The Grown-Up's Guide to Running Away from Home, Second Edition: Making a New Life Abroad

BOOK: The Grown-Up's Guide to Running Away from Home, Second Edition: Making a New Life Abroad
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Copyright © 1998, 2008 by Rosanne Knorr
Front cover photo © 2008 by Medioimages/Photodisc

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except brief excerpts for the purpose of review, without written permission of the publisher.

Ten Speed Press
PO Box 7123
Berkeley, California 94707
www.tenspeed.com

Distributed in Australia by Simon and Schuster Australia, in Canada by Ten Speed Press Canada, in New Zealand by Southern Publishers Group, in South Africa by Real Books, and in the United Kingdom and Europe by Publishers Group UK.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Knorr, Rosanne.
  The grown-up’s guide to running away from home : making a new life abroad / Rosanne Knorr. — 2nd ed.
    p. cm.
  Summary: “A primer for midlife adults who long to live or retire in another country, featuring information on choosing a destination, readying finances, settling in abroad, and keeping in touch with stateside friends and family; advice is interspersed with anecdotes from the author’s own adventures and interviews with other experienced expatriates”—Provided by publisher.
  Includes bibliographical references.
  eISBN: 978-0-307-80776-2
1. Retirement, Places of—Foreign countries. 2. Americans—Foreign countries. 3. Retirees—Life skills guides. I. Title.
HQ1063.K65 2008
646.7′9—dc22
                                              2007044780

v3.1_r2

To Jenn, for inspiration, love, and laughter

CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

For sharing advice and tales from their adventures, I want to thank the following grown-ups: Frances Aronson, Anne and Bob Berra, Mary Campbell, Treasa Campbell, Sue and Jim Chambers, Pam and Steve deLyra, Douglas Gilbert, Claire Larson, Judy Lawrence, Margot Milner, Dave and Susan Oswald, Ben Ott, Maria-Eugenia Ott, Shannon Roxborough, Peter Vaughan, and Dana Wood. Thanks, also, to the shy who didn’t want recognition. Other than that, if I’ve forgotten anyone, please forgive a poor memory.

NOTE TO READERS

The first edition of
The Grown-Up’s Guide to Running Away from Home
earned praise for the practical tips and inspiration that helped people plan an adventure overseas.

To keep this book relevant, our revised edition reflects changes that have taken place in the world. It updates the numerous resources available for planning a sabbatical or retirement abroad and adds new information on advanced technology, especially in areas such as communication and travel services.

Every care has been taken to ensure this version is accurate as well as inspiring. It’s designed to help you explore the many options available for revitalizing your adult years with a long-term adventure abroad.

This book provides an excellent base and overview, but it cannot substitute for the professional assistance of accountants, lawyers, tax experts, travel agents, and other specialists involved in making a transition overseas. You must make informed decisions based on your specific personal and financial situation.

To the best of my knowledge, this material is accurate. However, regulations related to living abroad change, as do resources, locations, phone numbers, and other details. And costs can change depending on inflation and exchange rates. As you make plans, investigate fully and carefully. Neither I nor the publisher can take any responsibility for the outcome of actions you take after reading this book.

Many thanks for reading—and may “running away” provide you with fascinating experiences, fulfillment, and happiness beyond your dreams.

INTRODUCTION

Life is either a daring adventure or nothing
.

—Helen Keller

Long, long ago—before career ladders and children and homes with mortgages to be paid on a regular basis—I dreamed of sipping wine at a French café with a view of the Eiffel Tower or waking to the day in a whitewashed cottage on a Greek island. You can fill in your own dreams. We all have them.

But for most of us, the travel through life follows a practical path. As we reach middle age, it’s our children—the students in high school or college—who participate in a year abroad. We see them and say, “I wish I could have done that.” Then, one day, my husband and I asked, “Why can’t we do it now?”

Midlife is an ideal time for adventure overseas. The empty nest provides the opportunity to “run away” from the humdrum habits of several decades and create a fulfilling second life. As my husband commented: “I’ve done this life. I want to have another.”

