carolinax@alien.topBtoDigital Nomads•Where is the most far-flung place you have eaten American fast food?English
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1 year agoI had cheesecake factory at Shanghai Disneyland. It was a nice meal.
I had cheesecake factory at Shanghai Disneyland. It was a nice meal.
I know of one guy who runs a music website (or did back in 2015 onward) who DN’d through SEA. He built an interesting niche EDM site and accepted donations. It was interesting stuff.
I know of another guy who is a music producer and singer and for like 15 years he built a career for himself selling licenses to his corporate music on Audio Jungle, he’s done very well for himself but he’s not a DN and he doesn’t like to travel (even turned down a North American tour).
Born in Colombia, spent 28 years in Canada, I moved back to set up a base in Colombia at 34 with my husband and kid. Like you, I spent summers here with family.
It has been a learning experience. It hasn’t been as easy I thought it would be. My family and I basically live parallel lives and occasionally meet up (and we live in the same city, pretty typical). Though I grew up in a Colombian household Spanish isn’t my first language, it’s English, so despite having advanced to fluent language skills the accent gives me away every time. I’m seen and treated as a foreigner or gringa every where, which I can sometimes use to my advantage. The city that I live in is also one of the the most classist, elitist cities I’ve ever experienced from a local population so that’s been rattling, even though I’m also in their so-called “high society” it’s absolutely mental though. I don’t spent all day discussing who my interior designers are, I’m doing shit they don’t relate to, like walking everywhere, building a company, going to the gym 5 days a week. Like, shit, some jardín moms are brutal dude. One flat out asked me why I have an accent 😂 I was like “¿en que idioma mamí? 🥴” it’s just a elitism I’ve never experienced before and it’s next level because I am integrating into the local scene as opposed to the nomad/immigrant scene.
Anyway, other than my personal struggles making good local friends here, LatAm is an unbelievable place to raise a family. We’re so happy we’re here!