• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Live Limitless

Adventure, Business, Travel

  • About Matt
  • Start Here
  • Travel Hacking
  • Blog
  • The List
  • Contact

Live limitless

Adventures in Huasteca | A Side of Mexico Almost No One Ever Sees

by Matt 2 Comments

I looked down at my watch. Wait, that’s not true. I looked down at my phone. The time was 7 am. We had just reached the bus terminal of Ciudad Valles after a 9-hour evening bus from Mexico City. I had slept maybe 2-hours but was excited to get back into nature and see some awesome friends we hadn’t seen since our university exchange in Malaysia back in 2012. After weeks of traffic and concrete in the world’s second-most-populous city, it was now time for beautiful waterfalls, turquoise waters, and subtropical rainforest hikes.

Ricky and Andrea, two friends of ours that happen to be bamboo architects, and our friends we had come to visit picked us up to go back to their house for breakfast. They had already booked our first adventure, which was just-so-happened river kayaking at 10 am. We ate breakfast, I grabbed an energy drink and we made way to the first of many beautiful tranquil rivers for the following week.

Tumul WaterFall

We joined up with some American kayakers who have a business in Mexico during the winter months. They gave us a rundown on how to operate the kayak and told us we’d be going down class-2 rapids. After paddling around one of the biggest waterfalls in the area, we got started. When the first rapid came, we fell off in an embarrassing fashion. Karla got massive scrapes all the way from her bum to the middle of her leg and I got lucky with just a bruise. Nothing big, though her cuts looked horrible. After that, we got the hang of it and only fell out one more time, thankfully in deeper water. We had only kayaked once before in calm waters so this was a completely new experience and a fun one at that.

It was incredibly scenic. The water was a light blue. The sky was blue. The jungle ferns draped over the edges and had an almost “Indiana Jones” feel to it. Mini waterfall after mini waterfall, we made our way down the river for a couple of hours, finally disembarking near someone’s farmland, where some other locals had been paid to drop off our vehicles for us.

Success.

tumul waterfall huasteca

After a delicious but greasy lunch of Mexican gorditas, it was time for another waterfall adventure.

This time we were going to be jumping off of nine different waterfalls, starting from a mere 3-meter drop to the biggest drop of the day at 9 meters. Some of them we could slide down like waterslides and after the last one, we had a big surprise waiting for us. We were able to swim behind the waterfall. Crouching down in a cool, dark cave while looking out from behind a powerful waterfall pour down in front of us was as magical an experience as it gets. I wanted to stay for hours and just be in the moment. This was another first for me and definitely something I’d love to do again. After a good five or ten minutes, we crawled to the left and eventually leaped through the waterfall and back into the cold waters.

Over the next week in Huasteca, we never stopped. It was adventure after adventure. We went paddle-boarding for the first time in small ponds and also upriver to see a massive waterfall towering above us. We took the kayaks again to a different river and also paddled upstream to Tamul waterfall, the biggest waterfall in the area. We then said bye to water activities and went hiking through a magical subtropical rainforest to reach a staggering 200-meter sinkhole in the middle of the mountains. This area is famous for sinkholes with the most notable one being the Cave of Swallows, which was featured in BBC’s Planet Earth and many National Geographic articles. We went to the one that almost no one ever sees, which added to the experience of it all.

Huasteca Sinkhole

After spending a night in some beautiful cabins in a small tranquil mountain village, we embarked on another new adventure – mountain climbing. The goal was to see an incredible view from the top but the rain caused too much mist for any view to be seen. Though this was disappointing, it was really cool to strap on a harness with real mountain climbers and make our way up a steep mountain. I was told that I was a natural so who knows – maybe I’ve found a new activity to fall in love with. We then continued on to a surreal castle built by Edward James near the town of Xilitla. This magical place is built into a natural waterfall and was meant to resemble “the Garden of Eden”. All Rocky and I could talk about was designing a liveable town just like this. Paradise.

I love trips like this.

