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Americans are realizing: the system isn't fixable from inside it. But knowing something's broken and knowing where else to go are completely different problems. The information gap: You know America isn't working for your family. You don't know which countries offer visas to Americans without employer sponsorship, what income types qualify for which visa programs, how much money you actually need, or what timeline is realistic. That gap keeps people stuck researching endlessly without progress. What 217 visa programs globally means: I track visa programs across 116 countries. Not tourist visas. Not citizenship by investment requiring millions. Accessible visa programs for regular Americans with: remote income from freelancing or W-2 remote jobs, passive income from rental properties or investments, retirement income from Social Security or pensions. These are visas most Americans can actually qualify for with income they already have or can build. The broken system you're leaving: Healthcare tied to employment trapping you in jobs. Housing costs requiring 40-50% of income. Childcare eating entire second income. Education system training compliance not critical thinking. Gun violence normalized as unavoidable. Medical bankruptcy as leading bankruptcy cause. Retirement pushed to 70+ because costs outpaced savings. Active shooter drills traumatizing kids as "normal safety procedure." You're not imagining it's broken. It is broken. And it's designed to keep you trapped, exhausted, unable to leave. Why people don't leave despite knowing they should: Don't know where they'd qualify to move. Don't understand visa requirements. Think it requires employer sponsorship (hardest path). Think it requires massive savings (depends on country). Think it's only for rich people or retirees (wrong). Overwhelmed by information, don't know where to start. These are solvable problems with guidance from someone who knows which countries offer which visa types. What visa consulting actually does: Analyzes your specific situation: income type, income amount, family size, timeline, constraints. Identifies which countries you qualify for with visa programs matching your income. Explains requirements for each option so you can choose. Provides roadmap from where you are to approved visa. It's not generic advice. It's: here are the 3-7 countries you specifically qualify for, here's what each requires, here's how to apply, here's realistic timeline. The 217 programs across 116 countries: Remote work visas: 95 countries, usually require $2,000-4,000/month income from location-independent work. Passive income visas: 54 countries, usually require $1,000-2,500/month from rentals, investments, dividends. Retirement visas: 68 countries, usually require $1,500-3,000/month from Social Security, pension, retirement accounts. Digital nomad visas: 79 countries, requirements vary, typically 1-2 year terms. Many countries offer multiple visa types. Your situation determines which you pursue. The follow: If you know America's broken and you're ready to explore where else you can actually go with income you have or can build, follow. I post: visa program breakdowns by country, income requirement explanations, timeline expectations, how to structure finances for qualification, which visa types match which situations. Real talk about relocation challenges and benefits. Not Instagram-perfect expat life. Practical information for Americans who know they need to leave and need roadmap for how. What "ready to leave" means: Not "I'll think about it someday." Not "I'm casually interested." Ready to: research seriously, restructure finances if needed, make uncomfortable decisions, commit to timeline, take action despite fear. If that's you, follow. Link in bio when ready for personalized visa consultation. What's keeping you in America despite knowing it's broken? 🆘🇺🇸

@nomadveronica
477 views27 likes0:12ENMay 29, 2026
33 words182 characters3 sentencesReadability: Middle School

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I'm Veronica. I help Americans who know the system is broken but don't know where else to go. I consult on 217 different visa programs, follow this account if you're ready to leave.

