Myself wants to see cool shit before I die, you’ve saved me 60k of money I can’t take with me and cost me experiences that in some sense were kind of the whole point of working above and beyond the bare minimum to survive
The advice is completely independent of how much money you have.
If you have a lot of money, you can travel a lot. Travel a lot, then. That's traveling all you can.
If you have a little money, you can travel a little. Travel a little, then. That's traveling all you can.
If you have no money, you can't travel. Don't travel, then. That's traveling all you can.
It's saying if you have the opportunity to travel, take it.
I'm going to counter the comments here as someone who traveled a lot in their 20s.
It is possible to do it without being rich, but you need to be able to save a few grand, quit your job, and leave without bills or responsibilities back home.
It's also important where you travel. You can't stretch 3K very far in Western Europe or Japan. But you can cover a ton of ground bussing and hostel hopping through South America or SEA.
It was a lot easier pre-Covid, but it's still doable.
It is possible to do it without being rich, but you need to be able to save a few grand, quit your job, and leave without bills or responsibilities back home.
Like, are you being sarcastic? Poor folk cannot do this, even most folk comfortably in the middle class could not.
I'm not saying everyone can do it, I'm just saying you don't need to be rich.
Median income for 20-24 is 40K (pre-tax). So a middle-income young person would have to save 10% of their income for a year to travel for a couple months.
It's not easy, it requires prioritization, but for some people it's worth it.
When I did it, I'd paid off my student loans, I didn't own any vehicles, and only had about 10 boxes of possessions which I put in a storage unit when my apartment lease ran out. When I got back I sublet rooms until I found a more stable place.
Saving 10% of one's income is just not something most folks can do, including that bracket. Depending on where you live, that's living paycheck to paycheck. Not only would they have to put that chunk of money away: they'd have to have no debts, have somewhere they can keep their stuff while they're gone, have no emergency costs come up, have the ability to leave their job potentially permanently, have no interruptions in their savings during that time, among so much else. Now, if parents are involved it might be a bit easier, but it would still be a massive investment and a lot of folks don't have parents who can help. I don't want to assume your economic situation, but it doesn't sound like you grew up in a poorer home and maybe shouldn't be saying that it's so doable when you had no college debt when you traveled, had saved several grand, and had the privilege of being able to leave your home. Lots of folks just cannot do that. I appreciate you acknowledging that fact, but I think the group of folks unable to travel in this way is a bit bigger than you appear to realize.
I know you're saying its all about priorities, and I'm not trying to saying it's impossible either for poor or middle class folks to do this. What I am saying is that it's just not realistic even among a large group of folks who do prioritize correctly. The amount of hoops someone needs to jump through even if they're making 40k a year with all their other bases covered is already incredibly difficult. Sometimes priorities have to get shifted necessarily, or sometimes life gets in the way of plans that've already been made. What someone prioritizes is based on what they actually have control over, and there's just a lot of life that we cannot control.
It's also a bit important to note that rich is a relative term. I grew up dirt poor, so many of my middle class friends were rich to me. If you can afford to travel the world in your youth, that's gonna make a lot of folk think of you as rich, and they're probably correct (at least relatively speaking)! I hope I haven't come off as rude or dismissive, I do appreciate you doing some of that math and giving your insights as a traveler. I just am unsure about how well your experience can translate across economic lines.
Were you still living at home during your 20s? Did you go to college? What sector were you working in? How much did each of your parents make... A specific number, not a vague description. Do you have a trust fund? What sector did your parents work in?
Go to school and get a business degree. Businesses always need accountants no matter how bad the economy is. Your job will always be safe. Youll get paid well enough that you can take care of your debts and eventually save up cash and travel. Ive been traveling back home to socal these past two years since moving away from home and next year ill be going to Texas. Im hoping in another year or so I could look into a cruise or possibly backpacking through japan
We took a different approach. We did travel a lot when we were young, but those were driving trips to campgrounds. We visited far-off friends and family. We kept travel cheap and saved our money. Now we're old, and we take month-long trips to exotic countries we used to dream about.
One lesson I was taught was that your investments will roughly double every 10 years. That assumes your after-inflation return is about 7.2% So if you are 25 and trying to decide whether to spend $1,000 on something, consider that it is $2,000 you could spend at age 35, $4,000 at age 45, $8,000 at age 55, or $16,000 at age 65. Obviously, if you push that too far, it's money your heirs will spend instead of you. Plus, at some age, you are no longer in physical shape to enjoy it.
