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My name is Haleli Smadar. I am a writer writing about family journeys as well as other things. In September 2010 I left Israel with my husband, my three children and my dog to a journey in the world.

The first thoughts I had about traveling came to me in a very difficult time in my life. My father was very sick, and my daughter was just a baby. This daily contact with both ends of life led me into some very deep thoughts about life. About life in general and my life in particular and how I want it to be. Not in forty years and not for a week or two, but today, now, every day.

we left everything. Sold, donated, gave away. And off we were. To taste as much of the world as we can, on a (very) low budget but a with very happy soul.

This is how we looked like back then:

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We started with a bit of Europe, and from there moved on to southeast Asia. We traveled and lived in Nepal and in India. In the beginning we lived on what little money we had saved and in the meanwhile we devoted our resources to learn how to combine traveling with work. The beginning wasn’t easy.

In the end of the first year my husband and the dog went Back to Israel.

I continued to travel with the kids, by myself. Vietnam, Thailand, Nepal (the stay in Nepal is so comfortable and easy that we go back there every year for few months), a bit more of India, china, Mongolia…

The passports filled up with stamps until we had to make new ones ? but that’s nothing compared to the amount of deep and meaningful experiences that come with a lifestyle like this. The kids grew. Learned to speak English, Nepali and Hindi fluently. Gained hours of trekking, rivers, camping, journeys in trains and buses and planes. Met hundreds of people and heard dozens of languages.

They experienced life in remote villages without electricity or running water, experienced 6  whole weeks in a tent in wild Mongolia and also lived a life of luxury in hotels on the beach with a swimming pool and fruit shakes. They met cultures, tasted foods and saw things that very few their age get to see.

Roni’s and Gali’s favorite food is sushi (they say that the best sushi they’ve had was actually in China ?), Joe’s favorite is Vietnamese food, and I can eat Chapati with butter for the rest of my life.   

They rode horses to the Siberian border and met the reindeer herders. And petted the deer. They surfed down rivers in Nepal. Climbed to high altitude (5600 meters/18,500ft) in India. Rode bicycle in Vietnam. Did shopping in Thailand. Ate pan baked bread with yak butter in Mongolia. Celebrated a birthday in china and mostly met a lot A LOT of love and happiness. A million.

In the summer of 2013 me and my husband decided to make our separation official.

The separation set me many challenges. Physical, mental and emotional. It sharpened my need of total economic independence that isn’t depended on anything but my abilities. And as of today I am focusing most my energy on creating as high as income as possible. All that along educating and raising my kids in our amazing lifestyle.

It’s been 7 years now. During those years I wrote and worked on this website, and made it into a place anyone can come and see how to make their dreams come true. Today I am a very experienced traveler, both as a woman and as a mother. On my website and on my Facebook page I share the huge experience I gained, on a daily basis, writing about specific destinations we’ve been to and about our lifestyle. And of course I support and consult anyone that contacts me personally through email.

I published many articles in Israeli magazines and web sites, was interviewed several times and every year, when we come to Israel for a visit I give one or two lectures.

I published my first ebook two years ago, and the second one was just published recently.

 

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Many families set out themselves after exposing themselves to the options showed on the ebook and in this website, options they never even considered before. I am proud and grateful to have taken a part in making the dreams of so many people come true.

Want to consult with me? Need a recommendation to a specific destination you’re planning to visit? Want my help in planning a trip to southeast Asia? Want to know costs?
Contact me.

And check out my Facebook page.

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”
~Mark Twain[metaslider id=2008][metaslider id=2008]

When people think about traveling they usually picture themselves on the move. They see a suitcase or at least a big bag, from which dangles a sleeping bag full of experiences, they see days of nonstop journeying and excitement. They see tempting shop windows and bags with foreign logos, smelling of cheese and wine and perfume. They see airplanes and trains and boats…
And thats the reason that sometimes I find it very hard to explain our style of traveling. People simply find it difficult to understand, because it doesnt fit their image of traveling.

We’re traveling in a way thats called nesting. That means we locate to one place at a time, for a long period. Nesting. Our style of traveling goes deeper, far beyond the touristic experience.

We’re not necessarily looking for the tourist attractions, but the truer experience. Usually we don’t even get a guidebook to the place we’re going to, but prefer to get to know it ourselves, without prejudice. Learn about their way of life, their culture, their customs, their routine through seeing the everyday of the place, and questions we ask the locals.

In a ‘Nesting’ trip the meetings with the locals and with other travelers crosses the border of ‘tourist’ and becomes a deep personal bond. And that has many implications.

When the kids learned about Buddhism and they had questions that didn’t have an answer on the Internet (why do today’s kids look for all the answers online?) they just went down to the street and found a few monks for a conversation. At the end of which they came back home excited and knowing more, and with three new friends that invited them to visit their monastery. And when we went to visit them, they gave us the full tour, and explained everything and served us tea and a special kind of bread and since then we go to visit them often. These are the type of experiences that only become possible in this sort of trip. And those are the ones we love best.

∴ How do we decide where to nest?
We try to find a place that attracts and interests us in ways of natural views and local population. We look at the seasons and see if the weather is good for that time. We look at the level of transportation, and at medical services, common diseases,if any. We check economically, if living there is expensive or not. And finally, since we work on the Web- how good a network they have there.

∴ Where do we live?
That depends on a lot. In Europe we chose to live in rented apartments, because living is expensive and we preferred to cook at home and save the cost of hotels. And beyond that, there’s something very comfortable in a real house. We chose to live on the edges of beautiful places, that way everything is much cheaper than it is at the center. In Europe the tourist centers are packed full and noisy, and the prices are needlessly high (the pizza in the town where we lived was just as good as pizza in Florence only much cheaper).

