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Home » I quit my full-time job at 26. Now I work remotely 10 to 20 hours a week while traveling with my partner.
I quit my full-time job at 26. Now I work remotely 10 to 20 hours a week while traveling with my partner.
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I quit my full-time job at 26. