Dreams can come true, it can happen to you

Dreams can come true, it can happen to you

74Illustration by Gary Clement for The National

This week I’m sharing the stories of a few people who took a giant leap into the unknown – to live their best life now. None of them had a specific plan, but they all had guts and determination.

They appear to fall into three categories. The first are the likes of Chad, Josh and Neri, who know what they want from life, and decided to make it happen today, not after 30 years of the rat race, stress and unhappiness.

And then there are likes of David: business people who realised they risked losing a lot more than their homes when the credit crunch brought down people around them. They liquidated what they could and started all over again – with a focus on quality of life – not just how to earn money.

Then there are the Rons of the world, who, having retired, went in search of an affordable chilled life, and ended up making a bit of money while creating a social outlet for themselves.

Since the majority of us living in the UAE fall into the first category: people with full-time run-of-the- mill jobs and no experience creating businesses or being entrepreneurs, I am sharing a couple of stories in this section and only one in the other two. I’ll be expanding on retirement thoughts in another article soon.

30 years – starting today

Chad and Josh are from the US. They decided that theirs would be a life on the surf. They had fallen in love with an island in South America, so it was either live the next 30 years as unhappy paramedics and then retire to the island, or live the next 30 years, starting now, the way they want, every day. The key was being able to afford it. They settled on buying and running an existing B&B on their piece of paradise. It could have been a shop that sells flip-flops for all they cared, it was a means to fund their best life. So they sold all their worldly possessions and discovered that they were quite good at running a B&B.

Yes, they could be earning more money back home, but the takeaway these days is not only that less gets them more, but that every single day is their dream life. And they are very very happy.

Neri has a similar mindset. A 35- year-old pilot from Panama, she used to sell property in the capital – a job she took up to pay off her student debt. The weekend was her big escape – traveling to less developed areas beyond the city where she was happiest.

Neri saw her friends stressed to the hilt, getting stuck in traffic, bogged down by payments to the bank because of all the “stuff” they were buying.

She knew this was not the life for her. So after a conversation with her father, who was so very proud that she was a pilot, where she explained that she could either give into social pressure and live a “successful” life through her pilot career, be, by her account, miserable, then retire to the place she craved. Or she could start living her best life now, but it would mean walking away from the city, her potential pilot career and “opportunities”. She got his blessings to do as she saw fit. There is little infrastructure where Neri lives now and she still hasn’t figured out how she’s going to earn – perhaps from starting a coffee shop. She is very happy and some of her friends are now asking her to support them through similar transitions.

Your business or your life


The original article was first published in The National

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