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Laura's avatar

This is a really great post and, after having spent the last several years traveling full time, I have many thoughts on it. I think a lot of it boils down to this though: Don't take it personally.

What I would say to anyone thinking about making a major change like this is: Lots of your old friends and family will say they are going to follow your adventures and lots will say they are going to come visit you, but most will not. While it may feel like they're disinterested, what we found was when we went back "home" to visit, it was like nothing had ever changed and our friends were still great friends. They were just living their lives and we weren't present anymore. It's not that they were mad at us. It's not that they didn't care. They just had their own stuff to do, weren't particularly interested in following in our footsteps, and weren't going to keep us apprised of every event that happened in their lives when we were so far away.

Regardless of what anyone says, most people only have so much bandwidth to spread around, and are going to focus on their immediate concerns. And when we are thousands of miles away, we are not their immediate concern. That's why I've always focused on making friends who are doing what we're doing and who have the same interests. Blogging and Instagram have been great ways for us to connect with other people doing the same things. If our old friends want to follow us on those mediums, they can, but they don't have to and I don't take it personally if they don't. The important thing to me is, when we go "home," it's like we never left. And, when we're there, we make a point of focusing the conversation on them or on current events or other interesting topics and not droning on about our travel stuff. I think that helps a lot too.

Anyway, a great and thought provoking post!!

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Laura Barnett's avatar

Thank you is simply not enough words for me to express to you right now for the willingness to open your heart and write this. I come from a long line of wanderlust people and have travelled extensively all over the world. Less in recent decades while raising our now adult sons, but still, quite a bit compared to many. I married a man who is growing every single year and embraces my need for new experiences and thinking outside the box and for that I am eternally grateful. We decided in 2020 to pursue moving to Portugal in 6 years time at that point. We are halfway through that decision and while I was full steam ahead from the get-go, he took more time. I am a firm believer in speaking your dreams and goals into existence and did that from the start. That is where things got sticky for me/us. The reactions were just as you have listed above. Varied and very insightful, to say the least. Our children, both big travelers themselves, immediately embraced this and still to this day fully support it. We have recently found out we will be grandparents in 2023 and there is a tremendous amount of guilt that I am processing, as you listed above, with moving and not being near my kids and grandchildren and not because they want us to be near but out of fear of what others will judge us for. We have literally been told we are the most un-American people they know for being willing to embrace an 'ex-pat' mentality and this is the greatest country in the world. I won't go into details on every single thing in our lives that match up with what you wrote but I will say this: you have provided me with the hope and excitement that, despite this being a challenge for our relationship and other relationships, it is well worth the experiences and the personal growth that I knew we would find. Thank you, thank you, thank you! We will start 2026 in Portugal and cannot wait to see all of this planning, all of the scouting trips (the ones where I cry on the airplane coming home, 'cuz that happens) and all of the renewing of our spirits and minds while we still are able come to fruition.

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