Some young American workers are moving to Europe in hopes of a healthier and happier life.

  • HollandJim@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    25 years I’ve been abroad (The Netherlands) and the work-life balance is why I stayed. They insist I take days off (still foolishly work like an American) and have already booked out a 3 week vacation for later in the year…and I’ll still have nearly 2 weeks of vacation left. We can roll a few weeks of vacation over to the next year if not used. Even though the Dutch have NO holidays from June to Christmas, I’m still able to take 4 day weekends when I want to.

    The downside is family left behind may begin to resent you. My family have developed this red-hat victim culture. I can’t bring up how I live abroad or else it starts fights - they don’t want to talk to me now.

  • kilgore@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    As an American who has been abroad for many years, can confirm! I’m visiting the states at the moment and its crazy to hear a family member talking about trying to convince their boss that the employees should get five paid sick days a year instead of only three. Three! A year! Insane.

  • raz0rf0x@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    If you understand that the high salary is to meet the high cost of living in the United States then you’ll understand that it isn’t a pay cut. Take that one step further and consider the fact that the higher cost of living does NOT come with a higher quality of life in the US.

  • woobwub@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    If only they would leave their political affiliations and a few bad bits of their culture in the US too, that’d be great. They’re otherwise very welcome here, as is anybody else who wants to embrace the European lifestyle and integrate, Iranian, Afghan, Australian, Kenyan, Brazilian, Turkish, whatever.

  • GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I’d do it if I could afford it or was younger. Honestly wish I had. The sacrifice now, with family and kids, is too massive.

    • varsock@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      look at it this way, necessities in USA are largely out of reach (health care, education, housing, funded retirement) and luxaries are easy to come by (phones, sneakers, branded clothing, streaming etc).

      Whereas in Europe, the necessities are much more attainable for the population at any income bracket. Do you have much more “free cash”? No. Do you need it? No, you have a social safety net.

      Even vacas in Europe are cheaper bc for an American to travel to Europe is very expensive by means of airplane. In Europe you can take a high speed train and be in any climate.

      On the topic of trains, Public transit is more efficient there than it is to drive cars in the states. Imagine not having to buy a ~$30k car every 10 years? Not to mention fuel and maintain it.

  • topperharlie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    as an European I have to say:

    please stop advertising this, they will all come here with their American dreams and turn Europe in USA.

    I’m yet to see two of them actually connecting the dots between the “American dream” and the horrible labor laws. They want the wellbeing we have but they also want the rampant capitalism, they think “socialism == communism”

    • Garzak@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s a weird take on the subject, most American I’ve met or worked with where surprised but happy about our ways.

      We might have met totally different kinds of people.