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Weird article. It starts by stating ... the number of American digital nomads has seen staggering growth of 131% since 2019, with these self-described nomads numbering into the millions of workers. Then it gives exactly two examples of people who dropped out of the nomad lifestyle: one who suffered from panic attacks, and another who wanted to buy a house and settle down in Spain (i.e. not a nomadic lifestyle) but gave up because of cost and bureaucracy. Not good examples.

I have traveled with no home base since 2012, with a few periods staying in one place for months or longer. I know lots of people who do the same. People mainly give up on nomading because they can't afford it -- they don't have a reliable income and/or they spend too much. Some people have health problems. Some get lonely (blogging away with headphones in a coffee shop -- "why can't I meet people?"). Nomading doesn't solve problems like precarious income, loneliness, physical or mental afflictions. You take those with you.

Paid placement, HR and commercial RE are both suffering with WFH, etc.