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What to do if your flight is canceled or delayed

What to do if your flight is canceled or delayed

Yahoo21-03-2025

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London Heathrow Airport is currently completely shut down due to a power outage caused by a local fire.
For travelers hoping to fly in or out of London today, this is bad news — Heathrow is a global air travel hub and the airport's closure is expected to affect more than 1,300 flights.
This is a fast changing situation, but here's some advice on what to do if your flight is delayed or canceled.
As bad as it is to find out your flight has been delayed for a long time, or worse, canceled, it's better to find out from the comfort of home or a hotel room.
'Check your flight status before you go the airport. Most of these notifications are not happening at the last minute,' said Scott Keyes, the founder of Going.com. 'Save yourself the drive to the airport.'
Other tips from Keyes:
Sign up for airlines' free text alerts on the status of flights when you buy your ticket. Also, download your carrier's app.
Put your airline and flight number directly into a Google search bar to retrieve the flight status that way.
Check the website FlightAware for larger flight trends across the country.
Hop on waiver offers ahead of bad weather quickly. Early birds have the best choices of the remaining seats and flights.
Sometimes, the delays and cancellations happen after you've arrived at the airport. Heathrow is instructing travelers to stay away from the airport, but what if you're elsewhere in the world, hoping to get to London and now stuck in departures?
Keyes said to head as fast as you can to the airline agents' desk. 'It's going to make a difference who arrives first. It's first-come, first-serve. Positioning yourself close to the desk can pay off,' Keyes said.
Then you might want to call up your carrier while you're waiting. It might be faster to get through to a call center. 'Whatever happens first, great,' he said.
Other tactics you can try:
Go to a self-serve kiosk, American Airlines and United Airlines advise.
Use social media to your advantage, the travel advice website Travel Lens suggests. Try contacting the airline via X or other platforms when calls aren't going through.
Try an international call center for your carrier, Keyes suggests. Calls to US domestic numbers might have longer waits.
Whether you're dealing with an agent in person or over the phone, how you approach things can make a big difference.
'Honey attracts more flies than vinegar,' Keyes said. 'Look at this from the airline agents' perspective. … The agent is the one who has the most ability to help you. Asking nicely and sympathetically is far more likely to get what you want than being a jerk about it.'
He had another tip when it's your turn to talk to an agent about making new arrangements: 'Come prepared to offer your own options already. Doing your own research is absolutely helpful.'
Other considerations:
Book directly with an airline if the price is the same. If you've booked through a third-party site, you'll have to deal through them when there's a cancellation.
Avoid layovers when booking if possible, the consumer advocacy group US PIRG suggests. The more times you stop, the more chances for something to go wrong.
Regarding tarmac delays, airlines must provide working bathrooms the entire time, US PIRG says. 'After two hours, you must have food and water. After three hours, you must be in the air or back in the airport – or the airline faces massive fines.'
Cooperation between airlines could work in your favor.
'When flights are canceled, many airlines have the option of putting you on another carrier's flight because they have interline agreements,' Lousson Smith, product operations specialist at Going.com, told CNN Travel.
'This means, for example, if Delta is having service interruptions but American is running a flight to your destination, you may be able to get on that flight.'
