Hello guys, I'm Oliver, and I'm 19 years old from Manchester, England. Today I decided to relate my first travel experience to Lisbon, Portugal – an experience that surprised me in ways more than I had expected. It was not a classy holiday, just a cheap flight and a couple of days of meandering around with my backpack, but it turned out to be one of those travel experiences that stay with you after you've been back home.
I got to Lisbon late in the afternoon. The one thing that hit me in the face was the light. The town is bathed in warm golden light, especially at sunset, and the buildings appeared to be emitting. Peeling paint and cracked walls were stunning. I rode into town on the metro from the airport, and then I was strolling in the midst of steep streets, tiled facades, and the clatter of trams speeding by.
I slept in a small hostel off Rossio Square. It was not elegant, but it had friendly people and an open kitchen – just the kind of place where you sit around with travelers from everywhere and tell stories. At night, I ate dinner with a group of backpackers at a small local restaurant. We had sardines grilled, bread, and vinho verde, that light Portuguese wine. Sharing a table with strangers who turned out like friends was the perfect start.
The next day, I strolled to get to know Alfama, Lisbon's oldest district. Its streets are turning and narrow as a maze. I was lost in no time, but that was half the fun. Every corner concealed something: a tiny square with an orange tree, a staircase leading to nowhere, an old man playing guitar at his doorstep.
I did, however, stop at a vantage point called Miradouro de Santa Luzia. I could gaze out over the city's red tiles tumbling down to the blue Tagus River. The view was stunning, and I sat there longer than I had planned, just sitting and observing boats cross the water.
What surprised me the most was how vibrant Alfama was. Clothes were draped from balconies, children played in the streets, and fado music drifted out of a tavern. It wasn't a neighborhood to visit, but a neighborhood to experience.
As a fashion and do-it-yourself design enthusiast, Lisbon moved me profoundly. Street art abounds – walls decorated with paintings, political posters, or simply humorous scribbles. I chanced upon a tiny gallery owned by an up-and-coming artist, and we spent half an hour speaking. He said to me: "Here in Lisbon, art doesn't have to be perfect. It just has to leave a trace." That phrase struck home because it's precisely how I look at creativity. Imperfection makes things human.
I also came across a flea market called Feira da Ladra. I bought a second-hand denim jacket with 80s patches. It's rough, old, but so full of character. I can't wait to give it a new life at home and add it to my closet.
Lisbon cuisine was a bonus. I ate the take-out food everyone speaks highly of – the pastéis de nata – the custard tarts – and they are completely addictive. I discovered bifana, an inexpensive pork sandwich that is great as well.
But aside from food, I'll remember the people. In the hostel, every evening ended in late nights on the rooftop patio. Travelers shared stories of Argentina, Korea, and Germany, and locals joined in periodically. There was music, laughter, and a sense that we were all part of something temporary but real.
Lisbon taught me that traveling does not need to be perfect to be worth it. I got lost, my legs ached from all the hills, and my phone battery died more than once. But those "faults" led me to hidden cafes, unexpected friendships, and tiny moments of sophistication.
What I’ll remember most is the golden light on Alfama’s rooftops, the taste of fresh sardines, the sound of fado in the distance, and the feeling that imperfection is beautiful – in cities, in art, and in people.
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