While it wasn’t a new country (I’ve spent about six months in Mexico during the last five years), it was a new area and a place that almost no tourists ever see. The only tourists that make it to this area of Mexico are hardcore adventurers like the kayakers we met from the States. Most opt for major cities or beach resorts.

They are missing out and this could be great for visitors from couples to a great family holiday in Mexico.

This place was like walking into a National Geographic documentary. All the locals are super friendly and not-yet-damaged from mass tourism like those from Cancun and Riviera Maya. It actually reminded me of my time in Asia, driving through tiny villages and farmland and witnessing little villages with happy families. There are so many beautiful cities in Mexico, some of which are vastly unexplored.

Edward James Castle xilitla

After about five months of work and city life, this adventure was just what I needed. Adventure, thrills, good people and the odd bottle of Victoria beer. I tried some new adventure sports and grew as a person, which is just what travel is about, no?

When was the last time you tried something new or had your heart rate increase from excitement? Let me know in the comments – I’d love to hear about it.

My friend Ricky is building incredible bamboo buildings in the Huasteca region and we’re thinking of organizing an adventurous and unique tour in the next year or two. Would you be interested? Leave a comment if you are and you’ll be first in line when they happen.

PS: Don’t forget. I’m going to be releasing a book in 2015 called Limitless Travel. It’s going to be the ultimo travel resource book teaching you how to find the cheapest flights, how to become a travel hacker, all the different modes of transportation, different types of accommodation, best travel gear, and much more. It’ll be free for the first 5 days once released so make sure you sign up here and be the first to know about its release.

What I Learned from Door-to-Door Sales

by Matt 26 Comments

(Note: This challenge was one of 100 items on “the list”, which is now complete! I have a new, much more challenging and next to impossible list of goals to complete over the next 10 years. Check it out by clicking here.)

This past summer, I took a job as a door-to-door sales rep. After getting back from South America, I went straight to work on Canadian Free Flyers and my blogs but really wanted to get out of the house and learn something new. It had been a while since I truly challenged myself and it was time to get out of my comfort zone.

One thing I’ve been wanting to get more comfortable with is sales. As an entrepreneur, it’s a pretty important skill to have. Actually, sales is a decent skill for anyone.

Most people at this stage would buy some sales books or sign up for a course. I decided to do something different. I went out and got a job in sales. Not just any sales but the most uncomfortable sales I could think of – door-to-door. I figured that by getting a job in sales, I’d learn more than I ever could from a book or a course and I’d get paid for it. win/win!

To find a job, I started some simple research on Kijiji (similar to Craigslist in the U.S.) and some other job boards and eventually emailed a lawn care company. This company had a really good track record in the city so I knew I wouldn’t be selling garbage.

After an interview, I had the job. The first two days were simple as I was just following other sales reps around, learning from them and getting paid a flat training rate. On the third day, I was on my own and made zero sales. My spirit was crushed. I knew this was going to be one of my biggest challenges ever but making no money for a whole evening and being rejected 50+ times was really painful.

Knocking on doors to sell something out of the blue was (and still is) a big challenge for me. I would sometimes sit in my car, thinking over and over about my finger ringing the doorbell and trying to sell a stranger on our service. My chest would get tight and I’d continuously try to talk myself into it. I knew I just had to get over the first 100+ doors but part of me really wanted to just stay in my car and listen to music.

On day four (my second day alone), I bought a large Red Bull and forced myself to get out there and enthusiastically knock on more doors. I knew I didn’t have the ability to be as aggressive as some of the other reps but I did have the advantage of being kindly assertive, having a friendly look and a very tenacious spirit. I ended up selling six lawn care packages that day and being top salesman. It was a $400 day. My courage was renewed and I was ready for the following months.

As the months passed, I continued to have a few zero-sale days but I also had plenty of days when I was on fire. I did much better than I thought I would and made much more money than I imagined. When I started, I was simply hoping I could make it long enough to learn some things.