Thanks to changes in frequent flyer programs over the past several years, airlines often still have flights available with miles even when demand is high during a weather event, Julian Kheel, founder and CEO of Points Path, told CNN Travel in an email.
'You'll need to be prepared to spend a lot of miles, and you may not get the best value for them. But you could save yourself some significant cash if you're trying to evacuate away from a storm,' Kheel said.
'Most US airlines now allow you to cancel flights booked with frequent flyer miles without any fee or penalty right up until departure time. That means you can book multiple alternate flights on different airlines using your miles in case one of them ends up delayed or canceled.
'But don't try to book alternate flights on the same airline, as duplicates can be automatically canceled. And don't forget to cancel the remaining flights you don't end up using so you can get your miles back.'
What do you do if it looks like you're not going to be able to fly out until the next day and you're not in your home city?
This depends on the specifics of your situation — in the US, for example, airlines aren't legally required to put you up in a hotel. US-based airlines have their own individual policies that are tracked by the FAA, here.
But UK law is different — so, if you're being impacted by the current Heathrow cancelations, you'll likely be automatically entitled to food and drink vouchers and accommodation. You can read all the details at the UK's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA)'s website.
Your canceled flight will be covered by UK law if was supposed to be departing from the UK, no matter who you were flying with.
And if your flight was supposed to be arriving in the UK, you'll be covered by UK law as long as you were traveling on an EU or UK airline. This document from the UK's Civil Aviation Authority explains all the ins and outs of these rules.
Despite this, sometimes airlines can't help everyone, as the CAA says, 'this can happen when staff are stretched during major disruptions.' The CAA advice is to organize 'reasonable care and assistance yourself, then claim the cost back later. If you end up paying for things yourself, keep every receipt and do not spend more than is reasonable.'
Other things to consider:
Book your flight with a credit card, Smith said: 'Many credit cards offer travel protections such as reimbursement if a flight cancellation forces you to get a hotel, meals, etc.'
Consider hunkering down at the airport rather than going to and from a hotel if your flight is delayed but not canceled. A lot depends on your personal comfort level and the estimated wait time, Keyes said.
Check whether there is a hotel room available within the airport.
Try getting into an airport lounge if you can, where you can recharge your phone and rest more easily, the Points Guy advises.
Make safety your No. 1 priority. If extreme weather is causing air travel disruption, trying to make the journey by road could be hazardous, Keyes warns.
Consider buying travel insurance, advised Airport Parking Reservations in an email to CNN Travel.
It said 'most travel insurance policies provide additional cover for travel uncertainty. Additional [coverage] usually becomes applicable if your flight is postponed by more than 12 hours due to a strike, adverse weather or a mechanical breakdown.'
The site also advises that you keep any receipts of airport purchases. You can try to get the money back from the airline later.
Airlines in the United States are now required to give passengers cash refunds if their flight is significantly delayed or canceled, even if that person does not explicitly ask for a refund.
The Department of Transportation says the final federal rule requiring that airlines dole out refunds — not vouchers — went into effect on October 28, 2024. Find out the details here.

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‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder
‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder

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He'd struggled with obsessive compulsive disorder since childhood, but Cameron Mofid says that there was one thing that helped him cope — traveling the world. Mofid, who is originally from San Diego, found that he was constantly replaying and overanalyzing conversations or 'obsessively needing closure or certainty.' But the 'freeing' sensation that came with being able to hop on a plane and travel to a new destination made him feel as though he could 'live with uncertainty.' 'OCD feeds on control: controlling your environment, routines, and outcomes,' Mofid tells CNN Travel. 'But when you're navigating chaotic borders, sleeping on floors, or figuring things out in countries where you don't speak the language, you're forced to surrender control. It's uncomfortable, but also freeing.' Prev Next Mofid says the mental health condition — which the Mayo Clinic describes as a 'pattern of unwanted thoughts and fears known as obsessions' — can 'dominate your thoughts and actions in ways that are exhausting' and difficult to explain. 'Travel became my way of coping — first as an escape, then as a form of healing,' he adds. And then, travel turned Mofid into a world record breaker. Having already clocked up visits to many destinations while playing tennis competitively, he came up with the idea of traveling to every country in the world while grappling with OCD during the Covid-19 pandemic. And in April 2025, Mofid, who is of Iranian-Egyptian descent, finally completed his quest to visit all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories after jumping on a plane to North Korea with some of his closest friends. While it's a feat that has been achieved only by an estimated 400 people, it was particularly significant for Mofid as he became, by some reckoning, the youngest person to do it. His record didn't stand for long, but he says being exposed to so many different cultures has changed his perspective on life completely. 'Visiting every country wasn't just about geography,' says Mofid. 'It was about learning how to live with uncertainty, find calm in discomfort, and connect with people from every walk of life.' Mofid says the decision to try to visit every country came as a lifeline during a particularly low point. 'One day, I was in my apartment, and my anxiety, my OCD is kind of spiraling out of control,' he recalls. 'And I was on my computer just looking up randomly how many people had ever been to every country. 'More people had been to space than had been to every country in the world,' he says. 'I thought that was crazy.' Mofid soon realized that while the Guinness World Record for being the youngest person to do this was held by 21-year-old, he was technically able to beat the record listed by online platform NomadMania, which requires interactions with locals and visits to cultural or geographical landmarks in each country for it to count toward the record. 'The record was (held by) a guy who was 25 and a half,' he says. 'At the time I was 20. And I said, 'Maybe that's an amazing, crazy goal that I could reach.' Feeling inspired, Mofid, who had previously worked in marketing, set up an event marketing company to earn enough cash to be able to achieve his goal, giving himself a three-year deadline to begin the challenge. 'I told myself, after I graduated college, I would (begin,) which is what I did,' he says. Although he'd traveled to some countries as a child, he decided to 'restart,' only counting those he'd visited from the age of 18 onwards. Thanks to the 100 or so countries clocked up during his extensive travels while working in the tennis industry, as well as trips he'd manage to squeeze in during his studies, Mofid needed to travel to just over 90 new countries to complete the challenge. In order to ensure that he did so 'legitimately,' Mofid came up with a list of his own personal requirements, while adhering to those set out by NomadMania. 'My rule was I had to do something in each country,' he says. 'Something meaningful. Most countries, I stayed at least four days.' Mofid then created a 'massive spreadsheet' detailing the numerous combinations of flights and routes he could take, along with the many visas he'd need to obtain. 'It was a logistical nightmare,' he says, before explaining that he opted for the combination of flights and routes that 'made the most sense financially to do on such a budget.' In late 2022, Mofid 'threw a bunch of clothes into a Nike duffle bag,' along with some shoes, and began the journey that would see him join the club of travelers who've visited all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories in the world. 'I started with the countries around Europe,' he explains, admitting that he wanted to work his way up to the 'ultra dangerous countries' by beginning with those that he was more comfortable traveling to. 'And then maybe the South American ones. Australia, these sorts of countries that are not seen as dangerous.' To keep costs as low as possible, Mofid took many overnight buses and stayed in budget accommodation. 'I stayed in some two-star hotels,' he says. 'I stayed in a hotel in the country of Niger with no electricity and no running water… I've hitchhiked in crazy countries to get to the next border.' During a visit to his 115th country, West Africa's Nigeria, in January 2023, Mofid visited a floating village named Makoko and was so impacted by the experience that he went on to found a nonprofit organization named Humanity Effect, to support children in the community. 