Picking a Town, Finding a Home, & Creating a Budget in Costa Rica

By | 2019-11-01T20:04:13-04:00 November 1st, 2019|Categories: books, Cost of Living, Press|Tags: , , , , |

Costa Rica Cost of Living Update: Picking a Town, Finding a Home, and Creating a Budget in Costa Rica —Kindle $9.99, Paperback $15.99

My new book is available!

Happier Than A Billionaire: Picking a Town, Finding a Home, and Creating a Budget in Costa Rica. It’s the perfect companion to The Costa Rica Escape Manual and will guide you through finding the perfect spot to start your own Pura Vida lifestyle.

To celebrate, I made mango cobbler in a cocktail dress. You may be wondering if I always cook in cocktail dresses, and yes. Yes, I do.

 

My husband advised me to wear heels because I looked taller when compared to the countertop. He’s the Don Draper of the Happier Production Company. So instead of five feet in height, I’m a whopping 5’4”.  It’s shocking how little that detail made in my appearance or in my confidence overall.

I’m sure nobody cares about my height or even the mango cobbler. But the new book is great if you’re dreaming of moving to Costa Rica and want a better understanding of how much rent costs, the average monthly grocery expense, or even what a suicide shower is.

Electricity AND water? Who knew? (not a feature in The Happier House)

But I think the most important piece of this video is the montage of the happiest moments Rob and I have made in Costa Rica. This filmstrip plays in my mind every day — flashes of crazy adventures we had after quitting our jobs and trying to forge a completely new life.

Now when people ask, “You left everything behind? What were you looking for?” I can point them to this video. The answer is simply…

  • I longed to see my husband smile after climbing behind a waterfall and looking all but twenty-four again.
  • I wanted to sit on a beach with a dog under my legs as mama turtles swam back to the place where they were born to lay their eggs.
  • I wished to bathe in orange sunsets and marvel at lightning bolts flashing across the horizon.

Perhaps I wanted too much. But I remembered the person I was when I was my happiest. She smiled a lot, and I missed her. It turns out the things I needed back were the richest things I owned.

I hope all of you can visit this lovely country and bear witness to a capuchin monkey stealing a lemon. It’s never too late to replace your frayed and yellowed filmstrip with a happier one. There is an endless supply of unprocessed film tucked away in your head. It could be buried in your cerebral attic, or maybe you moved it to an overpriced grey matter storage facility.

I eventually found my box of film hidden in a mental shoe box. It smelled of my grandmother’s Italian cookies and was the color of the yellow dandelions that wildly grew in my parents’ yard.

Inside I found a treasure map pointing to bluer skies with air that smelled of coconuts. Your map could take you to a Himalayan mountaintop or a Bali yoga retreat. The only thing I’m sure is you have to reach inside to get out and dip back to go forward.

And moving forward, whether in flip-flops or four-inch heels, is a happier place to be.

***Happier Than A Billionaire: Picking a Town, Finding a Home, and Creating a Budget in Costa Rica is available at:

Amazon

iBooks

Kobo

Nook

 

A Little Costa Rica Sunshine in Linden, New Jersey

By | 2019-02-06T09:54:54-05:00 February 6th, 2019|Categories: Press|Tags: , , |

 

The Happier House

Costa Rica Cost of Living Update: Wireless Internet—From $52/month to $330/month for download speeds ranging from 1M to 6M

I love libraries, the feeling of walking through the stacks looking for a book, checking out the new releases in the front, or just chatting with another book lover. I wrote my first resume on a computer at a library because I couldn’t afford one of my own. I remember being confused by the program, and a librarian came over to help, as did others sitting around me. It meant a lot back then and still does now.

Costa Rica does not have many libraries. It was one thing that disappointed me when moving here. Even though I didn’t know how to read Spanish, I wanted to learn and thought a library could be the perfect place to start. I could be that weird gringo in the corner reading a Spanish version of Dr. Seuss, but that was never going to happen.

However, there were dialup internet cafes and I stopped at many to email my parents and let them know that I was alive and well. I was not the weird gringo in the corner because there was already some strange guy back there, all by himself, who never looked up. I stayed clear of him, confident he was not reading Green Eggs and Ham.

Libraries are on my mind today because Dawn Beviano, my hometown librarian, contacted me. She is featuring my books for a week since she considers me a notable Lindenite. That surprised me since I’ve never been notable at anything before.

Linden Library

When my husband and I dated, he drove me through his hometown Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. He stopped by his high school and said Tony Danza was also a past graduate. A picture honoring him hung in the hallowed halls. Rob appeared proud of this, and who wouldn’t be? Everyone loves Tony Danza. My husband actually sounds like Tony Danza. Of course, he does, they had the same English teacher. But Rob’s school suffered from, as per their Wikipedia page, “experienced criminal activity,” and not even the notable Tony Danza could tap dance this institution back into good standing. The high school ultimately closed.

Linden Library emailed me questions to answer, but I thought it would be fun to ask Dawn some of my own. 1988 was the last time I stepped foot in the building where I used their microfiche machine and scoured their card catalog. That was back when everyone used The Dewey Decimal System, which I have since learned from a not too exhausting Google search, is named after a real guy, Melvil Dewey.

Melvil was smart, demanding, and known to have made powerful enemies. This is ironic since he made powerful enemies out of every kid who found his classification system difficult to understand. “I just want to find the Mad Lib section,” little Timmy bemoaned in 1982. He was last seen between Social Sciences 300-399 and Fine Arts and Recreation 700-799.

Although Melvil was intelligent, he was also a misogynist who demanded that women applying for a library position include pictures of themselves. “You can’t polish a pumpkin,” he was known to say. That’s right Melvin, you can’t polish a pumpkin. But do you know what I can do? Write about how much of a jerk you were to those ladies. Polish that pumpkin, pal. Who knew a guy named Melvil could be such a creepo. You, sir, are no Tony Danza.

