Traveller or tourist? When I was younger, I took a Greyhound bus across vast Canada... and back, eventually. Gruelling, but eye-opening.
In four explorations of the Four-Corners region of the southwestern U.S., DW & I camped... or on two occasions, we stayed for a few days in homes of people we'd met. We hiked, climbed a peak or two, avoided rattle snakes & scorpions, went to Indigenous villages (sometimes to be Gringos sitting quietly while ceremonies or ceremonial dances took place... no cameras or recorders allowed).
In the UK, we spent a couple weeks driving around the perimeter of Scotland, staying at B&Bs, going to local events (music evening in a village's high-school auditorium)... also, an outdoor boot sale, ancient archaeology sites, etc) Trained down from Inverness for only five-days' stay in London, and got around in the tube, and took an open-top double decker tour of the streets, stayed in an inexpensive older hotel. Spent time in the British Museum, V&A Museum, the Design Museum, Natural History Museum. Ate meals in some good, affordable ethnic restaurants, and had fish & chips in the Bag o' Nails.
In Paris, we stayed in a very affordable old hotel within a few blocks of the Eifel, Greek cafƩ/restuarant across the quiet street. Walked a lot, took the Metro too. Louvre as well as small, obscure galleries & museums. And Belleville, where artists, art work & good food can be found. Then trained south and stayed in Arles, where we walked around and caught a van ride around Provence.
Another trip... Italy, off season (fall), in cheap hotels. Rome it was a pretty touristy stay for us, as was Florence, though in Venice we had walked around a whole lot. Didn't care for Florence, except when actually in cathedrals or museums.
In western and far-southern Mexico it was all very different, as we chose not to stay in resorts but where locals lived & worked. We walked everywhere, except took a 2nd-class bus from Jalisco to Nayarit. Worked with others five days or so, building a solar hot-water system in an orphanage. Often ate in places that were decent, unfancy & served delicious food, and sometimes just where we could quickly find something to eat. Took buses to see archaeological sites.
Thee weeks spent in Cuba were similar. A run-down but fairly clean old hotel, 12 miles outside Havana. A beach very close by, watched albatrosses flying over. Went to bars and outdoor cafƩs to hear great local music (shook hands with the musicians). Pedaled old bicycles from our hotel to nearby villages. Took a bus into Havana to walk the streets, or hire an unlicensed "taxi", went to a great evening baseball game.