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Replying to @smgroff When someone you love tells you they're in pain and identifies specific change that would alleviate that pain, and your response is "but I don't want to change," you're choosing your comfort over their wellbeing. That's not neutral position. That's active choice to prioritize your preference for staying same over their need to stop suffering. Family dynamics often normalize one person carrying disproportionate burden of everyone else's resistance to change. Usually that person is a woman. Usually she's told her pain is: dramatic, exaggerated, something she needs to work on internally, not serious enough to warrant disruption to everyone else's comfort. So she stays. And suffers. And tries to make it work. And feels guilty for even wanting something different. And her mental health deteriorates while everyone around her maintains their comfort by insisting change isn't necessary. This is how families trap people. Not through overt cruelty. Through collective insistence that discomfort of change is worse than one person's ongoing suffering. Through framing her pain as her problem to solve internally rather than family problem requiring collective action. But pain doesn't exist in vacuum. When one family member is drowning, "I don't want to get in the water" isn't loving response. It's abandonment disguised as preference. The fear of moving abroad - fear of unknown, fear of discomfort, fear of change - is valid fear. But it's temporary fear about hypothetical future difficulty. Her pain is current, ongoing, and deteriorating her mental health right now. Choosing temporary fear of change over permanent alleviation of her suffering is choosing wrong thing. And pretending those are equivalent concerns - his fear vs her mental health crisis - is false equivalence that prioritizes his comfort over her wellbeing. If roles were reversed, if he were telling her his mental health was suffering and he'd identified change that would help, and her response was "but I'm scared to change," everyone would see that as unacceptable. They'd tell her to get over her fear and support her partner. But when woman is suffering and family's response is "we're not doing that," it gets framed as reasonable disagreement instead of what it is: choosing collective comfort over her health. The test of whether you love someone isn't whether you're willing to maintain comfortable status quo with them. It's whether you're willing to be uncomfortable to alleviate their suffering. If answer is no - if your fear of change outweighs your concern for their mental health deterioration - you're not operating from love. You're operating from self-interest and calling it family unity. She doesn't need to keep sacrificing herself for people who won't sacrifice their comfort for her wellbeing. She doesn't need to stay stuck because other people are afraid. She doesn't need permission to prioritize her mental health over their preference for sameness. Link in bio for people whose mental health is being sacrificed to maintain other people's comfort. Whose comfort are you prioritizing over your own wellbeing? 🆘🇺🇸

Replying to @smgroff When someone you love tells you they're in pain and identifies specific change that would alleviate that pain, and your response is "but I don't want to change," you're choosing your comfort over their wellbeing. That's not neutral position. That's active choice to prioritize your preference for staying same over their need to stop suffering. Family dynamics often normalize one person carrying disproportionate burden of everyone else's resistance to change. Usually that person is a woman. Usually she's told her pain is: dramatic, exaggerated, something she needs to work on internally, not serious enough to warrant disruption to everyone else's comfort. So she stays. And suffers. And tries to make it work. And feels guilty for even wanting something different. And her mental health deteriorates while everyone around her maintains their comfort by insisting change isn't necessary. This is how families trap people. Not through overt cruelty. Through collective insistence that discomfort of change is worse than one person's ongoing suffering. Through framing her pain as her problem to solve internally rather than family problem requiring collective action. But pain doesn't exist in vacuum. When one family member is drowning, "I don't want to get in the water" isn't loving response. It's abandonment disguised as preference. The fear of moving abroad - fear of unknown, fear of discomfort, fear of change - is valid fear. But it's temporary fear about hypothetical future difficulty. Her pain is current, ongoing, and deteriorating her mental health right now. Choosing temporary fear of change over permanent alleviation of her suffering is choosing wrong thing. And pretending those are equivalent concerns - his fear vs her mental health crisis - is false equivalence that prioritizes his comfort over her wellbeing. If roles were reversed, if he were telling her his mental health was suffering and he'd identified change that would help, and her response was "but I'm scared to change," everyone would see that as unacceptable. They'd tell her to get over her fear and support her partner. But when woman is suffering and family's response is "we're not doing that," it gets framed as reasonable disagreement instead of what it is: choosing collective comfort over her health. The test of whether you love someone isn't whether you're willing to maintain comfortable status quo with them. It's whether you're willing to be uncomfortable to alleviate their suffering. If answer is no - if your fear of change outweighs your concern for their mental health deterioration - you're not operating from love. You're operating from self-interest and calling it family unity. She doesn't need to keep sacrificing herself for people who won't sacrifice their comfort for her wellbeing. She doesn't need to stay stuck because other people are afraid. She doesn't need permission to prioritize her mental health over their preference for sameness. Link in bio for people whose mental health is being sacrificed to maintain other people's comfort. Whose comfort are you prioritizing over your own wellbeing? 🆘🇺🇸