'That's something that kind of is the biggest legacy for my travels, I suppose…' he says, explaining that he has returned to the village several times over the years. However, Mofid's journey certainly wasn't without its setbacks. After traveling to North African country Algeria in April 2024, Mofid became extremely ill and says he was unable to move from his bed for 15 hours. 'I couldn't even reach over to grab my phone to call anyone,' he recalls. 'I started having weird visions, hallucinating, sweating like crazy. I was so hot, and then I was freezing.' Mofid concedes that this was probably the only point in the journey when he seriously considered giving up. 'That was the closest I got to a breaking point,' he says. 'Where I just thought to myself, 'Why am I here? Why am I essentially in a state of paralysis in the middle of the Algerian Sahara?'' Thankfully, he recovered after being admitted into a hospital and was able to fully experience Algeria, which Mofid describes as 'unbelievable.' 'It's one of my favorite countries in the whole world,' he says, noting that 'the countries that receive the least amount of tourism are often the ones where you have the best experience, because you feel totally immersed in their culture.' Mofid was also incredibly taken with Yemen, after visiting the destination in February 2023, and says walking through the streets there was like 'going back in time.' 'To see people dress the same way that they were hundreds if not thousands of years ago,' he says. 'To see people living in mud houses, to see people still using flip phones.' Both Algeria and Yemen are subject to US State Department travel advisories. Caution is urged in Algeria due to 'terrorism and kidnapping. In March 2025, an advisory said travelers should avoid Yemen 'due to terrorism, civil unrest, crime, health risks, kidnapping, armed conflict, and landmines.' 'It's a country that's obviously in a very politically and economically difficult spot right now,' Mofid says about Yemen. 'But again, what you find is that the countries that are in some of the worst situations have the kindest people.' While he says he was grateful to be doing something so few people have either the time, means, or desire to take on, Mofid admits that he felt incredibly lonely a lot of the time. 'The reality is that 95% of the time I was alone,' he says. 'You have to really learn to get comfortable being lonely and kind of love it in a way. 'To love really getting to know yourself, because you're going months on end without seeing anyone that you know in places where there's maybe not a lot of connectivity… 'So that sort of loneliness can be very isolating at times. But at the same time, it really pushed me to make friends and meet people.' Aged 25, he visited North Korea, the final country on his list, by participating in the Pyongyang International Marathon, an annual race held in the capital city. 'That trip was just incredible. I mean, getting off the plane and touching down in my 195th and final country…' he says. 'I became the youngest person to ever visit every country per NomadMania, barely. I beat the guy that was the previous record holder by I think, six weeks.' Mofid celebrated reaching his 'grand finale finish line' by heading to a bar with his friends. 'That was the big celebration, to have some beers in the world's most isolated and remote country,' he says. 'We went to a dive bar. People don't even know they have those in North Korea, but they do.' Pferdmenges Lucas, 23, from Germany, may have since beaten Mofid's record, according to NomadMania's UN Master's list. Mofid particularly enjoyed getting the opportunity to watch people in the country 'going about their daily lives' and doing simple things such as running, commuting to work, and playing games with each other. 'I think that kind of sums up what I had learned throughout the whole journey,' he says. 'We have shared interests, we have shared hobbies… 'So those sorts of things, seeing that innate ability of humans wanting to connect with each other in the most isolated country in the world was something extraordinarily powerful.' Now back in California, Mofid is slowly readjusting to being in one place for an extended period of time. Reflecting on his journey, he admits that he's incredibly proud of himself, and has learned that 'no one is going to believe in you as much as you do yourself.' 'When I told my friends and my family that I had this mission, I was going to visit every country in the world, not a single one of them told me that I could do it,' he recalls. 'They all said, 'You're going to go to Afghanistan and North Korea and Somalia and Yemen and the Congo, and you're going to get yourself killed.'' Mofid was able to make 'hundreds of friendships' throughout his travels, and is still in touch with many of those he met along the way. 'It just goes to show the goodness of humanity,' he says. 'The fact that I could walk down a street and a busy slum in Central Africa and be welcomed with a smile, a glass of tea and an invitation of dance.' During the course of the journey, Mofid met many others who struggled with mental health disorders like his, and says that this helped him immensely. 'Travel helped me recognize that mental health disorders don't discriminate,' he says. 'People from all over the world shared a lot of the same plights and challenges that I did with my own mental health, and there's something very comforting in that.' Mofid still struggles with OCD to this day, and says he's accepted that it will always be a part of his life in 'some capacity.' 'But being able to accept that and speak so openly about my experiences, makes it so much less scary,' says Mofid. 'And I feel like now, seven years after this whole journey began, I'm in control of my OCD, whereas before it was in control of me.'

‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder
‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder

CNN

time9 hours ago

  • CNN

‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder

He'd struggled with obsessive compulsive disorder since childhood, but Cameron Mofid says that there was one thing that helped him cope — traveling the world. Mofid, who is originally from San Diego, found that he was constantly replaying and overanalyzing conversations or 'obsessively needing closure or certainty.' But the 'freeing' sensation that came with being able to hop on a plane and travel to a new destination made him feel as though he could 'live with uncertainty.' 'OCD feeds on control: controlling your environment, routines, and outcomes,' Mofid tells CNN Travel. 'But when you're navigating chaotic borders, sleeping on floors, or figuring things out in countries where you don't speak the language, you're forced to surrender control. It's uncomfortable, but also freeing.' Prev Next Mofid says the mental health condition — which the Mayo Clinic describes as a 'pattern of unwanted thoughts and fears known as obsessions' — can 'dominate your thoughts and actions in ways that are exhausting' and difficult to explain. 'Travel became my way of coping — first as an escape, then as a form of healing,' he adds. And then, travel turned Mofid into a world record breaker. Having already clocked up visits to many destinations while playing tennis competitively, he came up with the idea of traveling to every country in the world while grappling with OCD during the Covid-19 pandemic. And in April 2025, Mofid, who is of Iranian-Egyptian descent, finally completed his quest to visit all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories after jumping on a plane to North Korea with some of his closest friends. While it's a feat that has been achieved only by an estimated 400 people, it was particularly significant for Mofid as he became, by some reckoning, the youngest person to do it. His record didn't stand for long, but he says being exposed to so many different cultures has changed his perspective on life completely. 'Visiting every country wasn't just about geography,' says Mofid. 'It was about learning how to live with uncertainty, find calm in discomfort, and connect with people from every walk of life.' Mofid says the decision to try to visit every country came as a lifeline during a particularly low point. 'One day, I was in my apartment, and my anxiety, my OCD is kind of spiraling out of control,' he recalls. 'And I was on my computer just looking up randomly how many people had ever been to every country. 'More people had been to space than had been to every country in the world,' he says. 'I thought that was crazy.' Mofid soon realized that while the Guinness World Record for being the youngest person to do this was held by 21-year-old, he was technically able to beat the record listed by online platform NomadMania, which requires interactions with locals and visits to cultural or geographical landmarks in each country for it to count toward the record. 'The record was (held by) a guy who was 25 and a half,' he says. 'At the time I was 20. And I said, 'Maybe that's an amazing, crazy goal that I could reach.' Feeling inspired, Mofid, who had previously worked in marketing, set up an event marketing company to earn enough cash to be able to achieve his goal, giving himself a three-year deadline to begin the challenge. 'I told myself, after I graduated college, I would (begin,) which is what I did,' he says. Although he'd traveled to some countries as a child, he decided to 'restart,' only counting those he'd visited from the age of 18 onwards. Thanks to the 100 or so countries clocked up during his extensive travels while working in the tennis industry, as well as trips he'd manage to squeeze in during his studies, Mofid needed to travel to just over 90 new countries to complete the challenge. In order to ensure that he did so 'legitimately,' Mofid came up with a list of his own personal requirements, while adhering to those set out by NomadMania. 'My rule was I had to do something in each country,' he says. 'Something meaningful. Most countries, I stayed at least four days.' Mofid then created a 'massive spreadsheet' detailing the numerous combinations of flights and routes he could take, along with the many visas he'd need to obtain. 'It was a logistical nightmare,' he says, before explaining that he opted for the combination of flights and routes that 'made the most sense financially to do on such a budget.' In late 2022, Mofid 'threw a bunch of clothes into a Nike duffle bag,' along with some shoes, and began the journey that would see him join the club of travelers who've visited all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories in the world. 'I started with the countries around Europe,' he explains, admitting that he wanted to work his way up to the 'ultra dangerous countries' by beginning with those that he was more comfortable traveling to. 'And then maybe the South American ones. Australia, these sorts of countries that are not seen as dangerous.' To keep costs as low as possible, Mofid took many overnight buses and stayed in budget accommodation. 'I stayed in some two-star hotels,' he says. 'I stayed in a hotel in the country of Niger with no electricity and no running water… I've hitchhiked in crazy countries to get to the next border.' During a visit to his 115th country, West Africa's Nigeria, in January 2023, Mofid visited a floating village named Makoko and was so impacted by the experience that he went on to found a nonprofit organization named Humanity Effect, to support children in the community. 