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How did you decide to be expat?

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guest22
Hey all. I  will share the link here so you can take a look. Its still a work in progress. I started a year ago writing the content but took some time deciding how I wished to host the words and then looking at photos from the last years wandering around. I'll be adding new content in the same format as I go and adding blog posts about whatever strikes my fancy. Thanks!
Moderated by Djameel 2 years ago
Reason : No external links/promotional content on the forum please.
Simon Paraguay

I didn't so much decide as one day discover I had become one.

The English bank I worked in was turning into a shop and seeing nothing else that appealed in the UK and not wanting to just go travelling I ended up on a project teaching English to children in rural Paraguay. The full story is on my blog ***

Moderated by Cheryl 2 years ago
Reason : External link + Personal blog
cccmedia

There is no reason Simon's blog should be blocked.

Visit simonsparaguay dot com

Gordon Barlow

There is no reason Simon's blog should be blocked.

Visit simonsparaguay dot com

They usually take a day or two to get around to checking the validity of blogs, CC. It happens to me a lot, but none have ever been rejected. Simon just has to be patient!

Gordon Barlow

I didn't so much decide as one day discover I had become one.


Me too, Simon. I was in Canada on my way home - back to Australia after a couple of years away, in my early 20s - when I took a detour to Bahamas. Three years of tax-free wages there for self and new wife, and I/we wondered whether we really had to go home! So we took a few more detours and finally pulled up on a Caribbean island, where we saw no reason to move again.

Our son followed the path, in a sense. This was his home, and he went hippy-ing in Latin America (not including Paraguay though) where he got a Norwegian girl pregnant and went with her back to Norway. He's still there - most of the time anyway - with two almost-grown-up children. More an immigrant than an expat - so far, anyway.

broccolipiee

when Turkey started to go downhill politically and economically. sadly. i would be happy living in my country with my people forever, i absolutely love the food and the culture. it is a part of me. but now every passing day it seems more like hell. it is not going to get any better for a long time. 

Gordon Barlow

when Turkey started to go downhill politically and economically. sadly. i would be happy living in my country with my people forever, i absolutely love the food and the culture. it is a part of me. but now every passing day it seems more like ... - @broccolipiee

I'm sorry to hear that, broccoli. I have very warm memories of Turkey from the time my wife and I drove and backpacked there nearly sixty years ago. Sixty years is a long time, but when you read this old blog-post of mine you will understand the warmth.

Ìý³ó³Ù³Ù±è²õ://²ú²¹°ù±ô´Ç·É²õ³¦²¹²â³¾²¹²Ô.²ú±ô´Ç²µ²õ±è´Ç³Ù.³¦´Ç³¾/2012/01/²¹°ù²¹°ù²¹³Ù.³ó³Ù³¾±ô

TKCHARGE

@guest22   Sorry blog link not working

El_Jost
I was working in Mombasa at the time on a 6-year contract with the Kenyan govt. which was due to end a matter of a year or so later. At a tourist beach hotel not far from my home I met a young woman from Switzerland. We sort of hit it off together. She visited me again later staying at my home. On the way out of Kenya I visited my g/f in Basel where 47 years later I still live. Now, as a widower, I'm thinking of visiting East Africa again to escape the northern winter.
Wondering how far I can  still climb up a coconut tree...
MarcellaMendez
Greetings from a kenyan. Beautiful story !!
El_Jost

@MarcellaMendez Sadly looking at the CV19 regulations for Kenya entry to your beautiful country is not possible. I'm one of those naughty persons who lives dangerously1f60a.svg and is not vaxxed.

beppi
El Jost: Too bad for you - you can basically forget about all long-distance travel for the foreseeable future! Why do you do that to yourself (and your dreams)?
OceanBeach92107

@MarcellaMendez Sadly looking at the CV19 regulations for Kenya entry to your beautiful country is not possible. I'm one of those naughty persons who lives dangerously1f60a.svg and is not vaxxed.