But then I started making sales and it felt good. After two months, I still occasionally felt the tight chest before knocking on the first door for the evening. After all, it isn’t something I particularly enjoy. I’m not really an extravert. At the same time, I’m super proud of myself for getting into a completely foreign and challenging situation. Not only did I break through the barrier of knocking on random doors but I actually crushed it and made a lot of money.

Leaving on a jet plane
Took this picture while knocking. Follow me on Instagram @MatthewGBailey

I don’t know how much of a “sales” guy I really am but I certainly learned some things over the summer months.

What I Learned from Door-to-Door Sales

Tenacity Pays Off

One of the last guys I sold to before the season ended complimented me on my tenacity. He was one of few people who didn’t buy directly at the door but wanted me to call him back. After a second and third phone call and a second visit to his house, he made the purchase. He was really impressed. Even with little sales skills, if you keep your head up and continue to knock on door after door, you will make sales. Most people stop knocking after too many no’s or they take too many breaks. If you knock on 50-100 doors you will make a sale. Don’t give up. Be tenacious. Keep going. you will make sales.

No’s Will Become a Yes

Rejection is a hard thing to deal with but it’s a natural part of life and business. If you can’t handle rejection, you are going to get crushed very quickly. This is another benefit of door-to-door sales. The rejection is often and you need to learn how to overcome it. Some nights were really difficult on the phsyci but I always tried to tell myself the age-old advice that every single NO is just one step closer to a YES. This is 100% true. You can’t let a NO get you down. It’s just part of life. If you never ask, you will never get a yes. If you do ask, you will get a NO – but eventually, you will also get a YES.

Appearance Matters 

When you’re selling someone face-to-face, appearance matters. If you look like a grungy kid or an untrustworthy person, people won’t buy from you. If they feel uncomfortable or see you as an amateur, it’s over. I have the benefit of looking like a good guy. People have even told me that at the door. They’ve told me that I look honest. Although I am an honest person, having that look helped me out. I always dressed nice and simple with khaki shorts, a company t-shirt and styled hair. I kept good posture at the door and acted confident. Never underestimate a good appearance.

Attitude Sells

If you try selling with a shitty attitude, you may as well go home. People sense this at the door. During the final few weeks, some of the younger sales reps stopped selling. They would literally make no sales for a whole week, which meant no paycheque. They would come in with a bad attitude and basically say that they weren’t going to make sales that day. Some of them would bring their personal lives to the job with them. If you start with a bad attitude or a bad mood, you’re finished. It radiates from you. People don’t want to buy from someone in a bad mood. You’re bad mood makes them feel bad. They get in a bad mood. Then they say NO. Even if you’re having a shitty day, you need to think happy thoughts and tell yourself to make sales. You need to be confident and positive. Otherwise, take the day off.

Keep Talking

Sometimes after I’d make the sales pitch, the customer would stand there thinking. The worst thing you can do is just let everything stay silent. Usually, they are thinking of an objection to make and silence is kind of awkward. It’s good to let them talk when they want to but when it goes silent, make conversation. Remind them of the benefits. Tell them a good story of someone else who bought the product. Repeat the sales pitch or repeat the closing line. If they seem unsure, keep talking. You need to sell them on your service and remind them why they need it. All of my top sales days were when I had the “talking spirit.” I kept making conversation and kept selling the product.

Little Things Can Make a Big Difference

After a week or two, I started pre-flling out sales sheets before the shift. I always had a minimum goal of two sales so I would fill out the date, my name and the city on two sales sheets, triggering a positive effect in my mind that  I was going to make two sales. This is when things took off for me. I don’t know how this stuff works but I almost never made less than two sales once I started doing this. Whatever little thing you need to do to give yourself a positive mindset, do it.

Kindness Pays Off

I’m certainly not an aggressive sales person but I do persist and I am very kind and polite with people. I didn’t think I was going to make it with this attitude but it turns out, people like it. I’m sure an aggressive nature can work as well but when I showed up at someones door with a smile and a friendly attitude, they dropped their barriers. Some of them told me that normally they would NEVER buy something at the door but because I was very kind and polite, they gave me the chance. I guess nice guys don’t finish last.