In southeast Asia, for example, we live in hotels or guesthouses, sometimes right in the middle of the whole tourist scene, sometimes slightly on the side. That way instead of travelling the whole world, the whole world comes to visit us. We meet people from all over the world, hear every language. And all that without even leaving the restaurant.

∴ And what about the kids?
In ‘Nesting’, what we’re actually doing is giving them a sort of a routine and a feeling of consistency. In other traveling styles you’re usually on the move, which puts the kids off balance after a while. When ‘Nesting’ they stay in the same place, in the same neighbourhood that slowly becomes familiar. We eat in the same restaurants every day, meet the same friends every day, go to explore the area, go to programs. A kind of a pleasant bubble.

The advantages of Nesting are many. For example, i have no doubt it’s one of the best ways to make travelling cheaper. Our personal acquaintance with the loacls, let’s us get most everything much cheaper. For example, when we stayed in Tuscany, our friendship with our owners of the apartment made our rent drop by half. In Pokhara, Nepal, the owners of our guesthouse lowered the price on their own, without any bargaining on our part. We could use their laundry machine, their kitchen, we bought water in bigger containers and many other things that eventually added up to a huge saving.

It was the same way in Vietnam and in fact anywhere else where we decided to nest.

Another advantage of being part of the local scene, and everything it means. Is learning to eat with our hands in Nepal (that’s how they eat) and knowing all the songs on the local charts. To get invited to an engagement ceremony to a wedding, to a celebration at a Buddhist monastery. Or on the other end of the spectrum, to care for a friend whose father died through all the Nepali mourning ceremonies. The personal acquaintance experience is different from any touristic experience, when you go to see a wedding of a stranger. For us they were friends, and that makes all the difference.

We hear the stories of our local friends about their lives, about how they educate their kids, about what the learn at school, politics, history, currency and a lot of other subjects in some of them we discover how much we’re all alike, in others we find an entirety different outlook than the one we have.

We spend time with them in their home and in their kitchen and learn about their lifestyle and customs, as well as their flavours and traditional ways to cook. We meet friends for life and know that when we come back to visit those places, there will always be someone to give us a warm welcome.

Short term Nesting:
Most families can’t afford to go to long term trips as long as a few months or years. But Nesting can work wonderful even when time is tight. We were only in Tuscany for three weeks, but made contacts and friendships that are with us even now and we really understood the place where we stayed. When we were in China we were in the city of Chengdu only for two weeks, and in that time we found a restaurant we went to every day (and that’s how we were exposed to the Chinese kitchen, helped them cook and made friends). And in the hostel where we stayed we discovered a whole world. We celebrated with friends our daughter’s birthday, went with them for walks in the city, and played many traditional Chinese games. And all that made our visit to this magicl city, to an experience that was far more impressive than any list of tourist attractions.

The principles of Nesting are simple. Settle in one place. Keep things consistent. Be open to meet everything the place has to offer (and forget about the ‘attractions’ list). Explore it slowly, peacefully.

When I worked on my ebook “How to travel the world for a year on 1400$ a month” I never even considered that I’ll have to explain why it pays off to go on a trip like this. I’ve been doing it for so long and it’s always been clear to me why. But after a while, I’ve begun to understand that maybe it’s not so clear to everyone. And that maybe there are people that want to go very much but can’t make up their minds. And I started posting amusing Facebook statuses (“cause it’s the best, most comfortable way to get back to your bikinis”… for example) and i talked about it with some friends and with anyone that contacted me personally by email for consultation until I reached the conclusion that there’s no escaping it. I need to write something serious. So here it is, and it’s really just the tip of the ice..

  • Traveling with your kids will make them fluent in English in less than 6 months. Serious.
  • It will allow you for shared family experiences, a minute before they escape between your fingers. Experiences you and them will remember your whole life.
  • To meet interesting people from all over the world.
  • To see wonderful and strange places- something that leads to changes in how you see the world and to widening your perspective on life and everything around us.
  • To meet children that live, and manage their lives entirely differently from the way we know. And somehow manage to find happiness. Even without whatsapp..
  • To see places that won’t be authentic in 10 years. growth and modernization are happening all over the world faster than ever. In a few years everything will be different.
  • To allow the kids to cope with different situations, unfamiliar ones, outside the safe zone. It will add to their self confidence and their feelings of independence..give them new skills. And show them themselves from a different viewpoint.
  • And if we’re already talking about skills, the mother of all reasons: development of social skills. After this trip the kids could give University seminars on how to make friends.
  • Experience a whole new way of learning, an experiences derived way powered by curiosity alone. Challenging Experiences derived learning that exposes the kids to a wide range of fascinating knowledge.
  • And to get some time off the stressed routine of the west. Escape the screens, look around see what’s happening.
  • A year in which we dedicate life to collecting experiences and memories, rather than things and possessions.
  • To let them fall in love with the whole world, on all it’s ways, colors, habits and beauty.
  • To focus on the similarities between them and people all over the world, not in the differences.
  • To discover that under the different looks, skin color, the weird language, the funny clothes- there are people that are very similar to us.
  • We’ll expose them to an unbelievable range of different lifestyles, of choices, of the many ways people choose to achieve happiness. And show them,  in reality, how everything is possible.
  • To light the fire within you and show your kids yourself in a different light. An exciting light, ecstatic, and full of passion.
  • To dance with them in the streets, to get excited with them, jump into water with them, to cope together with different challenges and edgy situations. To show them we’re all just people. To show them different sides of us, sides that very rarely show themselves in our normal everyday.