The price of … everything?I reckon Norway would tick most boxes for me: sea, mountains, a proper winter, culturally rich, a high standard of living and good knitwear. What's not to like?
The price of … everything?I reckon Norway would tick most boxes for me: sea, mountains, a proper winter, culturally rich, a high standard of living and good knitwear. What's not to like?
I know I mentioned Wyken in my post, but at least I did not say Earlsdon as that would make me sound altogether too posh.Okay. Mod hat on. Calling time on posts growing more and more politically negative. Removed the last two posts that were no longer anything to do with the thread before. There are others that are going in a negative direction that I have left since they are not so political, but let’s try to be more positive….or don’t post in this thread.
Threads like this are meant to lift peoples’ spirits, both writing what they would like to do, and reading where others would go. So please, no more negative diatribe…mild moans still okay
Thank you.
Chris
Ah, but we are told that money is no object...The price of … everything?
To be fair, Scandinavian countries are like that.I get money is "no object" but, really high cost of living areas have an impact on society that to me is generally an overall negative on society at large.
This means even if I win a Billion Dollar (USD) Lottery, I am not moving to an area like Scandinavia or Switzerland. Money only matters to a point and after that can be a real negative.
If money is "no object", I am living in a middle class economy where people are happy and most live at the "same level" so there is general equality amongst everyone.
I moved away from Tucson, Arizona and returning years later was not nearly as happy overall because the middle class was totally gone. The majority of people were living paycheck to paycheck at a basic subsistence level and a small minority were living at a really upper-class level with expensive cars and housing totally detached from the other segments of society beyond themselves and those living the same life style.
Whether I live in the USA, Europe, or in the Asia/Pacific Rim, I want to live in a fairly flat society where people have enough for a happy life with all the necessities being not a challenge for almost everyone with money left over for the nicer things in life in moderation.
I haven’t worn one of those for the last ten years and then it was only sometimes at work.
I’m part of a large and growing family, My “ties” have ties.
It was just my thinking as I read the OP.
In the spirit of the original post, if I really was financially independent there are so many places that I world love to go and where I could be useful. There are so many places that I’ve only read about and don’t really know much about the culture in practice. I’ve also got an old brain which even struggles with my native English. I’m not sure how I’d manage a new language.
All that said:
Maybe Holland, Austria, Poland or Northern Italy
Awesome! I hope it all works out for you.Sometimes life throws a possibility & opens a door & my life’s dream is in my grasp.So I’m doing just that.. Abruzzo, Italy is on the cards.(can’t afford Tuscany).
I’m learning the Italian language & currently on the search to buy a stone farm house with around four acres of land with orchard & olive trees.
I’ve purposely thrown myself into work & kept away from a relationship and lived a frugal life to fulfil my dream.
This winter I need to visit & next spring put my feelers out to the locals & access the area.
That is a risk no matter where you buy your dream home.I remember reading about a Canadian who, fearful that WW3 was about to kick off, and living near the US border felt he would likely cop it, decided to move to the most remote place he could find so that he'd be safe from war and the collapse of society.
He moved to the Falklands two weeks before the Argentinians invaded...
Awesome! I hope it all works out for you.
I don't know about inflation and the economy in general over there but, on this side of the Atlantic, home ownership is becoming out of reach for many.
Housing sales nationwide are down significantly due to unaffordability in the USA. Most national tracking sites blame rising interest rates combined with the inflation of daily necessities.Do you mind me asking - are you speaking nationally or locally? IE In Texas itself?
The trend has been gradually growing for decades. However the pandemic gave it a shove. Property prices exploded as people forced to work from home sought to upgrade those homes, either by remodeling or simply buying bigger homes. Others who weren’t so lucky as to be able to work from home simply sat unemployed and were displaced from the market. Then the election turned the economy on its head and nothing has really recovered. All that said some careers are fairing better than others and new construction is definitely happening.Do you mind me asking - are you speaking nationally or locally? IE In Texas itself?