Don’t Take it Personally

This is one of the biggest challenges in sales – especially door-to-door. I got rejected right to my face hundreds of times each week. Some people were nice and some were rude. Rejection after rejection. It can really kill your spirit. Sometimes I would take it personally and get pissed off. Then I would get in a negative mood. Then I would make no sales. It became a vicious cycle. Other sales reps did the same thing. Some of them would get mad and get more aggressive, leading to aggressive customers and a really bad night. It can be tough but you need to realize that it’s just business. They aren’t rejecting you, they are rejecting the service. Sometimes they are simply having a bad day. Maybe they are having troubles at home or had five other sales reps from different companies knock on their door that same day. Sometimes they really don’t want the service and sometimes they just want to be left alone. Either way, they don’t know you. They don’t know who you are or what your values are. They aren’t rejecting you. They are just rejecting the sale. If you make it personal, you’re going to get down on yourself and the day is over. It’s not personal, it’s just business.

**

Do you have any experience in sales? What have you done to challenge yourself lately? Share below.

PS: I’m writing a book called Limitless Travel. It will teach you everything you need to know about booking the cheapest flights, finding the cheapest accommodation, finding unique accommodation, finding out the best things to do as well as the best travel gear, apps and websites. Sign up here to be the first to know when it’s released and to get it for free!

**

Photo of doorbell by Darwin Bell.

My First $5000 As a World-Travelling Lifestyle Entrepreneur

by Matt 2 Comments

It all started in Laos

My wife and I were in Vientiane – the capital of Laos. We had just come from the north where we had kayaked through the jungle, boated to isolated jungle villages and lived it up in the beautiful city of Luang Prabang. Then I got an email. It was from a Canadian journalist who had seen my site, Canadian Free Flyers and wanted to do a story on me for the Toronto Star.

Say whhhhhat.

I was so excited. The Toronto Star is the biggest news publication in Canada. How did this lady find me? Over the past year, I had created a travel hacking site for Canadians but had yet to market it. I had maybe three customers who had bought the $47 package. I was too busy backpacking throughout Southeast Asia to worry about marketing the site. I was waiting until I got back to Canada.

Muang Ngoi Neua, Laos

But suddenly, this journalist lit a fire under my ass.

I didn’t want to pass up the opportunity as it might never come again. In fact, I wanted to talk with her as quickly as possible as I know how quickly an opportunity can fade away. The next night I was on Skype, calling her on her Canadian cell phone from the rooftop of the hotel we were staying in. WiFi was shotty as you might expect and I ended up having to call her back four or five times to finish the interview.

In the end, it worked out though. In some ways, doing it from a hotel in Laos made the story better. I was living the life as a travel hacker. When I asked her how she found me, she said she was looking for Canadian travel hacking sites and mine was the only one that came up.

That’s cuz I was the only one!

That’s what had me so excited about Canadian Free Flyers in the first place. There were a ton of sites offering travel hacking advice in the United States but none offering advice just for Canadians. I started the first one, which got me in the Toronto Star. The journalist told me the interview would be coming out on October 15th, three months after the interview.

I had time to get my shit into gear.

I still didn’t have much time really. After all, my wife and I were backpacking through exotic Asian countries and the last thing I wanted to do was be behind a computer. When I could, I made sure the site looked half-professional and made sure the content was up to speed. Most importantly, I made sure there was a way for people to pay!

Over the next couple of weeks, we travelled around Laos and eventually flew to Myanmar, a country I had been wanting to visit for months! Myanmar was like stepping back in time. No franchise businesses, no ATM’s and barely a hospital. British colonial buildings in the big city were literally falling apart. Sanctions from many countries including the U.S. has kept Myanmar in the past, which may or may not be a good thing. Either way, it’s the people that make the country and Myanmar is full of the friendliest people on Earth. It really is a special place.

