Julie Andrews, Yoga Retreats, and Costa Rica Consulting

By | 2022-01-05T19:53:43-05:00 January 5th, 2022|Categories: Consulting, The Costa Rica Escape Manual|Tags: , , , |

Between fixing up our haunted house located in the woods of North Carolina and visiting its pristine waterfalls, we’ve been trying to get a legal water letter to our building pad in Costa Rica.  This piece of property is where we started our journey.  It’s not the location where we built The Happier House but ironically in a defunct development adjacent to it.  Take two steps to the left, and we would have had legal water.  It’s taking us over sixteen years to sort this out.  It may take another sixteen, but we are optimistic.

This is why I started my consulting business.  Because not everything is as it appears and results may vary when investing in Costa Rica.

I’ve provided consulting for all sorts of people—some long to retire in Costa Rica, while others are preparing to open a business.  And then I met people like me, who impulsively jumped aboard the magical carpet ride and hiked the Osa Peninsula, stood on top of volcanos, and wasted glorious afternoons watching sloths climb trees.  (Pack breakfast, lunch, and dinner for this event.)

 

But nobody is quite like my latest client, Bridget.  A New Yorker, shaman,  innkeeper, journalist, and a person who once had Stevie Wonder run his fingers across her face.

Her voice has that quick New York cadence that makes me sit at the edge of my chair.  She’s like watching a lit bottle rocket, unsure which direction it may blast off.

She recently graduated from the Jaguar Path School of Yoga and Shamanism and plans to offer retreats, energy clearing ceremonies, and private coaching/energy work.  Bridget enthusiastically peppers me with questions about the property she is purchasing.  She tosses a log on the fire while listening to me explain Costa Rica tax implications and the current COVID situation. She is determined to make this experience everything she dreams it can be.

Bridget has lived a thousand different lives in many different places.  Her father was the owner of The Russian Tea Room and Tavern on the Green.  The latter is where a teenaged Bridget introduced herself to Stevie Wonder.  She kneeled next to him while he gently ran his fingers across her nose and cheeks.  I swoon a bit just imaging that encounter.

Her stepfather is Tony Walton, the celebrated Broadway and film production designer, her mother a renowned children’s book author.  Bridget is a cultural zeitgeist, full of facts and anecdotes that would surprise even the most learned New Yorker.  I want to share a pastrami sandwich with her at the Carnegie Deli and amaze her with my story of asking tired commuters, “Where’s Penn Station?” while standing in front of Penn Station.  (I not only learned where to catch my train but thirty magnificent synonyms for moron.)

She co-founded The East Hampton Independent in 1993, where she interviewed Steven Spielberg, Martha Stewart, Julie Andrews, Linda Ronstadt, and Jane Fonda.  She currently co-hosts “Sundays on the East End” with Oscar-nominated screenwriter Alec Sokolow on 88.3 WLIW FM.

One day I hope she interviews me.  “I see that you started your first book with a fart joke.  Any second thoughts on that creative choice?” she’d ask.

“Well, Bridget,” I’ll return, “it needed to be addressed.” We’d then laugh together before I ask if Julie Andrews smells like sugar cookies.

 

I’m going to need a shaman to get this water letter.  I want the complete package, every ceremony designed to rid this property of bad energy and give hope to a project that fell flat many years ago.  I want to turn it around and feel like a bottle rocket again, unsure which direction to take off.

I love what I do, helping people navigate the choppy waters of moving to a foreign country and building a different life from scratch.  I still think about that moment I almost backed out, wondering if I was making the biggest mistake of my life.  But I was brave and determined and jumped in feet first.  Qualities I didn’t know I possessed, but so happy they appeared.

When I submitted my first book to literary agents, one sharply replied that no one cares about a woman who moves to Costa Rica.  “Nobody will read it,” he stated in Arial font.  In type so small, I had to squint to read the rejection.

But people did read my book, from Australia to Saudi Arabia.  On islands off Portugal and in Ghana, Africa.  People full of energy and light and searching for something unexplainable.  People like myself who weren’t scared to jump in feet first.

Never underestimate your abilities and surround yourself with encouraging people.  And when given the opportunity, pause to watch a sloth climb a tree.  It’s not high octane excitement, but it taught me that time is fabulously subjective.

With purpose, we’ll get to where we’re going, one sleepy step at a time.

Follow Bridget’s journey at www.BridgetLeRoy.com

Read all about my adventures here.

Get Me Out-a-Here Syndrome

By | 2021-01-22T11:32:01-05:00 January 22nd, 2021|Categories: The Costa Rica Escape Manual|Tags: , |

The Costa Rica Escape Manual 2021

Costa Rica Costa of Living Udate: COVID-19 Test—$120

Get Me Out-a-Here Syndrome is a combination of disorders that include but are not limited to:

  • Glancing around and wondering how you accumulated so much stuff
  • Imagining palm trees while staring out your window
  • Desire to sit in a hammock all-day
  • Wanting to walk out your front door and never look back

If you suffer from any of the above, The Costa Rica Escape Manual, 2021 edition is the road map to your escape. You’ll learn about residency, buying a car, crime, and funny things about living as an expat. You’ll also find out why I hate the guy who gave a glorious five-star Amazon review of a blanket while giving a less charitable assessment of my work. My dad hates him too.

