Here are the secrets to seeing all your favorite places around the world. Not much of a secret if you ask me :-)
From Kate:
Source: (Kate From the States)
via Kate |
The honest truth – I never have the money I need to travel, but I buy
the ticket anyway. I’ve realized that money comes and goes, but the
more I make, the harder it is to part with it and weirdly, the less I
have, the easier it becomes to budget.
I don’t do that saving account, checking account, travel account
thing either. I am not rational. I am extreme. I want to travel and so I
do. There is no in between. While I was working my first career job in
public relations, I realized early on that it was going to take me
forever to save all the money I would need to see the world. I come from
a middle class family, I’m the middle child of five and I live in one
of the most expensive places in America – Long Island, New York. I don’t
have rich family members or know people that know people and I
certainly can’t rely on inheritance to someday boost my dreams. So I
focused on what I did have – a roof over my head, and the attitude that I
can and will do anything I want.
… And I want to live around the world.
REWIND TO THAT PLACE IN TIME
I’m working seven days a week and I can’t even afford my own place
yet. Five days at the PR firm and Saturdays and Sundays bar tending. For
what? So I can slave away my 20s. Work 7 days a week to buy clothes for
work and a $400 monthly train pass to get to work. I was literally
working to afford working. And don’t get me wrong. I absolutely loved my
job. I loved my clients, I loved my boss and I loved my interns. I was
proud of where I was and where I was going, yet I still had something
inside of me telling me that if I wanted to go all out for my career, I
needed to give up that living around the world dream… and if I wanted to
live somewhere else, I was going to need to give up my career.
And so the google search began. I have no money. But I want to travel for long periods of time. How do I do that?!
I’m going to need to work abroad.
Working while you travel is literally the smartest thing a person can do.
But you can’t do it forever. It’s only for the young. Sorry people.
Not my rule. There are countries who will give you a year working visa
but you have to be under 30. (Australia and New Zealand)
So with this information. It was now or never.
I mean, lets face it – If I moved into New York City when I was 24
years old, I’d be working to pay for my apartment. Once you leave the
nest – rent till you die. Travel for me would not be likely for a very
long time.
And even if I stayed home and kept working like I was – I wasn’t
saving what I needed to get ahead. I was getting ahead in my career but
financially, I was just getting by and some.
It was only when I thought about the life I was setting myself up for
that I realized I was just fitting the mold, and the scariest part was
that I liked it because I was used to it – it was the only life I had
ever known.
If you tell people you work 7 days a week, they don’t see anything
wrong with it. I didn’t. I was a champion. I was going places. If you
tell them you work two jobs in one day, well then, you are a hard
worker, a hustler, a person who is determined to succeed.
I hate that mindset now. Unless you know exactly what it is you are working for.
What’s up with our society that people are so proud to work so much
just to get by? No. You are an adult. Working 40 hours should be enough
to provide for your family and your home and everything you need.
Especially if you are not working for your dreams. Working more should
be an option. (You know for that iPad or pocketbook.) Not a must-do or
you cant afford the rent. Or at least that’s how it should be. Kate for
President, just saying.
Okay, but really – I understand that there are instances where you
work a lot because you have a goal. Mine (at the time) was to afford an
apartment in New York City so I could be closer to my job and break out
of the nest. It was really exciting to think about – until I starting
becoming excited thinking about where I would work on the weekends to
afford this new life. Fall back. YOUR GOALS SHOULD NOT BE MATERIALISTIC.
They should be focused on personal growth and just because your bank
account is growing, it doesn’t mean you are. My mindset was all about
money. Money for this, money for that. Bills, bills, bills, throw some
money in the savings every month, go for drinks with friends, look for a
husband – hey, everyone’s doing it – It’s called being responsible and
having your head on straight. I can almost hear my parents sigh of
relief when they thought I had lined myself up a successful future… but
then I quit my career and crushed their dreams and I didn’t care because
where was the room for my dreams? I had to break that mold.
Someone really tell me WHAT THE FUCK life is about? My generations
economy sucks. Yet for some reason, everyone has nice things. A lot of
us have two jobs, or are working overtime at our one job or even have
three gigs going on – And if you don’t fill those categories – get off
my page. (Just kidding, but really.)
