One year is enough time to research every visa you might qualify for, gather your documents, get apostilles, create a remote or passive income stream, and submit your application. It's more than enough time. So if a year has passed and you still haven't done any of those things, the timeline isn't the problem. Your commitment is. Here's what actually happens in that year for most people: They follow expat accounts. Join Facebook groups. Watch hundreds of videos. Save Instagram posts. Make Pinterest boards. They collect information like it's a hobby instead of acting on any of it. Because collecting feels productive. It feels like progress. It gives you something to talk about at parties. But it's not planning. It's research theater. Planning has milestones. Deadlines. Concrete steps with completion dates. "By March I'll have my documents apostilled. By June I'll submit my visa application. By September I'll be there." Performing has vibes. Somedays. "I'm still figuring it out" energy that never actually resolves. If you've been "planning" for over a year, stop lying to yourself. You're either going to move or you're not. But stop calling procrastination preparation. Link in bio if you're ready to stop performing and actually execute. ππΊπΈ
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Real talk, if you've been planning to move abroad for over a year, you're not planning. You're performing.
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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. ππΊπΈ #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. ππΊπΈ #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. ππΊπΈ #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. ππΊπΈ