bitofarambler
Kino's Journey(2003) - great fix for philosophy and drifty, travel vibes.
I make my own DIY huaraches like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1FrEgeP9jI
extremely comfortable, you can make it with any old slipper lying around and some paracord, lasts for 6 months to a year, depending on the quality of the sandal base.
adjust it to exactly your size that fits perfectly and then you can sew the knots so that all the dimensions stay the same.
takes me maybe 5 minutes to make each pair, and then 5 minutes for the sewing of the knots so I never have to readjust them, costs nearly nothing.
every story I've heard about them sounds like yours.
ESL industry is always looking for native speakers to teach English, for your back pocket.
his post is factually incorrect, of course.
https://adcare.com/addiction-demographics/homeless-population/
"homeless" is a term used to describe someone who does not live inside a domicile, 40-60% of all homeless people have and hold down jobs.
travel podcast:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bit-of-a-rambler/id1804692516
sorry about the aliens.
Lemmy is a much nicer environment overall, so i moved here
wow that is crazy, your dad's actions were crazy I mean, I'm glad to hear you came out to him and severed that tie.
"Parents have no hold over you, not really. If they don't deserve your presence, don't allow it."
can't agree more with you here.
sorry to hear that.
you certainly don't have to travel if you dont want to, I just like people being aware of the option, but I'm not following one thing:
How does disagreeing with and being alienated from your family make traveling less of an option for you?
people usually ship their belongings by sea or air(ocean freight is cheaper and slower, but I'm not sure by how much with Costa Rica being so near) with a company like DHL, I've used them and found them to be a reliable international shipping company, FedEx and UPS are also options.
I wouldn't worry about customs taking your stuff, especially if you have insurance or tracking or anything like that on the ticket, and especially with a wealthier country like Costa Rica where paper trails are more important.
I've actually never heard of customs taking anything legal in real life from anyone who's shipped belongings overseas(my friend's yak jerky got confiscated because it's illegal to import a lot of international meat products into the US) so I personally don't believe customs pocketing things is very common.
Legos aren't apparently valuable on their face and with the paper trail of receipts/documents I wouldn't think you have to worry about anything getting lifted by customs. plus, if you add some fragile notices and insurance on there the agents responsible for transporting the packages will be a lot more careful, for sure.