I'm not suggesting that you should live like a miserable miser when you are young, but take good care of the needs and desires of "future you" as well. It's all about balance.
I just wrote the same thing. Well not the investment stuff although i do agree. But drive. Camp. Couch surf with friends who have stayed with you. The US has so much to see; and young people can do it with ease.
When i was young, i loved From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs Basil E Frankweiler. I think the weird lesson I found was that you can be creatively comfortable in any dead broke situation. And I had a very fun dead broke 20s and early 30s.
We did lots of cheap travel when we were young, staying in cheap run down motels and seeing cities and natural sights in parks that are free or cheap to get into in my state and neighboring ones that we could reach by car. We'd go to things like ren faires and concerts and rock and fossil shows. It wasn't Europe, but I hadn't seen any of that stuff before, so it was still fun travel for me. Lots of flyover states and southern states still have unique and interesting cities and nature stuff, and they're cheaper.
On me, not only do I not have the money to travel anywhere I have to take time off from work which is more money coming out of my pocket. So no old man I haven't been on vacation, it sounds like a rich people sport.
That's my philosophy. I'll probably never pay off all my debt but as long as I have a somewhat decent life, I don't even care, especially since I'm not married.
Yeah definitely a balancing act. On one hand it would be nice to travel more, on the other hand I personally value having freedom sooner rather than later.
You can still do traveling as long as you keep track of your finances wisely by mean of keeping it track in fina so you’ll have an enough money to enjoy life
Or you can try checking/using https://www.fina.money/templates so that you can be guided in your financial problems and situation as it has diff templates here that was all financially related that could make you stable and face financial problems wiser
If you really want I you would do it. Stop seeing obstacles and get to the solutions. There’s deals and other modes of transport/hotels/hostels meet people stay with them share a room work volunteer. Seek discomfort
Get one of those horrible jobs where they move you around and put you up in hotels. Eat lots of rice and love frugally AF while they're paying your bills. Order a lot anytime you get a company dinner. Couch surf when you get time off or have them pay to ship you to a vacation destination. Invest half your income. When you're ready to settle down you'll have investments, enough in the bank to buy a house if you want to, and will have had a lot more experiences in your life.
I did this by getting a Teaching English as a foreign language certificate in the UK, and then it's very easy to get a job in various countries in Asia/Eastern Europe. You have to work, but it's a great way to earn some money and still see/travel the country on weekends.
You don’t have to travel to some foreign land or out of state necessarily. Blue collar worker on a budget here. Over this summer I went on a little road trip about an hour away from where I live, to a place I almost went to college at back in 2013, with my kayak just looking for spots too kayak/fish that I’ve never been to before. Along the way, I discovered a beautiful pond/small lake that I never knew about since I took the back roads there. I couldn’t get out on the water due to a thunderstorm that conveniently hit when I got there, but it was a little mini adventure I needed. I plan on visiting there next spring/summer:).
You don’t have to travel far to have fun, sometimes just a tank of gas and a sense of adventure/checking out someplace new, is all it takes
Travel, especially when you're young and flexible, can be very inexpensive.
Start small but definitely prioritize doing one good trip every 2 years. You can do smaller things every other year until you get in the hang of saving.
I started driving to a friend's place in another city. Just needed gas and we ate ramen when i got there. Then i bought a tent and would go to Kennesaw mountain for a weekend with granola bars and hang out listening to music. Go somewhere. It's not expensive to travel in the US and we're massive!
Now for example: Nashville to Iceland round trip on Iceland Air nonstop $400. That's unbelievably cheap! Start saving $10/week today and in 2 years you can absolutely have that plane ticket, get a hostel, pack a backpack, pay for food and transpo around with a couple of friends. Rick Steves has free travel audio guides. Go see the puffins!!
Make saving for that trip an activity for the 3 of you in your travel trio. If you don't have a roommate, get one and start saving money. I have the money now (I'm old) but i still love to travel on the cheap. Thankfully i have a travel mate who loves it too! It's a puzzle to solve.
Work holiday visas, champski. Also, you can't eat out everyday when you're travelling, or drinking/doing drugs every night either. All that stuff is expensive and adds up!