Bagan, Myanmar

A couple of weeks into the trip, I decided to open my Paypal account to see what funds I had. Oops. Paypal was shut down immediately and I was locked out of my account. I guess that’s what a sanction means. Suddenly I had no way to open my Paypal account and now had to prove to the company that I wasn’t laundering money for someone in Myanmar. I needed to provide actual mail with my home address, which was difficult from overseas. After about four weeks and many talks with my parents, I finally had the account back up and was warned that it would be locked for good if I did it again.

Sheesh. Give me a break.

Now that I had access to my account again, I made sure it was linked to Canadian Free Flyers for the big amount of traffic I was sure to get from the Toronto Star article.

Fast forward two months…

We had been in China for nearly two weeks. Having flown from Indonesia to China to attend my cousin’s wedding, we were now sitting in a hotel in the non-touristy town of Shizhou, waiting for the article to go live. Of all the countries to be in at this moment, China was probably the worst. I had no access to WordPress! UGH. This meant that I could not login to Canadian Free Flyers, which meant much stress for me on the biggest day of Canadian Free Flyer’s life. I also couldn’t access the Toronto Star’s website to see the article. I couldn’t access Facebook or any other social media profile either. I was screwed. I basically had to trust that everything was well. Such are the problems of a world-travelling lifestyle entrepreneur. Shit like this happens I suppose. Next time I’ll make sure I am not in China.

When we reached Beijing two weeks later, I was able to check Paypal. $5000! Over 100 people had paid for the $47 option and had created the biggest “entrepreneurial” day of my life. Up until that point, I had only made maybe $500 total during my online life. Canadian Free Flyers was my first actual online business and had just brought in $5000 in a couple of days.

View from Shanghai World Financial Center

It felt unreal. It was such a proud moment to realize that I created this money out of thin air. I had an idea and created it all by myself with no knowledge of coding whatsoever. I simply built an average website using WordPress, laid out my knowledge of travel hacking and added a checkout button.

Voila!

Three days later, my wife and I were back in Canada. The journalist had mailed me a hard copy of the newspaper, which had a full page dedicated to my story and some pictures of me on an elephant in Chiang Mai, Thailand. I was famous!

While the Toronto Star opportunity was lucky in many ways, had I not put myself out there and made the effort to get the site online, they never would have found me and the interview never would have happened. That $5000 wouldn’t be in my Paypal account.

Since then, I’ve reached out to the media myself and have been featured in the Globe and Mail, MoneySense, Metro, the Vancouver Observer, and the Flight Network. Canadian Free Flyers has since changed from a one-time fee to a monthly membership site that combines tutorials along with real-time deal alerts, which means I do all the research for members so they don’t have to.

It’s been quite the ride and it has given me the confidence to pursue other business opportunities as well as reach out to more media.

Temples of Bagan, Myanmar

Lessons learned

  1. In order for luck to find you, you must make yourself findable. Had I not taken the time to create Canadian Free Flyers in the first place, I never would have heard from the Toronto Star. If you have a business idea, you need to get it out there, even if it’s just a basic version of it. If you’d like to create a side income, you need to take action. It all starts with an idea.
  2. If you’re into the whole world-travelling entrepreneur thing, you need to take on certain responsibilities. If you’re going on a long trip but have a business, you should have everything accomplished before you go OR set time aside during your travels to actually work on the business.
  3. Be ready for opportunities. You never know when an opportunity could strike. It could be your first customer sending you a question via email or a journalist inquiring about a story. Who knows? but you better be ready for it.
  4. When it comes to travel, be aware of the countries you’re visiting and the problems you could encounter with your business. I should have done some research before opening Paypal in Myanmar. I didn’t really have a choice with China but I could have researched the opportunity to have a VPN, which would have allowed me to navigate around the great firewall of China and access WordPress.

In the end, the most important lesson here is ACTION. Reading books, taking courses and coming up with ideas can be important but action is what you’ll ultimately have to do for any chance of success. You can’t keep dreaming about it or putting it off. You need to take the first steps and start building the path to your success.

You are your greatest wall and only you can climb over it.

Did you like this story? Leave a comment below or share it with your friends and family!