3092:59
You’ve asked the question. You’ve googled it. You’ve watched videos about it. You’ve saved posts about it. You know the answer. You just don’t like the answer because the answer requires doing something uncomfortable. There is no secret pathway. There is no hack. There is no “just apply to this one company and they’ll sponsor you.” There is no waiting until conditions are perfect. There is one path that works for regular people without corporate sponsorship or family wealth: generate income that qualifies you, apply for visa, relocate. That’s it. That’s the whole thing. Everything else is details. The reason you keep asking “how do I move abroad” when you already know how is because you’re hoping someone will tell you different answer. Answer that doesn’t require you to do hard thing you’ve been avoiding. You want someone to say: just save this amount, or just apply to these jobs, or just wait until this timing, or just move to this one country that’s super easy. Something that fits into comfort zone you’re currently in. But comfortable path doesn’t exist. If it did, everyone would take it. The reason most people don’t move abroad isn’t because they can’t figure out how. It’s because knowing how and doing how are completely different things. You can know exactly what’s required and still not do it. Because doing it means: pitching services to strangers, building income stream from scratch, risking failure, being uncomfortable for extended period, taking action before feeling ready. All the information in world doesn’t eliminate discomfort of doing something you’ve never done before. And you’ve been conditioned to avoid discomfort, so you keep researching instead of executing. Research feels productive. Feels like progress. Feels like you’re working on it. But if research never converts to action, it’s just sophisticated way of staying stuck while pretending you’re moving forward. Watch video for the answer you already know but keep hoping will change. Link in bio for people ready to do the uncomfortable thing instead of researching it forever. How long have you known what you need to do without doing it? 🆘🇺🇸

You’ve asked the question. You’ve googled it. You’ve watched videos about it. You’ve saved posts about it. You know the answer. You just don’t like the answer because the answer requires doing something uncomfortable. There is no secret pathway. There is no hack. There is no “just apply to this one company and they’ll sponsor you.” There is no waiting until conditions are perfect. There is one path that works for regular people without corporate sponsorship or family wealth: generate income that qualifies you, apply for visa, relocate. That’s it. That’s the whole thing. Everything else is details. The reason you keep asking “how do I move abroad” when you already know how is because you’re hoping someone will tell you different answer. Answer that doesn’t require you to do hard thing you’ve been avoiding. You want someone to say: just save this amount, or just apply to these jobs, or just wait until this timing, or just move to this one country that’s super easy. Something that fits into comfort zone you’re currently in. But comfortable path doesn’t exist. If it did, everyone would take it. The reason most people don’t move abroad isn’t because they can’t figure out how. It’s because knowing how and doing how are completely different things. You can know exactly what’s required and still not do it. Because doing it means: pitching services to strangers, building income stream from scratch, risking failure, being uncomfortable for extended period, taking action before feeling ready. All the information in world doesn’t eliminate discomfort of doing something you’ve never done before. And you’ve been conditioned to avoid discomfort, so you keep researching instead of executing. Research feels productive. Feels like progress. Feels like you’re working on it. But if research never converts to action, it’s just sophisticated way of staying stuck while pretending you’re moving forward. Watch video for the answer you already know but keep hoping will change. Link in bio for people ready to do the uncomfortable thing instead of researching it forever. How long have you known what you need to do without doing it? 🆘🇺🇸