It's this cool life hack that some people have found that is called "being born to rich parents". So many people are like "am drowning in college debt" or "I will never be able to afford my first home" and I am just like have you tried "being born to rich parents"? I really thing that is on them for not trying "being born to rich parents".... /s
I remember calling a bunch of buds last minute, hopping on my beater car, and driving a couple hundred miles out to Chicago to walk around all day and see the big city. Nothing planned, just big hopes and mentality of making it to our destination lol. We were under prepared for the cold, barely enough money for McDs, but we had a freaking blast and still remember it years later.
I travelled to Europe carrying ""Europe on $5 a day." and lived on less, most of the time. it was possible because I stayed in a a pensione sharing a room with other people paying $.50 a night. the freighter cost $99 ow to Tangier. Traveling looked very different from what you might have thought ....or be willing to do. luckily I was ahead of the hoard that has followed. We communicated with each other vis mailgrams sent and forwarded by American Express.
You can always travel in your own mind. Hear me out. Every cool place has a video about it. You can always read up.
Honestly, people who say travel, its in their Passions. What we all like to do is not the same as everyone else. Ir misery loves company. Either way. Do what your higher consciousness wants to do. You won't regret it. You need figure it out. Traveling with all of its mandatory components of uncertainty doesn't sound like a good place to start unless you truly have a destination. And every other possible opinion or perspective that is possible.
Learn a lot work a lot in your younger years around 5 years for 80 hours a week and then get a good life but don't do it mindlessly have a plan a backup plan and a backup backup plan learn a demanding skill that can be a side hustle get a job start your own business or startup from the money you collected and saved or expand your side hustle quit your job once your side hustle makes more than your job make it full time expand it more
Well this sounds pretty theoretical but better than 40 hours a week until you are retired at the age where you can't even walk normally
It doesn't sound realistic but you can modify it specially in teenage years like learning a lot of skills and so much you can do
I know i will get downvotes now since no one likes what i said
I live in Russia. I have no money to move to other city or town. Where should I get money if I have 4 hours of free time untill I get to bed after my full time job?
if you are living in the Siberia part the cold and inhabitable place then i guess you should vlog your daily life as people actually take interest in such things and people living in such condition and watch them and if you are in a populated area i suggest looking around and finding the demand like you can learn web developement anf go to small business to offer them a website or you could if you get popular in vlog charge people to promote their business what you can make from heavily depends on your environment and your surroundings
Lots of younger people I know go into debt to travel- I mean YOLO but seems a little ill advised…
Financially bad, but the alternative might be to be financially wise until you die, having never gone anywhere or done anything
Where ever you go, there you are. Same guy, same problems. There. I saved you a lifetime 60k on travel running away from yourself.
Myself wants to see cool shit before I die, you’ve saved me 60k of money I can’t take with me and cost me experiences that in some sense were kind of the whole point of working above and beyond the bare minimum to survive
Or you could get a business degree and stack up cash and travel during your vacation time
Some work while living at home a year or two to save for travel. Then travels frugaly.
I did it by staying in hostels
You can also couch surf
Depends on the ability to pay said debt.
100 percent planning, 10 percent money
either; debt, nepo, or saved up alot with a good income.
The old people who give that advice lived during a time when one could afford to be broke and still travel.
The advice is completely independent of how much money you have.
If you have a lot of money, you can travel a lot. Travel a lot, then. That's traveling all you can.
If you have a little money, you can travel a little. Travel a little, then. That's traveling all you can.
If you have no money, you can't travel. Don't travel, then. That's traveling all you can.
It's saying if you have the opportunity to travel, take it.
It's tone-deaf as fuck
Old person here, when was this exactly? I must have missed it.
The oldies telling me this, used the 70s as their example. I wasn’t alive during that time.
Just hitchhike and hope for the best.
I'm going to counter the comments here as someone who traveled a lot in their 20s.
It is possible to do it without being rich, but you need to be able to save a few grand, quit your job, and leave without bills or responsibilities back home.
It's also important where you travel. You can't stretch 3K very far in Western Europe or Japan. But you can cover a ton of ground bussing and hostel hopping through South America or SEA.
It was a lot easier pre-Covid, but it's still doable.
Yeah I’m sure there isn’t a ton of context being left out or anything
Yup.
Like, are you being sarcastic? Poor folk cannot do this, even most folk comfortably in the middle class could not.
I'm not saying everyone can do it, I'm just saying you don't need to be rich.
