While learning the language of your host country crosses the mind of most expats at least once during their time on the ground, many foreigners continue to “opt out” because of a variety of factors. Maybe they feel uncomfortable challenging themselves with something new and don’t want to go outside of their comfort zone. Perhaps they work in an English-speaking environment so they think they don’t “need” the language skills. You can shop at the supermarket in English by merely putting things in a cart and then reading the numbers off when the cashier rings them up, so many people think language isn’t a necessity in that regard. You can also point to the picture on the menu when you aren’t sure of what something is called in the local dialect. Not to mention, when all of your friends speak English, or your community and/or work environment is an expat community of English speakers, it tends to lead to insulation where you are living in an isolated bubble of expats who never really blend into the native environment. [Read more...]
Local Markets, Supermarkets and You
One of the first things you will notice in numerous countries outside the Western world is that many of them rely less on supermarkets than they do on local markets. And while the term “organic” might be nothing more than a gimmick in places like the United States (where I watched my mother pay $2 USD for a single cucumber and $4 USD for single onion in 2010 at her local Safeway in Colorado), once you get into the real world outside of the FDA-approved food industry you will discover a wide open world of true organic produce. The kind that doesn’t cost you an arm and a leg and doesn’t need an organic label on it because the locals aren’t chemically engineering their produce, but rather growing it the way nature intended. It is simply organic by its very nature. [Read more...]
Public Transportation around the World
While those of you who were born and bred outside of the United States were weaned on public transportation from the time you were a youngster, those who hail from the United States have faced an entirely different set of standards when it comes to public transportation. Unless you happen to hail from a major city in the United States, chances are your primary mode of transportation was a vehicle of your own. Although places like New York and Chicago have excellent public transportation options, not all major cities in the U.S. are so lucky, and if you are one of the average, everyday sort of Americans you likely view public transportation with disdain. [Read more...]
Guide to Location Independence Pt. 1: Respecting the Way of Life
“When you travel, remember that a foreign country is not designed to make you comfortable. It is designed to make its own people comfortable.” – Clifton Fadiman [Read more...]
Two types of expats
Traveling the world and exploring everything it has to offer is a dream for some people, but for those of us who are known as location independent digital nomads, it is a way of life. And while on the surface it might seem as though it is a carefree, wherever-the-wind-takes-you type of lifestyle that caters more to the single, no-spouse-and-no-kids type of traveler, the truth is that anyone can become location independent, regardless of responsibilities and attachments. All it takes is the desire to explore the world beyond the borders of suburbia, beyond where you have been told the world ends. [Read more...]
