4352:23
Replying to @theneauxexperience Americans think they need massive income to afford Europe because they're calculating European cost of living using American expense structure, which is backwards. The reason Americans feel broke isn't because they don't earn enough. It's because American life comes with mandatory expenses that consume income before you even get to basics like housing and food. Before American paycheck reaches rent, it's already been depleted by: health insurance premiums, student loan payments, car payments and insurance, childcare costs, retirement contributions because no pension exists, emergency fund because no safety net exists. What's left after those mandatory extractions is what you're trying to live on. And it's not enough. So you assume you'd need way more money to live in Europe where things seem expensive. But Europeans aren't paying those things. Their paycheck isn't being extracted before it reaches them. They're not: paying $500/month health insurance, paying $400/month student loans, paying $600/month car costs because they don't need cars, paying $1,200/month childcare. Remove those from budget and suddenly income that felt inadequate in America becomes comfortable in Europe. Not because Europe is cheaper across the board. Because expense categories that consume American income don't exist or cost fraction of American price. This is why visa programs in European countries set income thresholds around €1,500-2,000/month. Not because they think that's poverty level. Because that's genuinely livable income when you're not also hemorrhaging money on American-specific expense categories. Americans look at that threshold and think "I can't even pay my rent on that." Correct. In America. Because American rent is subsidizing: lack of public transportation, car-dependent infrastructure, healthcare tied to employment, education funding through property taxes. You're not just paying for housing. You're paying for all the infrastructure failures baked into what housing costs in car-dependent, service-poor, safety-net-absent American location. European housing costs less because: public transit reduces car dependency, healthcare isn't tied to location, schools funded nationally not by local property values, density reduces infrastructure costs per person. The average European isn't making six figures. They're making modest income that covers: housing, food, transportation, healthcare, education, recreation, savings. Because those things cost what they actually cost, not inflated American prices. Americans can't conceptualize this because only reference point is American expense structure where modest income leaves you broke. So you assume living well requires high income everywhere. But well-being isn't determined by income level. It's determined by relationship between income and expenses. Most countries have better relationship than America does. This is why Americans moving to Europe on same income they had in America describe feeling wealthy for first time. Income didn't change. Expenses did. Dramatically. Link in bio for people whose "Europe money" fears are based on American expense math that doesn't apply. What expense would disappear from your budget if you lived in Europe? 🆘🇺🇸

Replying to @theneauxexperience Americans think they need massive income to afford Europe because they're calculating European cost of living using American expense structure, which is backwards. The reason Americans feel broke isn't because they don't earn enough. It's because American life comes with mandatory expenses that consume income before you even get to basics like housing and food. Before American paycheck reaches rent, it's already been depleted by: health insurance premiums, student loan payments, car payments and insurance, childcare costs, retirement contributions because no pension exists, emergency fund because no safety net exists. What's left after those mandatory extractions is what you're trying to live on. And it's not enough. So you assume you'd need way more money to live in Europe where things seem expensive. But Europeans aren't paying those things. Their paycheck isn't being extracted before it reaches them. They're not: paying $500/month health insurance, paying $400/month student loans, paying $600/month car costs because they don't need cars, paying $1,200/month childcare. Remove those from budget and suddenly income that felt inadequate in America becomes comfortable in Europe. Not because Europe is cheaper across the board. Because expense categories that consume American income don't exist or cost fraction of American price. This is why visa programs in European countries set income thresholds around €1,500-2,000/month. Not because they think that's poverty level. Because that's genuinely livable income when you're not also hemorrhaging money on American-specific expense categories. Americans look at that threshold and think "I can't even pay my rent on that." Correct. In America. Because American rent is subsidizing: lack of public transportation, car-dependent infrastructure, healthcare tied to employment, education funding through property taxes. You're not just paying for housing. You're paying for all the infrastructure failures baked into what housing costs in car-dependent, service-poor, safety-net-absent American location. European housing costs less because: public transit reduces car dependency, healthcare isn't tied to location, schools funded nationally not by local property values, density reduces infrastructure costs per person. The average European isn't making six figures. They're making modest income that covers: housing, food, transportation, healthcare, education, recreation, savings. Because those things cost what they actually cost, not inflated American prices. Americans can't conceptualize this because only reference point is American expense structure where modest income leaves you broke. So you assume living well requires high income everywhere. But well-being isn't determined by income level. It's determined by relationship between income and expenses. Most countries have better relationship than America does. This is why Americans moving to Europe on same income they had in America describe feeling wealthy for first time. Income didn't change. Expenses did. Dramatically. Link in bio for people whose "Europe money" fears are based on American expense math that doesn't apply. What expense would disappear from your budget if you lived in Europe? 🆘🇺🇸

