Shownotes
Carl Richards is a certified financial planner, the New York Times Sketch Guy, and the author of Your Money: Reimagining Wealth in 101 Simple Sketches. He moved from Utah to New Zealand with his family in a matter of weeks. His wife bought plane tickets ten days after hearing about a friend's available house. Ninety days later, they had moved.
This episode covers:
- How Carl became the New York Times sketch guy (a desperate drawing on a whiteboard)
- Why showing up and being consistent matters more
- How Carl's wife pulled the rescue cord and moved the family to New Zealand
- The detox from US money and work culture that Carl did not see coming
- Moving teenagers abroad during a senior year of high school
- Why New Zealanders ask about holidays and weekends, not jobs
- The French cafe lesson: you think this is about money. It is about food.
- The worry list: a blank page. Nothing is helped by worrying.
- The cognitive load of a simple grocery store in a new country
- Carl's daughter's advice: you thought you were going to have an adventure without it being hard
- Why Carl would spend his savings again without thinking twice
Carl and host Arielle Tucker, CFP®, EA discuss why most of what we worry about never happens and why moving abroad does not require a perfect plan.
Resources
Mentioned in this episode:
www.passporttowealth.com
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