Median income for 20-24 is 40K (pre-tax). So a middle-income young person would have to save 10% of their income for a year to travel for a couple months.
It's not easy, it requires prioritization, but for some people it's worth it.
When I did it, I'd paid off my student loans, I didn't own any vehicles, and only had about 10 boxes of possessions which I put in a storage unit when my apartment lease ran out. When I got back I sublet rooms until I found a more stable place.
Saving 10% of one's income is just not something most folks can do, including that bracket. Depending on where you live, that's living paycheck to paycheck. Not only would they have to put that chunk of money away: they'd have to have no debts, have somewhere they can keep their stuff while they're gone, have no emergency costs come up, have the ability to leave their job potentially permanently, have no interruptions in their savings during that time, among so much else. Now, if parents are involved it might be a bit easier, but it would still be a massive investment and a lot of folks don't have parents who can help. I don't want to assume your economic situation, but it doesn't sound like you grew up in a poorer home and maybe shouldn't be saying that it's so doable when you had no college debt when you traveled, had saved several grand, and had the privilege of being able to leave your home. Lots of folks just cannot do that. I appreciate you acknowledging that fact, but I think the group of folks unable to travel in this way is a bit bigger than you appear to realize.
I know you're saying its all about priorities, and I'm not trying to saying it's impossible either for poor or middle class folks to do this. What I am saying is that it's just not realistic even among a large group of folks who do prioritize correctly. The amount of hoops someone needs to jump through even if they're making 40k a year with all their other bases covered is already incredibly difficult. Sometimes priorities have to get shifted necessarily, or sometimes life gets in the way of plans that've already been made. What someone prioritizes is based on what they actually have control over, and there's just a lot of life that we cannot control.
It's also a bit important to note that rich is a relative term. I grew up dirt poor, so many of my middle class friends were rich to me. If you can afford to travel the world in your youth, that's gonna make a lot of folk think of you as rich, and they're probably correct (at least relatively speaking)! I hope I haven't come off as rude or dismissive, I do appreciate you doing some of that math and giving your insights as a traveler. I just am unsure about how well your experience can translate across economic lines.
Yeah, no, "I traveled in my 20s" is all you need to hear to make a pretty safe assumption
Lol, where?
Were you still living at home during your 20s? Did you go to college? What sector were you working in? How much did each of your parents make... A specific number, not a vague description. Do you have a trust fund? What sector did your parents work in?
Why was it easier pre covid out of interest?
I wouldnt wanna travel across south America. That sounds hella scary
Probably best do nothing but work save and invest in your 20s.. it can pay off
This right here. I wish I would have learned about investment sooner
Yes, bank 100k in your 20s, 200k or more if you can, cut back on saving in your 30s and travel. Then coast from 40-60.
Go to school and get a business degree. Businesses always need accountants no matter how bad the economy is. Your job will always be safe. Youll get paid well enough that you can take care of your debts and eventually save up cash and travel. Ive been traveling back home to socal these past two years since moving away from home and next year ill be going to Texas. Im hoping in another year or so I could look into a cruise or possibly backpacking through japan
We took a different approach. We did travel a lot when we were young, but those were driving trips to campgrounds. We visited far-off friends and family. We kept travel cheap and saved our money. Now we're old, and we take month-long trips to exotic countries we used to dream about.
One lesson I was taught was that your investments will roughly double every 10 years. That assumes your after-inflation return is about 7.2% So if you are 25 and trying to decide whether to spend $1,000 on something, consider that it is $2,000 you could spend at age 35, $4,000 at age 45, $8,000 at age 55, or $16,000 at age 65. Obviously, if you push that too far, it's money your heirs will spend instead of you. Plus, at some age, you are no longer in physical shape to enjoy it.
I'm not suggesting that you should live like a miserable miser when you are young, but take good care of the needs and desires of "future you" as well. It's all about balance.
I just wrote the same thing. Well not the investment stuff although i do agree. But drive. Camp. Couch surf with friends who have stayed with you. The US has so much to see; and young people can do it with ease.
When i was young, i loved From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs Basil E Frankweiler. I think the weird lesson I found was that you can be creatively comfortable in any dead broke situation. And I had a very fun dead broke 20s and early 30s.
I do travel daily but I know it by another name. It's called commute.