SO I looked into it. PEOPLE DON’T HAVE MONEY FOR THE LIVES THEY ARE LIVING.
We finance almost everything. Your car, your house, your new big
screen TV. OMG I am going to be poor for the rest of my life. But I
won’t look poor. Because I’ll have credit cards.
LIGHT BULB.
Have you heard of 0% APR? Of course you have. Well it’s literally the only reason I can travel.
No I don’t have a rich family who funds my travels. Sorry to ruin your day.
When I moved to Australia on a Work and Holiday Visa I had $800 in my
bank account. Crazy I know. I literally told my parents, ‘Okay I’m
going to Australia. I only have $800 so if I don’t get a job in the
first week, I’ll see you next Sunday.”
BLANK STARES
I was taking a risk I know. But what did I have to lose? Money? My
whopping $800. Which is why having less money makes it easier to take
chances. I was prepared and willing to fail for a dream I wasn’t sure
would work. But lets be honest, I was NOT going to lose. I was on a
goddamn mission and I don’t understand the word “no”.
SO
UNITED MILEAGE PLUS EXPLORER CARD
– They gave me 50,000 miles for signing up and 5000 for adding someone
to the account (which I did) and miles after spending $1000 in the first
month (which I did because I put my plane flight on the card.)
This means, I basically racked up enough points (and by basically I
mean, I had enough points) for a free flight home. I’m A GENIUS — And
yes, I planned that out.
[NOTE: They have slightly changed the card. Look for deals and offers.]
THEN
CHASE SLATE - Boom! 0% APR for 15 months and free balance transfers in the first 60 days.
ARE YOU FOLLOWING ME?
I transferred all of my credit card balances to the CHASE SLATE CARD
for free and set up the minimum monthly payment to automatically come
out of my checking account every month.
I also set up my student loan to automatically be deducted every month as well.
NO WORRIES MATE – remember, it’s just money. (And it’s for my dream – Not a sweater and shoes.)
FROM THERE… I put a weeks stay at World Square Hostile, in an 18 bed dorm room (the cheapest bed they had) on my credit card.
WHAT ABOUT FOOD?
PB and J my friends. Not even J, just PB and the cheapest loaf of bread I could find in Sydney (which was $1, SCORE).
PB and J my friends. Not even J, just PB and the cheapest loaf of bread I could find in Sydney (which was $1, SCORE).
AND REALLY THE REST IS HISTORY
I found a job within the first three days. Applied for a tax file
number. Set up an Australian bank account and after my first Australian
paycheck I never had to touch my American credit card ever again. I was
making $1000 a week in Australia and working 35 hours a week. My rent
was $150 a week. Eventually I transferred some money over to my American
account just to keep paying the minimum payment on my CHASE SLATE card.
But that was the last I had to worry about my American bills. I ended
up SAVING $10,000 in six months working in Australia. And I used that
money to travel Australia with. Never having to touch an American
dollar.
I used this same strategy when I moved to Thailand. Except I started with $2000 as my backup if I didn’t get a job. (But I did.)
I may just be a master budgeter but I’m pretty positive this tactic
can work for anyone who is as ambitious and money savvy as me. Don’t
just go get a credit card and put everything on there. And don’t spend
more than you can make. The most I ever put on the card was $3000. The
point is to use it as a little loan to help you pursue a dream you may
not have the money for right now, while keeping some money in your bank
account for emergencies.
Good luck and be smart. (but not too smart – leave some space for risks!)
OH! AND AS FOR MY DREAM – In case it’s unclear… I want to live and
work around the world. I want to experience culture. I want to be a
local. See what it’s like to be someone from somewhere else. It’s not
just about money anymore. It’s about life and challenges and doing
things I never thought were possible for me.
I don’t know why I was so lucky to have been born in America – to
have all these opportunities – to not even be close to being the richest
person in my town but to still have so frikken much. I don’t know why I
got to be born here and not somewhere else, but I know I won’t take it
for granted.
If you are in a country where you can read this – Please don’t take it for granted. xx
Australian Work and Holiday blog post to come.
Travel Without Any Money. Here Is The Secret
Reviewed by Shane
on
Thursday, December 11, 2014
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