Lessons from My First Year as a New Digital Nomad – Sell It All!
One year ago I sold my house and this whole “Experiment” really got interesting. Here’s the backstory and lessons learned along my crazy first year as a for realsies Digital Nomad…
So this whole “Experiment” actually started with deep roots in travel, and only travel. I never really traveled until I was in my late 20s. At that time, I still thought that travel was fairly unattainable because it cost too much.
I was born in the US; that’s what we’re fed. Get a job, get your 2-3 weeks vacation a year, and go to a resort. Then go home and ponder about the feeling that you need a vacation from your vacation…
Sorry, but I wasn’t having that. I had a choice to make. I could do the “comfortable, easy resort travel 1-2 times a year,” or I could find a way to see more. I chose to start this experiment of pushing my comfort zone because I wanted more travel, and I was willing to hack my way into it. If you want to learn from someone that got so fed up with his boring, non-traveling situation, that he just said, “fuck it, I’ll figure out”, then I’m your guy.
What I found was that the “cheap” way I travel offers so much more than hotels and cookie cutter vacations ever could. I meet more people, see more unique, local places, and experience so much more than I ever imagined I could, and I do it for around $50 a day US, and never feel like I’m pinched. We need to have lots of tools in our travel tool belts, from hostels to hotels, couchsurfing to housesitting, credit card flipping and tons of other tricks of the travel hacking trade.
And sometimes it’s just about exploring some new places and writing home about it so that you can add it to your bucket / before list!
One year ago I sold my house and this whole “Experiment” really got interesting. Here’s the backstory and lessons learned along my crazy first year as a for realsies Digital Nomad…
…the unfortunate part is that a lot of time it’s pretty unclear that the voices in your head aren’t necessarily your voice, it’s the voice resonating that societal imprint…
Last night I fell asleep with the Jeep door wide open as I lay watching the nearly full moon illuminate my world at over 7,000ft, camping next to Cathedral Valley in Capitol Reef National Park. That wasn’t the plan. There was no plan, really…
I spent 2 months as a digital nomad in Centro Queretaro, Mexico, and I ate A LOT. Here are over 10+ of my favorite spots…with delicious photos as proof…
After-Market Roof Rack Awning or Tarp Systems were too pricey…so I built one for my Jeep Wrangler JKU Thule roof rack! Here are all the details…
Google Maps Saved Lists are an awesome way of storing travel ideas for future use. Here are detailed instructions on how to use Google Maps saved lists…
Setting up Google Maps custom saved lists on a computer in a web browser is a little different than in app or on a device. Here’s a quick set up how-to with some tips!
Setting up Google Maps custom saved lists on your phone or in app is a little different than in a browser window. Here’s a quick set up how-to with some tips!
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Been wondering how the hell all those digital nomads, location-independent travelers, and remote workers, travel “full-time?” Maybe you’ve thought about living that life one day, but you’re really not sure where to start.
Beyond giving you the stepping stones to dive into short-term domestic and international travel, this book will show you how long-term travelers extend those tools, maximize their budgets, and turn weeks into months…or even years…of traveling the world indefinitely.