vram22 an hour ago

Anyone here done it differently and better?

  • specproc 5 minutes ago

    Yup, I didn't nomad. Been more or less in the same (non-Western) place for fifteen plus years.

    I have meaningful, long-term connections with the place I live, it's people, culture and bureaucratic peculiarities. I've got lifelong friends here, local and foreign. Not going to pretend my language skills are great, but they're good enough.

    It's a good life and I still love it, though I recognise I'll have to move home at some point for various reasons largely (but not exclusively) unrelated to where I am.

    On the economic front, I've seen my host country follow the opposite trajectory of my home country. It's grown whilst home has stagnated. Both countries are turning authoritarian, but please do let me know of any country that isn't descending into shit on the political front right now.

    Data points:

    - Married, but to someone from my OG country. Met out here, married out here, been together since about year 1.

    - No kids, one dog.

    - Large enough family at home to not need to be around for elders.

    - Multiple careers, started of in the aid biz and transitioned to dev work.

throwawayffffas 2 hours ago

They are doing it wrong, they are acting like they are on vacation, which obviously gets old pretty fast.

The right way to do it is to setup a regular lifestyle in the place of your choosing, rent an apartment, instead of Airbnb and hotels, work from a home office or an actual office instead of Starbucks.

Ideally learn the local language and go where the locals go instead of where the tourists go.

Obviously this can't work if you are moving every other month or so, but that too gets old pretty fast.

  • specproc 2 minutes ago

    Don't know why this was down-voted.

    Totally agree that moving around too much and not learning the language is where most people fail. We need community to feel happy, you're not going to get it doing multiple countries in one year.