Today’s eye-opening guest-post is great read. I’ll let the author introduce herself!
My name is Amanda and you can find me at on my blog, Having Fun, Spending Less or follow me on Twitter. My blog is about life as a family of four, making the most of the budget we have whilst not compromising on fun. It’s filled with budgeting ideas, activity and day out suggestions, and random family life ramblings. Today’s post is about a spectacular adventure we took as a family!
In 2009 we sold our house, quit our jobs, sold/ gave away most of our belongings, took the girls out of school and went travelling around the world for 8 months. What prompted this decision you may ask? We got bored, we decided life was too short for ‘maybes’, we experienced a couple of traumatic bereavements that made us realise life isn’t a rehearsal, you’re only here once.
It’s not secret, our parents thought we’d lost the plot. Maybe we did! From making the decision to travel to actually leaving took 5 months. In that short amount of time we’d condensed our lives into a dozen or so boxes of things we couldn’t live without (stored in grandad’s loft). It’s wonderfully liberating to strip your life down so bare, to realise how few material belongings you actually need/ want in your life. It made me realise the clutter I’d gathered was weighing me down. All we left the UK with was 4 rucksacks and a mini suitcase filled with school work – which we promptly ‘gifted’ to children in Peru a few months in because it was hindering our travel experiences.
‘What about schooling?’ was most peoples concern. Taking the girls out of school was ridiculously easy. We carefully planned to follow the literacy and numeracy curriculum that the girls would miss, but quickly abandoned this. In actual fact we read with the girls frequently, kept journals with them, did day to day maths in markets etc but on the whole we just allowed ourselves as a family the chance to really immerse ourselves in the environment we were in.
The girls came back to the UK at the same level their friends were working at, except a couple of maths things like measuring angles and naming triangles – a very small price to pay for the rich experiences we had together.
We spent the majority of our time in Mexico,Peru and Ecuador, but also visited Hawaii, San Francisco, Australia and New Zealand. We had the most amazing time together, very rarely annoying each other, probably in part because when we became restless, we moved on. We all returned refreshed and more well-rounded individuals. It was a wonderful parenting experience to be able to witness the girls’ idea of ‘normal’ shift and their horizons widen.
I could share a 101 travelling tales with you, in fact I think I might over on my blog in the future. You would not believe the things we got up to!
We came back with a minimal amount financially, enough to get us through the period of buying a car, renting a house and finding work again. I guess you could say that we’re starting all over again. Yes, I think we are, but it’s refreshing. The only negative thing I can say is that we adults have found it more difficult to re-adjust. We’ve become wanderlust, where as the girls have settled wonderfully into North Yorkshire life…but hey ho, who knows what the future holds?
So, if any of you are considering doing anything similar…I say do it! Or maybe you just think we were crazy?
Amazing story. I’m not sure we’d ever be brave enough!
I’m just wondering, have you been abroad since, on a holiday etc – if so, did it feel very different?
Hi Nicki, thanks for publishing this post!
In answer to your question, the furthest we’ve ventured since we got back in Filey and London! We’d love to travel again but used up a lot of our funds plugging the gap between finding a job and actually starting it. We both work in jobs that need CRB’s and just happened to apply at the same time as every other student, teacher and dr on rotation.
We have the travel bug now for sure. I can’t imagine ever doing just ‘normal’ package holiday again. We got a real kick out of staying in hostels and living out of a back pack – it’s very liberating. Then again, we’ve never holiday-ed without the girls, maybe a luxury package holiday sans enfants would be quite nice.
We definitely plan to travel more in the future. We’d like to return to South America and also India and China are on our ‘must see’ lists.
Hmm…you’ve got me daydreaming now!
The trip sounds amazing but weren’t you scared that selling your house and using the money might mean you never have the amount again to buy that type of security – i.e. another home? This isn’t a judgemental thing – I’m really interested. And I admire your courage.
You’ve got it in one – we don’t have the money to get back on the property ladder, at least not at the moment. In fact, if you look at it really brutally, we’ve blown the kids’ inheritance as well!
But…do you know what? I wouldn’t change a thing. The whole process has allowed us to reassess our lives and what’s important. We’ve relocated to a beautiful North Yorkshire village, which we probably wouldn’t have had the balls to do before (ironically enough).
I’d like to think that we’ve shared the inheritance with the girls and had the opportunity to share some amazing experiences that may some how shape the person they become in the future. I’m not saying that RTW travel would be everyone’s cup of tea, but for us, it’s restored our faith in human nature and given all four of us special memories and experiences that we’ll never forget.
Anyway, we’re only 31. We’ve got plenty of time to build up another nest egg (here’s hoping!).
Good question Midlife Singlemum. Always happy to answer peoples’ questions and curiosities. Keep ’em coming!
Thanks for your detailed reply. I didn’t get my first ‘unrented’ home until I was 39 so it’s not impossible. And I agree that family experiences add so much to your lives.