The Costa Rica Escape Manual doesn’t have any unpleasant side effects. It’s a happier book for people looking for a happier life. Everything from taxes to national park regulations is up to date.

San Joseito

Some exciting developments are a proposed digital nomad bill that will make it easier for telecommuters to live here on a temporary visa. Another is a projected change to import costs so that you can move your belongings here without getting clipped on thousands of dollars in taxes. And get this… it includes a car. Anyone who has bought a vehicle in Costa Rica knows that this may be one of the biggest game-changers.

We’ve all been through a lot over the past twelve months. So much has changed, and there continues to be a sense of unease about the future. But it may also be the green light you’ve been waiting for. Sometimes it takes facing the ultimate challenge to make the biggest change. Getting out of your comfort zone is one of the hardest things to do. But it’s incredible how alive you feel after the first step. A little nauseating as well, but alive, nonetheless.

Is it easier living here than anywhere else? No. But I can attest that the sounds of howler monkeys and lavender sunsets calm my racing mind. And it makes me daydream.

That may be the biggest side effect of The Costa Rica Escape Manual. You’ll daydream again but this time with a road map to the monkeys, the hammocks, and the crazy, psychedelic sunsets. Your daydream is a seed taking root. It’s just a matter of time before it cracks the surface.

Keep your dream alive, and thank you for allowing me to help. It’s been the pleasure of my life.

Nadine Hays Pisani

Thanks to My Readers & Inspirational Sunsets

By | 2018-11-28T20:45:47-05:00 November 28th, 2018|Categories: The Costa Rica Escape Manual, The Escape Manual|Tags: , , , |

 Nadine Hays Pisani

Costa Rica Costa Of Living Update: The Costa Rica Escape Manual 2019— Kindle $9.99, Paperback $15.99

KINDLE      PAPERBACK

I’m up at 3 a.m. It’s the time I start writing, and I thought today would be different because I finally finished the 2019 edition of The Costa Rica Escape Manual. “I’ll sleep in!” I said to myself. But here I am, wanting to write, again, to all of you.

I wanted to tell you about these crazy swirly sunsets. Each night, the sky isn’t a colored layered cake, but more like someone finger painting across the horizon in slow motion. If you can imagine taking orange and yellow paint, swirling it into turquoise, then dripping lavender across the sky before blending it into the entire canvas… that’s what’s happening in Costa Rica.

sunsetI loved finger painting as a kid, and we rarely got to do it in art class because we eventually finger painted all over ourselves— and our friends— by the end of the hour. I think nothing makes kids happier than that kind of freedom. Dipping their fingers in random colors and creating something so unique. It’s why you can’t help but smile as a child shows you their creation.

When you watch these Costa Rican sunsets unravel, your body relaxes and your mind stops racing. You start to believe in all sorts of things. You’re convinced of the goodness in this world.  You swear that you can be a nicer person, more patient and loving. And you believe that you can forgive others, even the ones that hurt you the most.

But most importantly, you believe the thing you want to do more than anything else in life is possible. It’s as if these sunsets are giving you a key to a secret door, to a party where you’re always invited.

Flamingo BeachCosta Rica changed my life. But you already know that story, I’ve written enough books on the subject. But what I didn’t realize was how many small increments of happiness have piggybacked onto each other. Little hitchhikers of laughter that I carry and drop off, before taking on more passengers. And all of you, those who have read my books or just follow us on social media, have been important pieces of happiness in my life.

Thank you for making my dream of becoming a writer come true, and for years of supporting this whacky journey my husband and I are on. It hasn’t been a smooth ride, but neither was my life back in that office. There are many types of potholes in life, and my head was full of them at that old job. If given a choice, I’ll always choose the literal potholed road as opposed to the metaphorical one. Both rattle your brain, but one takes you to the ocean’s edge where you can build sandcastles.

And I’ve been building them ever since I landed in this beautiful country. When I started, I never imagined how big they’d become. But Rob knew. He always knew. He started building our castle the moment we met.

Palms SunsetThe sun is finally coming up; it casts a rosy glow across the mountaintops and a pink-hued blanket of light across my home. I’m glad I’m awake to see it, doing what I love more than anything in the world: finger painting across my keyboard, typing words of color across the pages. Hoping they melt together like a first grader’s art project.  Hoping people will read them. Hoping it’s all not just a pink-hued dream.

With love, Nadine

If you can’t make it to Costa Rica right away, for your own inspiration you may enjoy reading my books! Click this link: https://amzn.to/2TW4Xee

The Costa Rica Escape Manual 201

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