Replying to @seraphina.shop Picking the country you should move should be an analytical choice not an emotional decision. I match financial considerations, healthcare concerns, educational requirements, weather preferences, citizenship potential, diversity and inclusion data, and more - to find you the right country to move to. Donโt fall for the trap of choosing a country just because it goes viral. There are lots of wonderful places to live that will match your criteria, but just havenโt become popular yet. Often, the reason they havenโt gone viral is because the income requirements are too high for travel influencers to qualify, so only older people are able to utilize those visas. Find out your options in the Global Life Accelerator group coaching program. ๐๐บ๐ธ #TikTokEncyclopediaContest
@nomadveronicaTranscript
I love that all of these things are priorities in the next place that you're going to call home. And the United States is not providing safety for minorities or healthcare for all or cost of living that is reasonable for what the wages are, but you can't find those things abroad. And what I do is a very comprehensive approach where I match your reality with visa programs around the world and I use data to back it up. To you say that you have these priorities like diversity and I use data from places like the other random belonging institute that ranks racial inclusiveness. I use data from Equaldex that ranks inclusion for LGBTQIA+ individuals. I use data from the world happiness report. I use data from the global peace and security index to rank safety for women and children. And I use all this data in conjunction with where you will be allowed to live. So I match up your priorities in a way that will give you a really good look at all the places that you can possibly live, instead of just relying on viral articles. Because more often than not, people will come to me and they'll say, Veronica, I want to move to this place or this place because they saw an article or a video about it. And that place doesn't match any of the things that they tell me that they want. Or they'll say, like, here are the three places I'm thinking. And those places have nothing in common. One super expensive, one's extremely developing country and one has no visa process that they can apply to. So it doesn't make any sense how people choose the countries that they choose, but that's where I come in. I'm the expert that's going to take all that back in, boring data and put it together in a report for my clients that will say, here's what matches your priorities where we'll actually take you based on your logistical reality. So if you're looking for where that country would be for you, I've got a group coaching program linked in my bio right now called the 2026 Global Life Accelerator. That's going to be an entire 60 day program where I'm going to teach Americans where they should move and how they can do it in 2026. We're going to stop with the analysis paralysis and I'm going to show you the path to make that move abroad happen for you in 2026. [BLANK_AUDIO]
Download Transcript
Related Videos

You can move abroad on SSDI. You cannot move abroad on SSI. Know the difference. SSDI is Social Security Disability Insurance. You earned it through working. It follows you to other countries and counts as passive income for visa applications. SSI is Supplemental Security Income. It's need-based and requires you to live in the US. Leave for 30+ days and your payments stop. If you're on SSDI, you're not stuck in America. Your benefits will continue in most countries, and passive income visa programs accept SSDI as qualifying income. The average SSDI payment is enough to meet income requirements in multiple countries. You just need to know which ones and how to apply. Link in bio for consultations on moving abroad with disability income. ๐๐บ๐ธ #creatorsearchinsights

Before you move abroad with kids, everyone tells you about the logistics. Visa requirements. School enrollment. Housing. Language barriers. But nobody tells you about the emotional complexity. These aren't deal-breakers. But they're real nomad family struggles. And if you're not prepared for them, they'll catch you off guard in month three when everything feels hard and you start questioning if you made a mistake. You didn't make a mistake. You're just experiencing the parts nobody warned you about. Moving abroad with kids isn't just a logistical challenge. It's an emotional transformation for your entire family. The families who thrive are the ones who expect that transformation instead of being blindsided by it. Link in bio if you want help preparing for the reality of moving abroad with kids, not just the Instagram version. ๐๐บ๐ธ #creatorsearchinsights

France or Thailand? Both are easy visa paths for Americans. But they're completely different lives. France gives you: European culture, proximity to other countries, four seasons, wine country, healthcare that's rated among the best in the world, access to the Schengen zone. Thailand gives you: Tropical beaches, lower cost of living, warm weather year-round, expat-friendly infrastructure, amazing food, island life. Neither is better. They're just different. The question isn't "Which country is best?" It's "What do I actually want from my life abroad?" Do you prioritize travel access or beach living? Cold winters or endless summer? European systems or Southeast Asian ease? Most people can't answer that question because they've never actually thought about what THEY want. They're just chasing what looks good on Instagram. Stop asking which country is better. Start asking which life you actually want to live. Then pick that one and go. Link in bio for exit plan consultations where we figure out what YOUR priorities are and which countries match them. ๐๐บ๐ธ #creatorsearchinsights

Replying to @thats_close_enough Americans will spend $200 on a bulletproof backpack for their 8-year-old and call that normal. Not alarming. Not dystopian. Just... normal. "Better safe than sorry." "Every little bit helps." "At least I'm doing something." You know what else you could do? Move to a country where bulletproof backpacks don't exist because they're not needed. My kids go to school in Portugal with regular backpacks. Because the threat they're designed to protect against doesn't exist here. Not because Portugal has better security. Because Portugal doesn't have a mass shooting problem. The fact that an entire industry exists to profit off your fear should tell you everything about how broken the system is. But instead of leaving the system, you're buying products to survive within it. That's not protection. That's acceptance. Link in bio when you're ready to stop accepting this as normal. ๐๐บ๐ธ