3752:37
The childhood your kids could have in America - same town, same school, same peers, same cultural context from birth through graduation - isn't objectively better than childhood that spans continents. It's just the default you're accepting without considering the alternative. American parents agonize over: which school district, which extracurriculars, which experiences will give kids advantages, which opportunities will set them up for success. All optimization within single geographic and cultural context. Meanwhile parents raising kids internationally are giving them: direct experience with how different cultures function, friendships spanning continents, perspectives on history and current events from multiple vantage points, adaptability from navigating change, identity that isn't tied to single nationality. The concern that moving kids internationally will harm them assumes stability and consistency are highest values in childhood development. But research on third culture kids shows: higher cultural intelligence, greater adaptability, broader worldview, stronger language acquisition, deeper understanding of global systems. These aren't theoretical benefits. These are observable outcomes in adults who were raised internationally as children. They navigate complexity better, adapt to change faster, connect across cultural differences more easily than peers who grew up in single location. The grief that comes with this lifestyle - missing places, leaving friends, constantly adapting to new contexts - is real. But grief and growth coexist. Kids can miss Japan while loving Portugal while being excited about next adventure. Capacity to hold complexity is itself valuable skill. American education teaches about world through textbooks and videos. International childhood teaches about world through direct experience. Reading about how different cultures approach education versus experiencing three different educational systems produces different depth of understanding. The friendships formed across countries aren't less meaningful because they're maintained digitally. They're often more intentional because distance requires effort. Kids choosing to maintain connection across time zones and continents are learning that relationships worth having are worth working for. The identity formation is different too. Instead of absorbing single national identity as default, third culture kids actively construct identity from multiple cultural influences. They choose what resonates, what feels true, what serves them - rather than inheriting single predetermined cultural package. This doesn't make them rootless or confused. It makes them flexible about what home means and confident that they can create belonging anywhere rather than believing belonging only exists in one specific place. The American parents keeping kids in America to provide stability are choosing known quantity over unknown possibility. That's valid choice. But it's choice, not requirement. And other choice produces different outcomes worth considering. Watch video for specific ways international childhood shapes kids differently than American childhood. Link in bio for parents ready to give kids global perspective instead of single-culture experience. 🆘🇺🇸

The childhood your kids could have in America - same town, same school, same peers, same cultural context from birth through graduation - isn't objectively better than childhood that spans continents. It's just the default you're accepting without considering the alternative. American parents agonize over: which school district, which extracurriculars, which experiences will give kids advantages, which opportunities will set them up for success. All optimization within single geographic and cultural context. Meanwhile parents raising kids internationally are giving them: direct experience with how different cultures function, friendships spanning continents, perspectives on history and current events from multiple vantage points, adaptability from navigating change, identity that isn't tied to single nationality. The concern that moving kids internationally will harm them assumes stability and consistency are highest values in childhood development. But research on third culture kids shows: higher cultural intelligence, greater adaptability, broader worldview, stronger language acquisition, deeper understanding of global systems. These aren't theoretical benefits. These are observable outcomes in adults who were raised internationally as children. They navigate complexity better, adapt to change faster, connect across cultural differences more easily than peers who grew up in single location. The grief that comes with this lifestyle - missing places, leaving friends, constantly adapting to new contexts - is real. But grief and growth coexist. Kids can miss Japan while loving Portugal while being excited about next adventure. Capacity to hold complexity is itself valuable skill. American education teaches about world through textbooks and videos. International childhood teaches about world through direct experience. Reading about how different cultures approach education versus experiencing three different educational systems produces different depth of understanding. The friendships formed across countries aren't less meaningful because they're maintained digitally. They're often more intentional because distance requires effort. Kids choosing to maintain connection across time zones and continents are learning that relationships worth having are worth working for. The identity formation is different too. Instead of absorbing single national identity as default, third culture kids actively construct identity from multiple cultural influences. They choose what resonates, what feels true, what serves them - rather than inheriting single predetermined cultural package. This doesn't make them rootless or confused. It makes them flexible about what home means and confident that they can create belonging anywhere rather than believing belonging only exists in one specific place. The American parents keeping kids in America to provide stability are choosing known quantity over unknown possibility. That's valid choice. But it's choice, not requirement. And other choice produces different outcomes worth considering. Watch video for specific ways international childhood shapes kids differently than American childhood. Link in bio for parents ready to give kids global perspective instead of single-culture experience. 🆘🇺🇸

2183:23