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Moving Overseas – Why Move to Another Country

Moving Overseas logoIn this series, Moving Overseas, I will share my experiences living and working overseas, sharing the lessons I’ve learnt to make your move less stressful.

Moving your family to a new home is a stressful experience but relocate to a new country and you release enough stress into your kin to put weak hearts at risk. So, why should you risk heart failure to live in another country?

Cultural Exchange.

By understanding other cultures and accepting that our differences enrich our lives, we can begin to walk the road towards global peace. OK, a lofty ideal but the stereotypes we assign each other are usually wrong and the differences are fascinating up close.

The Thaipusam festival is a frightening vision when you look at the images of men pierced by multiple hooks and spikes walking through the streets to cleanse their sins. In 1984, my friend Phil and I followed the festivities all day, watching the devotees prepare their minds and bodies before carrying their kavadi to the Sivan Temple at Dato Keramat Road, Penang. It is a lasting memory from my years in Malaysia, and gave me an opportunity to understand why this bodily abuse is an important part of Hindu society.

Living in the United States opened my mind to the nuances between Australian and American language, often with humorous results as we misinterpreted each other in meetings and social gatherings. For the record, rooting for her team is not something I’d let my daughter do in Australia. Two societies separated by a common language.

Find New Solutions to your Problems.

People face the same problems in every corner of this tiny planet of ours but have found unique solutions because each nation has a unique perspective on life. For example, when I lived in Malaysia my local car repair shop would weld a patch over the hole in a muffler rather than replace it. A cost effective solution, unlikely to be adopted in consumerist societies but I guarantee you will bring home new solutions that amaze your friends with their simplicity.

Reduce the clutter in your life.

Moving is an expensive process and the easiest way to reduce those costs is to take less with you. Walk through your home now and peer deep into your cupboards to see what is hiding in the dark. When did you last use those items? Look at the dozen pairs of shoes in your wardrobe, how many of them do you wear at least twice a month? The mass consumption economic model has filled our lives with so much choice that we feel compelled to own at least two of everything.

It took one hard working young lady four hours to pack the contents of our kitchen, and we have vowed to start culling the excess when we reach our new home (fortunately, my employer pays for the removal). In his book The 4-Hour Workweek, Tim Ferriss advocates selling everything, packing a small bag and heading for your new locale but I think this is a little extreme for most people. However, we have reduced our footprint to less than 80 cu.ft of stuff plus the rented furniture and have maintained a comfortable lifestyle.

In the nest installment, I will discuss how to select the right country for your move overseas.

 

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Book Early or miss the Last Supper when you visit Milan

As the travel planner in my family, I’m expected to bring together the itinerary and make the necessary reservations for our travel dreams come true. As part of my sacred duty, I set out yesterday to book our visit to see Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper when we get to Milan in two months, double the recommended time to book ahead.

My first mistake, arriving on Sunday because on Monday the Last Supper is closed to visitors leaving us only one day to see the remains of Leonardo’s great work. Oh well, I’m plenty early to snag a spot Sunday afternoon. Wrong, the Last Supper is fully booked and our main reason for visiting Milan is out of our grasp without taking a more expensive tour.

Early in this blog’s life I wrote about good planning, learn the lesson if your travel partners want to see the Last Supper, book early.

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Five Tips for using your Debit Card Overseas

Electronic banking brought a fundamental change to the way I travel, no cashing traveller’s checks or quiet negotiations with wily money changers in foreign markets, just a debit card, credit card and a small emergency cash reserve. Follow these five tips for smart debit card use on your next vacation:

Use affiliated bank ATMs. Your bank has affiliate banks ion other countries and they usually wave transaction fees for your ATM withdrawal. Check with your local branch or the bank’s website.

Know your daily withdrawal limit. We changed our account to reduce fees without checking all the conditions. A year latter we found out our daily withdrawal limit had been reduced to $250 a day. Unfortunately, we were in Rome and reliant on cash transactions for most of our accommodation costs. We had to use a cash advance on the credit card, a very expensive alternative. Check your daily limit before you leave.

Advise your bank of your travel plans. Your bank is protecting your interests and will freeze accounts if unusual transactions suddenly appear in your statement. Advise your bank and credit card provider of your travel plans and carry contact numbers to resolve any problems whilst overseas.