We did lots of cheap travel when we were young, staying in cheap run down motels and seeing cities and natural sights in parks that are free or cheap to get into in my state and neighboring ones that we could reach by car. We'd go to things like ren faires and concerts and rock and fossil shows. It wasn't Europe, but I hadn't seen any of that stuff before, so it was still fun travel for me. Lots of flyover states and southern states still have unique and interesting cities and nature stuff, and they're cheaper.
Rich mommy and daddy or influencer?
On me, not only do I not have the money to travel anywhere I have to take time off from work which is more money coming out of my pocket. So no old man I haven't been on vacation, it sounds like a rich people sport.
Well... if you are going to die in debt anyway... Just add another sim to the pile.
That's my philosophy. I'll probably never pay off all my debt but as long as I have a somewhat decent life, I don't even care, especially since I'm not married.
You won’t have a decent life like that.
Typical in America .. lots of advice as if everybody is rich
Most do lol.. they gas their car to go to and from work.
Invest* as much as you can while you are young.
Brad and Muffy (a real name for a boomer woman) will say this then criticize the toast you eat while talking to them
Yeah definitely a balancing act. On one hand it would be nice to travel more, on the other hand I personally value having freedom sooner rather than later.
They mean mortgage your kidneys and all organs.
Stupid life advice found along side tropes like "use your network", "fake it until you make it" and "buy the dip!"
I travel from my room to the kitchen multiple times a day, does that count?
You can still do traveling as long as you keep track of your finances wisely by mean of keeping it track in fina so you’ll have an enough money to enjoy life
Or you can try checking/using https://www.fina.money/templates so that you can be guided in your financial problems and situation as it has diff templates here that was all financially related that could make you stable and face financial problems wiser
If you really want I you would do it. Stop seeing obstacles and get to the solutions. There’s deals and other modes of transport/hotels/hostels meet people stay with them share a room work volunteer. Seek discomfort
Hitchhiking, couchsurfing, Erasmus program, workaway. Many possibilities. Visited more around 20 countries
Yup
Yall seen that movie "Into the wild". Everybody do that.
CREDIT CARD DEBT
I travel everyday! To work, to bed, to work, to bed, to work, to bed.....
Some countries offer youth visas is you're cool doing a working vacation
Stowaway.
Damn frog has more money than me
Get one of those horrible jobs where they move you around and put you up in hotels. Eat lots of rice and love frugally AF while they're paying your bills. Order a lot anytime you get a company dinner. Couch surf when you get time off or have them pay to ship you to a vacation destination. Invest half your income. When you're ready to settle down you'll have investments, enough in the bank to buy a house if you want to, and will have had a lot more experiences in your life.
Through school, work, various programs, saving while sacrificing in some other area.
It's doable and doesn't have to be in excess. Start with smaller trips, that is still travel.
Traveling is becoming increasingly costly these days, making it harder for me to save up for trips.
Two words. Working Holiday.
I did this by getting a Teaching English as a foreign language certificate in the UK, and then it's very easy to get a job in various countries in Asia/Eastern Europe. You have to work, but it's a great way to earn some money and still see/travel the country on weekends.
I traveled once, a decade ago. The only camping trip I've ever been on (24yo, parents were broke af so no summer camp for me), had to pay my own way.
With inflation there's no way I could do that again, especially with my minimum wage job
You don’t have to travel to some foreign land or out of state necessarily. Blue collar worker on a budget here. Over this summer I went on a little road trip about an hour away from where I live, to a place I almost went to college at back in 2013, with my kayak just looking for spots too kayak/fish that I’ve never been to before. Along the way, I discovered a beautiful pond/small lake that I never knew about since I took the back roads there. I couldn’t get out on the water due to a thunderstorm that conveniently hit when I got there, but it was a little mini adventure I needed. I plan on visiting there next spring/summer:).
You don’t have to travel far to have fun, sometimes just a tank of gas and a sense of adventure/checking out someplace new, is all it takes
Credit card debt. Great trip but man did it cost me. Although tbf interest rates were 20% less
Travel, especially when you're young and flexible, can be very inexpensive.
Start small but definitely prioritize doing one good trip every 2 years. You can do smaller things every other year until you get in the hang of saving.
I started driving to a friend's place in another city. Just needed gas and we ate ramen when i got there. Then i bought a tent and would go to Kennesaw mountain for a weekend with granola bars and hang out listening to music. Go somewhere. It's not expensive to travel in the US and we're massive!
