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? ๐๐บ๐ธ
@nomadveronicaTranscript
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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The life you've built in America isn't the life you wanted. It's the life you could scrape together under constraints of: wages that don't cover basics, healthcare tied to employment, housing costs consuming half your income, constant financial stress, survival mode as default state. You didn't choose misery. You chose best option available within impossible constraints. But those constraints are geographic. Change geography, change constraints, change what's possible. The apartment you can barely afford in America becomes the nice place with breathing room abroad. The paycheck that barely covers survival in America becomes the income that allows saving abroad. The constant stress about one emergency destroying you financially becomes manageable situation where emergencies are expensive but not catastrophic. Same income. Same skills. Same person. Different location. Completely different life. You're not stuck because you lack resources. You're stuck because resources you have don't work in location you're in. Move those resources to location where they work better, and you're not stuck anymore. But moving requires: tolerating uncertainty about how things will work out, being uncomfortable while figuring out new systems, releasing familiar patterns even when familiar is miserable, trusting you can build better life from scratch. Most people choose familiar misery over unfamiliar uncertainty. Devil you know feels safer than devil you don't, even when devil you know is grinding you down. This is why people stay in: jobs they hate, relationships that don't work, locations that don't serve them, lives that feel like slow suffocation. Because at least they know how to survive current misery. Unknown is terrifying even when unknown might be better. But what if you're not choosing between misery and uncertainty? What if you're choosing between: familiar misery that will continue indefinitely, or temporary uncertainty that leads to actually building life you want? When you're in survival mode, you're making choices based on: what's cheapest, what's fastest, what gets you through next month, what keeps crisis at bay. Not what you actually want. What you can manage given constraints. Those choices compound into life that doesn't reflect your preferences. Reflects what you could piece together while drowning. But when you move somewhere your income works better, you're not in survival mode anymore. You have breathing room to choose based on: what you actually want, what serves your family, what creates life you're proud of. That's not small difference. That's the difference between life you're enduring and life you're choosing. Living in America isn't default you're stuck with. It's choice you're making every day by not choosing differently. And choosing differently is available to you. Link in bio for people ready to choose. What would you choose if survival wasn't consuming all your energy? ๐๐บ๐ธ