If someone knows the transformative power of a good journey, then it is an actor Selma Blair,
As Blair explained on stage recently Travel + holidayThe world’s best summit of 2025, she was officially diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2018, although she probably lived with it for 25 to 30 years, including a child living with optical neuritis. But during all this, he has maintained his signature grace, light and humor.
Blair said with a laugh, “One thing that I had received since childhood was very good.” “Everyone feels better on just one holiday. So even as a sick child, he was always beacon, North Star for me.”
Now, Blair explained, she is staying to travel to relax-free and back to the world, although her sidekick, in a very different fashion with scouts. “Fortunately, the hotels are really dog friendly, which is a plus and minus,” he said. “Because I allow my service dog to be quite favorable for people. He thinks my job, now that I am much better, go out and to be a service dog for someone else who wants him. And he is happy with it. And he still does his work for me.”
Blair said thanks to the scout, she travels with an unusual but easy item in her carry-on: a squeeze. “I squeeze a dog to remove the dog from the ground,” she explained, so she is always ready to clean any fur from a Uber or a plane floor.
Any trip should be for the pair, Blair reported that it should have just a beautiful room, preferably with a scene. “I (I do) make sure you have a room with a scene,” she said, explaining that she may not be able to find out that she uses, she can still enjoy new places in this way. “I always make sure that I have a beautiful room.”
He also said that hotels can serve their customers with the needs to reach better, by ensuring that they can also get a great view.
“It would be cute if there is a room and you see someone coming with disability, and ask yourself,” Is there any scene, is there a way to make it a little more pleasant? ” Because it could be their holiday, “he said.
Blair was also in a hurry to praise hotels which gives it right when it is correct. “I was in a hotel in Washington, DC with the most incredible ADA room,” he explained, seeing that it had tactile touch-like touching railings in the rain, which was away from average, low-boss chrome railing in most hotels. “People with disabilities also like a little chic.”
He also emphasized the effects of small tangent such as flowers, blackout curtains and even a simple deck of cards, which always is in the hotel in its bag, which the hotel does not provide them. “Simple things that can be seen for a guest can be seen and not that they have a problem that no one knows how to behave.”
Despite the additional work that comes with the world with disability, Blair keeps traveling, and encourages others to do so, given that it is “important to hit a milestone of something that you did not think of.”
And while, of course, Blair, like the rest of us, loves a little high end moment, but for that, the journey is not about luxury for luxury. It is about both existence and joy. “Travel to me is a symbol of vibration and hope and adventure,” he said. “It is very worthy.”