Tony Danza

“Card catalogs, as you knew them, no longer exist,” Dawn said. “Everything is now computerized. Every item in the library’s inventory has a barcode and is scanned in and out. No more cards in the pockets, with the date stamps. When I tell my children that we used to have to thumb through index cards by author, title, or subject matter to find what we were looking for, their eyes glaze over. Now patrons go to a computer and search for what they want.

“The microfiche machine still exists but is being phased out. We are in the process of having our microfilm collection digitized. The film has begun to deteriorate over time, and we want to preserve those newspapers from the early 1900s. It will be a long process that will take several years.”

I was surprised to learn that the Linden Library offers so much more to the community than they did many years ago. “Lending museum passes is something new that many libraries are now utilizing!” Dawn explains. “It allows patrons to visit museums at no cost to them. Most libraries have a non-profit organization called The Friends of (insert library name). They fundraise and procure many of the “extra” items that a library has like the museum passes. Ebooks are pretty much standard now as are online audio books.

“Since we have so many children’s programs, they LOVE being here! From Lego club, chess club, game nights, movies, S.T.E.M, Girls who C.O.D.E, animal programs, trivia nights, story time, or arts & crafts – we keep them busy! There are also two computers in the children’s room that the children use when they want. They are downloaded with educational games and programs.”

I asked Dawn if people still get excited over reading. “Books will always be the heart of any library, ever since Benjamin Franklin began the first lending library, back in 1731. There’s excitement when a favorite author has a new release, finding that favorite book you loved growing up, or browsing the stacks until something catches your eye. There is something about the smell of the book, holding it, and turning the pages that allow you to live in the book…you can’t do that with an ebook… or that could just be me.”

Thank you, Dawn, and to all your colleagues for sharing my books and including me on your notable list. I’m hoping to do an author event there, and I plan on wowing the crowds. I’ll start with my 200-010 story of swimming in subterranean lakes with lazy crocodiles and end with the 862-222 tale of how I opened a bed and breakfast in a foreign land.

Then I will tell Dawn that I’m looking for a book, but I can’t remember the name, but it has a blue cover, with a horse on it. She says librarians love it when patrons do that.

Take a look at the cool Linden Library! www.facebook.com/Lindenpubliclibrary

Click here to check out my bed and breakfast, The Happier House. I would love to host more people from my hometown!

The Happier House

 

Keep Your Daydream Podcast: Why You Should Be Living an Extraordinary Life

By | 2018-04-15T18:19:16-04:00 September 7th, 2015|Categories: Press|Tags: , , , |

Playa Avellanas, Costa Rica

Costa Rica Cost of Living Update: 8.3 lb watermelon— $3

Are you someone who is constantly daydreaming? Are people telling you to get your head out of the clouds? If this is you, guess what… you’re not alone!

There are plenty of people following their passions, even when everyone around them thinks they’re crazy. Tricia, at Keep Your Daydream Podcasts, tracks down these daydreamers to find out what makes them tick.

Whether you fantasize about sailing around the Caribbean or driving an RV across the country, listening to other people’s stories is a great first step to get the courage to do it yourself.

Be extraordinary and live your own version of an extraordinary life!

Costa Rica Podcast Interview

By | 2018-04-15T18:19:17-04:00 April 13th, 2015|Categories: Press|Tags: , , |

Costa Rica Cost of Living Update: 32 oz box of McCormick Chicken Stock— $7

Would you like to know what it’s like to quit your job and move to Costa Rica? And would you like the person telling you this to have a New Jersey accent? Well, you’re in luck!

I recently had the opportunity to be interviewed by the host at Fearless Rebelle Radio, the fabulous Summer Innanen. It was a lot of fun and Summer has a delightful Canadian speaking voice. I, on the other hand, sound like I should be an extra on the Sopranos… like a consigliere or the bookkeeper at a labor union.

We discuss why I moved to Costa Rica and the reasons I stayed and made it my home. Not everything has worked out as planned, but it has definitely been a hilarious ride.

Click play button on picture, download it here , or grab it from iTunes.

RADIO DOS BY THE BEACH

By | 2018-04-15T18:19:19-04:00 October 11th, 2014|Categories: Press|Tags: , , |

Nadine Hays Pisani Radio Interview

Costa Rica Cost of Living Update: Car Repairs (brake pads, brake cylinder, new horn, two new seat belts, two quarts of oil,  one air-conditioning belt, brake fluid, inspection sticker and a mechanic who personally takes the car to get it) —  Total parts and labor: $350

Rob and I were invited to a wedding at Flamingo Beach Resort a couple of weeks ago. I get very excited at weddings, and when I say excited I mean I cry until mascara runs down my face. In fact, I think I cry more at weddings than at funerals. I just can’t help it, there is so much love in the room  (or in this case, on the beach), I get verklemmt.

To give you an idea how great I am at planning my life, I show up two days early for the wedding. Rob was even wearing a shirt void of any stains. That alone was a miracle.

It just so happened that Evan Luck from Radio Dos was at the hotel. Evan is a very popular DJ in Costa Rica and often does his show on location in Flamingo or Tamarindo.  I was on his program about a year ago discussing my first two books and the Ex-Pat show Rob and I did with Jimmy Buffett’s daughter. When he heard I was about to release my third book on November 1st, The Escape Manual, he invited me on the show to make an announcement.

November 1st is the date written on my calendar, but apparently, I have scheduling issues. Who knows, this book might pop up two days earlier ready to party. I’m sure I’ll get verklemmt once I see it up on Amazon, crying happy mascara-laden tears all over Rob’s last clean shirt.

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