Now for example: Nashville to Iceland round trip on Iceland Air nonstop $400. That's unbelievably cheap! Start saving $10/week today and in 2 years you can absolutely have that plane ticket, get a hostel, pack a backpack, pay for food and transpo around with a couple of friends. Rick Steves has free travel audio guides. Go see the puffins!!
Make saving for that trip an activity for the 3 of you in your travel trio. If you don't have a roommate, get one and start saving money. I have the money now (I'm old) but i still love to travel on the cheap. Thankfully i have a travel mate who loves it too! It's a puzzle to solve.
It’s not that hard guys, you just have to work hard to be able to afford it. I go ski bi-weekly in the Alps in the winter.
All you have to do is forego the ridiculous luxuries these younger generations feel so entitled to. It’s all about prioritization.
I’ll give the learned helplessness generations a hint that gives it all away: Don’t get yourselves a junior chicken this week and buy Steep on Steam.
Work holiday visas, champski. Also, you can't eat out everyday when you're travelling, or drinking/doing drugs every night either. All that stuff is expensive and adds up!
It's this cool life hack that some people have found that is called "being born to rich parents". So many people are like "am drowning in college debt" or "I will never be able to afford my first home" and I am just like have you tried "being born to rich parents"? I really thing that is on them for not trying "being born to rich parents".... /s
Story of my life & missed opportunities. Now STUCK. Meh.
My mom tells me this fucking shit all the time. She just can not believe that it isn't still like 150 bucks to fly across an ocean and stay for a week
Like a refugee, from one mountain to the next.
All of my travel is to and from work lol
I remember calling a bunch of buds last minute, hopping on my beater car, and driving a couple hundred miles out to Chicago to walk around all day and see the big city. Nothing planned, just big hopes and mentality of making it to our destination lol. We were under prepared for the cold, barely enough money for McDs, but we had a freaking blast and still remember it years later.
I joined the Navy and saw some interesting places while working. Maybe a job for a cruise company would be cool?
I travelled to Europe carrying ""Europe on $5 a day." and lived on less, most of the time. it was possible because I stayed in a a pensione sharing a room with other people paying $.50 a night. the freighter cost $99 ow to Tangier. Traveling looked very different from what you might have thought ....or be willing to do. luckily I was ahead of the hoard that has followed. We communicated with each other vis mailgrams sent and forwarded by American Express.
With what money?
I see you have a laptop and power and a table. Still learning how to appreciate young grasshopper 🦗
“Travel while you’re young” they said, conveniently forgetting rent, bills, and reality 💀
You can always travel in your own mind. Hear me out. Every cool place has a video about it. You can always read up. Honestly, people who say travel, its in their Passions. What we all like to do is not the same as everyone else. Ir misery loves company. Either way. Do what your higher consciousness wants to do. You won't regret it. You need figure it out. Traveling with all of its mandatory components of uncertainty doesn't sound like a good place to start unless you truly have a destination. And every other possible opinion or perspective that is possible.
Does anyone else remember how much a nap cost back then? Half a paycheck for a drive GTFO
Be born to rich parents or beg, borrow, and steal.
Skip the lattes.
Learn a lot work a lot in your younger years around 5 years for 80 hours a week and then get a good life but don't do it mindlessly have a plan a backup plan and a backup backup plan learn a demanding skill that can be a side hustle get a job start your own business or startup from the money you collected and saved or expand your side hustle quit your job once your side hustle makes more than your job make it full time expand it more Well this sounds pretty theoretical but better than 40 hours a week until you are retired at the age where you can't even walk normally It doesn't sound realistic but you can modify it specially in teenage years like learning a lot of skills and so much you can do I know i will get downvotes now since no one likes what i said
I live in Russia. I have no money to move to other city or town. Where should I get money if I have 4 hours of free time untill I get to bed after my full time job?
I think it's the same situation all around the world, not only in Russia. Привет, кст.
if you are living in the Siberia part the cold and inhabitable place then i guess you should vlog your daily life as people actually take interest in such things and people living in such condition and watch them and if you are in a populated area i suggest looking around and finding the demand like you can learn web developement anf go to small business to offer them a website or you could if you get popular in vlog charge people to promote their business what you can make from heavily depends on your environment and your surroundings
Traveling is overrated. Spend money on something useful.
Agree, Overrated and way overpriced
yep, time is running out. FREEDOM TO MOVE WERE EVER WILL SOON BE GONE.