'That's something that kind of is the biggest legacy for my travels, I suppose…' he says, explaining that he has returned to the village several times over the years. However, Mofid's journey certainly wasn't without its setbacks. After traveling to North African country Algeria in April 2024, Mofid became extremely ill and says he was unable to move from his bed for 15 hours. 'I couldn't even reach over to grab my phone to call anyone,' he recalls. 'I started having weird visions, hallucinating, sweating like crazy. I was so hot, and then I was freezing.' Mofid concedes that this was probably the only point in the journey when he seriously considered giving up. 'That was the closest I got to a breaking point,' he says. 'Where I just thought to myself, 'Why am I here? Why am I essentially in a state of paralysis in the middle of the Algerian Sahara?'' Thankfully, he recovered after being admitted into a hospital and was able to fully experience Algeria, which Mofid describes as 'unbelievable.' 'It's one of my favorite countries in the whole world,' he says, noting that 'the countries that receive the least amount of tourism are often the ones where you have the best experience, because you feel totally immersed in their culture.' Mofid was also incredibly taken with Yemen, after visiting the destination in February 2023, and says walking through the streets there was like 'going back in time.' 'To see people dress the same way that they were hundreds if not thousands of years ago,' he says. 'To see people living in mud houses, to see people still using flip phones.' Both Algeria and Yemen are subject to US State Department travel advisories. Caution is urged in Algeria due to 'terrorism and kidnapping. In March 2025, an advisory said travelers should avoid Yemen 'due to terrorism, civil unrest, crime, health risks, kidnapping, armed conflict, and landmines.' 'It's a country that's obviously in a very politically and economically difficult spot right now,' Mofid says about Yemen. 'But again, what you find is that the countries that are in some of the worst situations have the kindest people.' While he says he was grateful to be doing something so few people have either the time, means, or desire to take on, Mofid admits that he felt incredibly lonely a lot of the time. 'The reality is that 95% of the time I was alone,' he says. 'You have to really learn to get comfortable being lonely and kind of love it in a way. 'To love really getting to know yourself, because you're going months on end without seeing anyone that you know in places where there's maybe not a lot of connectivity… 'So that sort of loneliness can be very isolating at times. But at the same time, it really pushed me to make friends and meet people.' Aged 25, he visited North Korea, the final country on his list, by participating in the Pyongyang International Marathon, an annual race held in the capital city. 'That trip was just incredible. I mean, getting off the plane and touching down in my 195th and final country…' he says. 'I became the youngest person to ever visit every country per NomadMania, barely. I beat the guy that was the previous record holder by I think, six weeks.' Mofid celebrated reaching his 'grand finale finish line' by heading to a bar with his friends. 'That was the big celebration, to have some beers in the world's most isolated and remote country,' he says. 'We went to a dive bar. People don't even know they have those in North Korea, but they do.' Pferdmenges Lucas, 23, from Germany, may have since beaten Mofid's record, according to NomadMania's UN Master's list. Mofid particularly enjoyed getting the opportunity to watch people in the country 'going about their daily lives' and doing simple things such as running, commuting to work, and playing games with each other. 'I think that kind of sums up what I had learned throughout the whole journey,' he says. 'We have shared interests, we have shared hobbies… 'So those sorts of things, seeing that innate ability of humans wanting to connect with each other in the most isolated country in the world was something extraordinarily powerful.' Now back in California, Mofid is slowly readjusting to being in one place for an extended period of time. Reflecting on his journey, he admits that he's incredibly proud of himself, and has learned that 'no one is going to believe in you as much as you do yourself.' 'When I told my friends and my family that I had this mission, I was going to visit every country in the world, not a single one of them told me that I could do it,' he recalls. 'They all said, 'You're going to go to Afghanistan and North Korea and Somalia and Yemen and the Congo, and you're going to get yourself killed.'' Mofid was able to make 'hundreds of friendships' throughout his travels, and is still in touch with many of those he met along the way. 'It just goes to show the goodness of humanity,' he says. 'The fact that I could walk down a street and a busy slum in Central Africa and be welcomed with a smile, a glass of tea and an invitation of dance.' During the course of the journey, Mofid met many others who struggled with mental health disorders like his, and says that this helped him immensely. 'Travel helped me recognize that mental health disorders don't discriminate,' he says. 'People from all over the world shared a lot of the same plights and challenges that I did with my own mental health, and there's something very comforting in that.' Mofid still struggles with OCD to this day, and says he's accepted that it will always be a part of his life in 'some capacity.' 'But being able to accept that and speak so openly about my experiences, makes it so much less scary,' says Mofid. 'And I feel like now, seven years after this whole journey began, I'm in control of my OCD, whereas before it was in control of me.'

‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder
‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder

CNN

time9 hours ago

  • CNN

‘It was a form of healing': How traveling to every country helped this American cope with a mental health disorder

He'd struggled with obsessive compulsive disorder since childhood, but Cameron Mofid says that there was one thing that helped him cope — traveling the world. Mofid, who is originally from San Diego, found that he was constantly replaying and overanalyzing conversations or 'obsessively needing closure or certainty.' But the 'freeing' sensation that came with being able to hop on a plane and travel to a new destination made him feel as though he could 'live with uncertainty.' 'OCD feeds on control: controlling your environment, routines, and outcomes,' Mofid tells CNN Travel. 'But when you're navigating chaotic borders, sleeping on floors, or figuring things out in countries where you don't speak the language, you're forced to surrender control. It's uncomfortable, but also freeing.' Prev Next Mofid says the mental health condition — which the Mayo Clinic describes as a 'pattern of unwanted thoughts and fears known as obsessions' — can 'dominate your thoughts and actions in ways that are exhausting' and difficult to explain. 'Travel became my way of coping — first as an escape, then as a form of healing,' he adds. And then, travel turned Mofid into a world record breaker. Having already clocked up visits to many destinations while playing tennis competitively, he came up with the idea of traveling to every country in the world while grappling with OCD during the Covid-19 pandemic. And in April 2025, Mofid, who is of Iranian-Egyptian descent, finally completed his quest to visit all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories after jumping on a plane to North Korea with some of his closest friends. While it's a feat that has been achieved only by an estimated 400 people, it was particularly significant for Mofid as he became, by some reckoning, the youngest person to do it. His record didn't stand for long, but he says being exposed to so many different cultures has changed his perspective on life completely. 'Visiting every country wasn't just about geography,' says Mofid. 'It was about learning how to live with uncertainty, find calm in discomfort, and connect with people from every walk of life.' Mofid says the decision to try to visit every country came as a lifeline during a particularly low point. 'One day, I was in my apartment, and my anxiety, my OCD is kind of spiraling out of control,' he recalls. 'And I was on my computer just looking up randomly how many people had ever been to every country. 'More people had been to space than had been to every country in the world,' he says. 'I thought that was crazy.' Mofid soon realized that while the Guinness World Record for being the youngest person to do this was held by 21-year-old, he was technically able to beat the record listed by online platform NomadMania, which requires interactions with locals and visits to cultural or geographical landmarks in each country for it to count toward the record. 'The record was (held by) a guy who was 25 and a half,' he says. 'At the time I was 20. And I said, 'Maybe that's an amazing, crazy goal that I could reach.' Feeling inspired, Mofid, who had previously worked in marketing, set up an event marketing company to earn enough cash to be able to achieve his goal, giving himself a three-year deadline to begin the challenge. 'I told myself, after I graduated college, I would (begin,) which is what I did,' he says. Although he'd traveled to some countries as a child, he decided to 'restart,' only counting those he'd visited from the age of 18 onwards. Thanks to the 100 or so countries clocked up during his extensive travels while working in the tennis industry, as well as trips he'd manage to squeeze in during his studies, Mofid needed to travel to just over 90 new countries to complete the challenge. In order to ensure that he did so 'legitimately,' Mofid came up with a list of his own personal requirements, while adhering to those set out by NomadMania. 'My rule was I had to do something in each country,' he says. 'Something meaningful. Most countries, I stayed at least four days.' Mofid then created a 'massive spreadsheet' detailing the numerous combinations of flights and routes he could take, along with the many visas he'd need to obtain. 'It was a logistical nightmare,' he says, before explaining that he opted for the combination of flights and routes that 'made the most sense financially to do on such a budget.' In late 2022, Mofid 'threw a bunch of clothes into a Nike duffle bag,' along with some shoes, and began the journey that would see him join the club of travelers who've visited all 195 UN-recognized countries and territories in the world. 'I started with the countries around Europe,' he explains, admitting that he wanted to work his way up to the 'ultra dangerous countries' by beginning with those that he was more comfortable traveling to. 'And then maybe the South American ones. Australia, these sorts of countries that are not seen as dangerous.' To keep costs as low as possible, Mofid took many overnight buses and stayed in budget accommodation. 'I stayed in some two-star hotels,' he says. 'I stayed in a hotel in the country of Niger with no electricity and no running water… I've hitchhiked in crazy countries to get to the next border.' During a visit to his 115th country, West Africa's Nigeria, in January 2023, Mofid visited a floating village named Makoko and was so impacted by the experience that he went on to found a nonprofit organization named Humanity Effect, to support children in the community. 