- @El_Jost
You don't need to be vaccinated to enter Vietnam.
El_Jost
You don't need to be vaccinated to enter Vietnam.
- @OceanBeach92107

Yes, I see Vietnam is open to all. Good to see it.
Actually the situation worldwide is not as restrictive as some will have it.
At present:- 
89 countries are freely open to the unvaxed.
69 are open but require a test certificate, which is no great hassle.
and 20 require test & quarantine
In addition, 49 countries are closed, many regardless of vax-status.

edkimble

@procella I knew there had to be something different than what I was living. Something better. I left everything. Stuff. Family. everything. And it was the best decision I ever made. The only person I am responsible for is me. No stress. No begging relatives. No drama just for the sake of drama.


Errol

Gordon Barlow

@MarcellaMendez Sadly looking at the CV19 regulations for Kenya entry to your beautiful country is not possible. I'm one of those naughty persons who lives dangerously1f60a.svg and is not vaxxed.

-@El_Jost

Good for you, Jost! I held out for a year or so, but when my son and one of his daughters wanted to come and stay for a while, I gambled with my life and submitted to the jabs. I'm still alive (as you see...), and haven't ever caught the Covid, unlike my many friends who caught it after being jabbed. Maybe as an old man (83), I have enough natural immunity. Who knows? I'm on the side of everyone who resisted the vaccine, including my other granddaughter - and you!

Mac68

@MarcellaMendez Sadly looking at the CV19 regulations for Kenya entry to your beautiful country is not possible. I'm one of those naughty persons who lives dangerously1f60a.svg and is not vaxxed.

-@El_Jost
Good for you, Jost! I held out for a year or so, but when my son and one of his daughters wanted to come and stay for a while, I gambled with my life and submitted to the jabs. I'm still alive (as you see...), and haven't ever caught the Covid, unlike my many friends who caught it after being jabbed. Maybe as an old man (83), I have enough natural immunity. Who knows? I'm on the side of everyone who resisted the fake vaccine, including my other granddaughter - and you!
-@Gordon Barlow


Reasons for becoming an Expat:


I am enlightened there is so much babble about COVID 19. It seems the center of life for this conversation. However, the much deeper reasons are left out. For us it was simply the ability to do so. The lack of an anchor to stay. The country of my wife's birth. Her family. A way of life.


MAc

Gordon Barlow

Well, Mac, varying from the script is pretty common on international forums!


To your reasons, I would add "a sense of adventure". I left Australia at age 23, to see the world. That was in 1963. And I never went back except to visit. My wife and I experienced expat life in Canada, Bahamas, New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), England - and Cayman in the Caribbean in 1978. A few years after that, we decided to stay here, which made us immigrants rather than expats, although all immigrants here are always called "expats" regardless of their status.


Now our only child is an immigrant in Norway, with three Norwegian children of his own. Who knows where those children will end up. It's a very hospitable world!

OceanBeach92107

You don't need to be vaccinated to enter Vietnam. - @OceanBeach92107

Yes, I see Vietnam is open to all. Good to see it.
-@El_Jost


Technically, no.


Citizens of 80 nations are eligible for the eVisas tourist visa in Vietnam.


has to continue waiting to enter the country, unless they have an employment visa, family visa exemption certificate or investor visa.

Mac68

Well, Mac, varying from the script is pretty common on international forums!
To your reasons, I would add "a sense of adventure". I left Australia at age 23, to see the world. That was in 1963. And I never went back except to visit. My wife and I experienced expat life in Canada, Bahamas, New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), England - and Cayman in the Caribbean in 1978. A few years after that, we decided to stay here, which made us immigrants rather than expats, although all immigrants here are always called "expats" regardless of their status.

Now our only child is an immigrant in Norway, with three Norwegian children of his own. Who knows where those children will end up. It's a very hospitable world!
-@Gordon Barlow


Gordon,

I must say, of course you are correct about the sense of adventure. I traveled to many parts of the world as a function of my employment. However, Viet Nam is pretty animate about it's restrictions. So, I guess we always remain expats in Vietnam. The manner in which the West delt Viet Nam in the past has left its mark. Viet Nam for Vietnamese, all others are Expats here always in some way or another.


MAc

Genuinsanity

@procella

I couldn't  stand myself  so I keep running  from country to country... but everywhere I go.... there I am. Oh , god.

CamHenneman

I want to talk with people who have lived in Fiji

beppi

@CamHenneman Then it makes sense to post on the Fiji forum, not here!

Aidan in HCMC

@CamHenneman

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