Minimise your transactions. Fewer transactions reduce your exposure to fraud and fees.

Safeguard your card. Keep your debit card in your money belt with your passport and other valuable documents.

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The Five Secrets of Travelling with Teenagers

The generation gap becomes a yawning chasm during an overseas vacation unless you maintain the decrepit rope bridge that connects your plan and their teenage expectations. Teenagers look forward to hanging out at the mall with their friends and an overseas vacation shackled to their parents is not a high note in their summer plans. You invested thousands of dollars on the vacation; ensure everyone gets value for money. We apply five secret strategies to our vacations. As a result, our teenagers enjoy the experiences and the travel is fun for everyone.

Secret One: Itinerary Compromise
Your kids are your travel companions; ensure they help plan the itinerary. Brainstorm the route together, list the major sights and attractions, and discuss everyone’s itinerary preferences. Cram your trip with museum visits and cultural events if you enjoy the company of apathetic teenagers. Add an afternoon riding the luge or an evening rock concert and you are instantly hip.

Secret Two: Let them decide what to Pack
Arguing over what to pack is a direct route to a lousy vacation, and an unhappy teenage travel companion. After several arguments over clothing choices, we discovered the second secret. Everyone has a bag, broad guidelines and instructions to pack anything they need and is prepared to carry. A quick sanity check ensured they packed enough necessities but otherwise we left the choices to them. Our daughter wore $2 slippers everywhere, and both favored jeans despite the heat of summer. Happy with their own choices, we never heard a complaint about heavy bags or sore feet, a first in our travel adventures.

Secret Three: Maintaining Contact with Friends
Three weeks without their friends is cruel and unusual punishment for most teenagers. Find hotels with Internet connections or close to Internet Cafes so the kids can get online to chat or exchange emails. Learning the latest gossip at home is more valuable knowledge to your teenager than the fascinating food preferences of ancient Romans. It is also a time to reflect on their travel, the boring morning at the museum is suddenly a cool experience to see Michelangelo’s David’ when chatting to friends who spent the day watching Sponge Bob.

Secret Four: Entertainment
After a long day sightseeing, you may enjoy writing a journal entry over coffee, watching CNN and reading a book but your teenager is bored. Bring their favorite entertainment with you. A laptop is a multi-purpose recreation tool and we never travel without one. It also serves as a portable darkroom for our family of digital photographers.

If technology is not a travel option, select books that appeal to everyone, old favorites or cannot miss new editions like Harry Potter are best, and find travel versions of your favorite board games. Sharing a bedroom with your teens for three weeks is a challenge for the happiest families, reduce the boredom and you are one-step closer to a successful journey.

Secret Five: Give Teenagers as much freedom as possible.
Teenagers want freedom more than any other commodity in their lives. At home, they go to the mall, the movies or just hang with friends, stretching their boundaries like an eaglet testing its wings before the leap off into the world. Many parents hold their teenagers back in foreign countries; afraid that they will get lost or fall victim to local criminals but the reality is most countries are no more dangerous than your neighborhood is.

Armed with a map, money and a sense of adventure, a parent free afternoon exploring or shopping becomes a vacation highlight. With the kids happy, you can enjoy a romantic meal for two at the quiet little cafe around the corner. Stretch your budget and book two rooms at least once a week; teenagers enjoy the freedom to stay up late watching movies and you can enjoy the romance you came for.

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What do I put in a Basic Travel First Aid Kit?

A basic first aid kit should be part of every traveller’s packing list but what you need to carry depends on your destination and health. Every first aid kit should contain the following items:

Aspirin or ibuprofen

Antiseptic cream

Band-aids (variety of sizes)

Blister kit (moleskin or duct tape are popular choices)

Insect repellent

Sunscreen

Add Dramamine if you suffer from motion sickness.

List of medical contacts and translations for common aliments and medications.

This should be sufficient for most travellers needs but add any non-prescription medications that you use on a regular basis. Always carry your prescription medications in their original container with a copy of your prescription to ensure you do not run afoul of the local constabulary.

Check the US State Department and Australian Smart Traveller websites for additional health information for your destination and enhance your basic first aid kit as required to meet any unique requirements. For example, malaria prevention medication is recommended for many countries.