Want some one-on-one coaching to get started in travelling the world or starting an online business? Visit the Live Limitless coaching page and let’s get started!

Like this article? you’ll probably like these as well:

  • 30 Tips from 30 Years of Life
  • How I Booked a Flight from Canada to Mexico, Colombia and back from Bolivia for $27!

Thanks for reading!

 

 

30 Tips from 30 Years of Life

by Matt 5 Comments

I turned 30 on July 31, 2014. Just one day ago.

Wow.

That’s really all I can say. I feel like I’m getting really old even though I’m living quite an amazing life. Much more amazing than my teenage years and most of my twenties.

As someone who has grown tremendously over the last ten years, travelled all over the world, met amazing people from all walks of life, started a blog that has introduced me to hundreds of entrepreneurs and adventures, married a sweetheart, and has started successful online business ventures…I thought it would be cool to think deep and share some advice that I wish I had when I was 20.  Actually, I wish I had someone tell me these when I was younger than that, though who’s to say I would have listened. Of course, the advice isn’t just for twenty-somethings. It can be for anyone of any age. All of us have different backgrounds and lessons we’ve learned over the years. In fact, each of us can learn something from each other and I’d love to hear from you in the comments below on a tip/lesson you’d like to share.

Before you go on, I should warn you that this post is more tun 4000 words. Oh c’mon, it’s not THAT long.

These are my 30 tips on life from 30 years of life. 

[Read more…] about 30 Tips from 30 Years of Life

LL 014: An Interview with Andrew Szeto

by Matt Leave a Comment

In the 14th episode of the Live Limitless podcast I chat with Andrew Szeto.

I met Andrew in the comment section on a blog we were both reading at the time. After getting to know him better, I learned that Andrew was becoming a “full-time” copywriter while working full-time as a pharmacist. I thought it was very inspiring that Andrew would commit his free time to building up skills in a completely different field without giving up his day job. Andrew now has essentially two full-time income streams.

Besides being an all-around great guy, Andrew has become a really good copywriter and has built up his skills during his spare time. I invited Andrew on the show to talk about how he learned his new skill set, why he chose copywriting, how he found a mentor, and how he built copywriting into a full-time gig.

[Read more…] about LL 014: An Interview with Andrew Szeto

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/livelimitlesspodcast/LL_014_-_An_Interview_with_Andrew_Szeto.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Email | RSS

LL013: An Interview with Scott Brills

by Matt 2 Comments

In the thirteenth episode of the Live Limitless podcast I chat with Scott Brills of ScottBrills.com.

I met Scott for the first time at World Domination Summit through a mutual friend and have since spent a week with him in the deserts of Nevada for Burning Man. As an avid traveller myself, I loved listening to all the adventures Scott has packed into his life and as an entrepreneur I was interested in how he funded everything.

After being accepted in a year-long work/study program in Japan straight out of high school, Scott’s thirst for travel began. Not to long after that, Scott started a web design company, which funded his incredible lifestyle for ten years.  While he still does consulting for tech companies, his main focus is building up Pamoja Safaris; a new company he co-founded with a partner in Tanzania, Africa.

In this episode, we talk about:
  • How Scott has supported his travelling lifestyle for the last 10 years
  • Scotts new safari company in Tanzania, Africa
  • Scotts incredible rickshaw race coming up soon
  • Attending conferences and how to connect with people
  • World Domination Summit and not approaching people as a fan
  • His favourite books and plans for SE Asia travel
  • Scotts advice for living limitless
  • And MUCH more…

 

[Read more…] about LL013: An Interview with Scott Brills

https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/livelimitlesspodcast/LL_013_-_An_Interview_with_Scott_Brills.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Email | RSS

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 9
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

About

  • About Matt
  • Contact

Travel Tips

  • Start Here
  • Limitless Travel
  • Travel Hacking

Inspiration

  • Limitless List
  • The Podcast

Courses

  • Your Complete Guide to Canada
  • Canadian Travel Hacking
  • Limitless Travel
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025