'That's something that kind of is the biggest legacy for my travels, I suppose…' he says, explaining that he has returned to the village several times over the years. However, Mofid's journey certainly wasn't without its setbacks. After traveling to North African country Algeria in April 2024, Mofid became extremely ill and says he was unable to move from his bed for 15 hours. 'I couldn't even reach over to grab my phone to call anyone,' he recalls. 'I started having weird visions, hallucinating, sweating like crazy. I was so hot, and then I was freezing.' Mofid concedes that this was probably the only point in the journey when he seriously considered giving up. 'That was the closest I got to a breaking point,' he says. 'Where I just thought to myself, 'Why am I here? Why am I essentially in a state of paralysis in the middle of the Algerian Sahara?'' Thankfully, he recovered after being admitted into a hospital and was able to fully experience Algeria, which Mofid describes as 'unbelievable.' 'It's one of my favorite countries in the whole world,' he says, noting that 'the countries that receive the least amount of tourism are often the ones where you have the best experience, because you feel totally immersed in their culture.' Mofid was also incredibly taken with Yemen, after visiting the destination in February 2023, and says walking through the streets there was like 'going back in time.' 'To see people dress the same way that they were hundreds if not thousands of years ago,' he says. 'To see people living in mud houses, to see people still using flip phones.' Both Algeria and Yemen are subject to US State Department travel advisories. Caution is urged in Algeria due to 'terrorism and kidnapping. In March 2025, an advisory said travelers should avoid Yemen 'due to terrorism, civil unrest, crime, health risks, kidnapping, armed conflict, and landmines.' 'It's a country that's obviously in a very politically and economically difficult spot right now,' Mofid says about Yemen. 'But again, what you find is that the countries that are in some of the worst situations have the kindest people.' While he says he was grateful to be doing something so few people have either the time, means, or desire to take on, Mofid admits that he felt incredibly lonely a lot of the time. 'The reality is that 95% of the time I was alone,' he says. 'You have to really learn to get comfortable being lonely and kind of love it in a way. 'To love really getting to know yourself, because you're going months on end without seeing anyone that you know in places where there's maybe not a lot of connectivity… 'So that sort of loneliness can be very isolating at times. But at the same time, it really pushed me to make friends and meet people.' Aged 25, he visited North Korea, the final country on his list, by participating in the Pyongyang International Marathon, an annual race held in the capital city. 'That trip was just incredible. I mean, getting off the plane and touching down in my 195th and final country…' he says. 'I became the youngest person to ever visit every country per NomadMania, barely. I beat the guy that was the previous record holder by I think, six weeks.' Mofid celebrated reaching his 'grand finale finish line' by heading to a bar with his friends. 'That was the big celebration, to have some beers in the world's most isolated and remote country,' he says. 'We went to a dive bar. People don't even know they have those in North Korea, but they do.' Pferdmenges Lucas, 23, from Germany, may have since beaten Mofid's record, according to NomadMania's UN Master's list. Mofid particularly enjoyed getting the opportunity to watch people in the country 'going about their daily lives' and doing simple things such as running, commuting to work, and playing games with each other. 'I think that kind of sums up what I had learned throughout the whole journey,' he says. 'We have shared interests, we have shared hobbies… 'So those sorts of things, seeing that innate ability of humans wanting to connect with each other in the most isolated country in the world was something extraordinarily powerful.' Now back in California, Mofid is slowly readjusting to being in one place for an extended period of time. Reflecting on his journey, he admits that he's incredibly proud of himself, and has learned that 'no one is going to believe in you as much as you do yourself.' 'When I told my friends and my family that I had this mission, I was going to visit every country in the world, not a single one of them told me that I could do it,' he recalls. 'They all said, 'You're going to go to Afghanistan and North Korea and Somalia and Yemen and the Congo, and you're going to get yourself killed.'' Mofid was able to make 'hundreds of friendships' throughout his travels, and is still in touch with many of those he met along the way. 'It just goes to show the goodness of humanity,' he says. 'The fact that I could walk down a street and a busy slum in Central Africa and be welcomed with a smile, a glass of tea and an invitation of dance.' During the course of the journey, Mofid met many others who struggled with mental health disorders like his, and says that this helped him immensely. 'Travel helped me recognize that mental health disorders don't discriminate,' he says. 'People from all over the world shared a lot of the same plights and challenges that I did with my own mental health, and there's something very comforting in that.' Mofid still struggles with OCD to this day, and says he's accepted that it will always be a part of his life in 'some capacity.' 'But being able to accept that and speak so openly about my experiences, makes it so much less scary,' says Mofid. 'And I feel like now, seven years after this whole journey began, I'm in control of my OCD, whereas before it was in control of me.'

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