We ended up living in a French village where we discovered new tastes in food and wine. We met fascinating people and explored different cultures. We learned a new language, studied art, and biked vineyards. And our French home served as a European base, the jumping-off point for driving trips to Italy, Spain, Portugal, and beyond—each trip a new adventure in itself. Best of all, we saw it all for ourselves, with a freshness and spirit of adventure that put new sparkle into our life. After spending years raising our kids, we became the kids we wanted to be. You can take that literally.

One wonderful result of our adventure was the realization that gaining knowledge of the world is the true fountain of youth. Like children, we discovered the world again, after all these old years of living. We didn’t worry or wonder just what it was we’d do with the rest of our lives. We were certainly not bored. No, we were too busy comparing the latest wines with our neighbors, exploring medieval churches and museums, participating fully in town life here, while planning the trips to nearby regions and countries. Our life was full and, as the French say,
agréable
. We did what we wanted when we wanted—a dream that we had never thought could become a reality but proved to be amazingly easy to accomplish.

You too can achieve this freedom. Enjoy a year, or more, of life overseas. Relish that feeling of discovery. It’s
not
just for the young. And when you return to your old life—if you choose to return—you’ll bring new interests
and an intriguing mystique home. If you return to work, you’ll add an international perspective to your career.

Running away from home as an adult
does
take more planning than it does for a younger person. When we were younger we had nothing to lose if we took off for a year or more. We didn’t have jobs, or at least not ones that paid enough to matter at that point. No children or elderly parents to be concerned about. No home with a mortgage, filled with stuff. Any belongings we did have could be stashed at our parents’ house until our return.

But we are the parents now. We have the houses packed with the accumulation of a lifetime. The mere thought of arranging a year off is intimidating enough to make anyone want to plop back in front of the TV with an old movie and a beer.

In our case, though, the itch for adventure was still there at ages fifty and sixty-one. We needed to scratch the itch while we were still young enough to negotiate old-world cobblestone streets, or we would forever regret not doing it.

So we searched libraries and bookstores. We made idiots of ourselves asking people if they’d ever lived overseas. Many people answered in the affirmative, and we grilled them on how they had arranged the countless details. Their input helped make this book possible. (Some of their attitudes and comments are reflected in quotes scattered throughout this book.) We discovered a range of attitudes toward living this type of adventure. The brave souls simply up and went. The not-so-brave (or less foolhardy), like us, talked it over and over. But they still dreamed.

Most of all, the number of midlifers who had successfully achieved an extended leave encouraged us. I started studying what they did to achieve their dreams. For five years before our departure, I looked for others who had done what we planned. I interviewed them, found out where they went and why, asked how they planned their adventures, and determined what worked and what didn’t. We found the areas we were interested in and took our vacations in those places, watching for the resident Americans of San Miguel or Ajijic or Aix-en-Provence. (If a person spoke English but didn’t carry a camera, it was a clue they weren’t the average tourist!) They proved to be friendly, informative, and, most important, inspiring.

Finally, we narrowed down our destination and studied up on the country we wanted as our overseas base—France. We joined
Alliance Française
, the worldwide group that promotes French culture and language. We practiced our “
Bonjour
.” But were we brave enough to follow our dream?

Gradually, we uncovered the details that would make our adventure overseas possible. We discovered the best means of divesting ourselves of our home and belongings, staying in touch with our family, friends, and financial advisors—and we even planned how to take our only “child” still at home:
a pound puppy named Folly. The details we needed weren’t found in any book, so we were left to either seek out others who had taken the road we wanted to follow or invent the solutions for ourselves.

We found far more adult adventurers than I had thought possible. The reasons they gave for “escaping” overseas were varied, but boiled down to a few basics: They’d had the long hours at work. They’d had the pressures of conformity. They’d had the so-called “good life” of stateside suburbia. Now they wanted to experience more of the world and a different lifestyle before the rocking chair became their mode of transportation.

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