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Kurt P.'s avatar

Thanks for opening this up. I was surprised that you don’t really talk about what these choices mean for children growing up. Ie who they grow up with, not just where. Schools & family time are certainly considered, but when we moved from nyc to Asheville my daughters life was changed by being in a neighborhood of kids, ours by having 4-5 families we go camping with and hang out with. It was part of what made us grateful to be here.

One of those families landed here despite using a spreadsheet to rank locations, that didn’t include this place. Just a note to engineers, don’t abstract it too much & neighbors matter.

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Connor Swenson's avatar

Great read!

Late commenter here :)

My wife and I went through a very similar journey to what you’ve described. I left Google just 2 weeks before the pandemic to go solo, and as the world opened up, and my wife joined the business, we realized we had a lot more freedom…and we were sick of London weather!

We went on a what we called a Semi-Nomadic experiment, aimed at testing out different cities for about 3 months to get the feel.

For us, we chose Lisbon due to climate, access to nature, great people, and close-ish to my wife’s family in London.

Cost-of-living actually wasn’t that high on our radar (somewhat naively) but after spending a few months in Austin and then going to Lisbon, we realized how much this impacts quality of life (US healthcare as a self-employed person is nuts)

Anyway, thanks for sharing and I’ll definitely use this essay the next time a friend asks for advice on where to live!

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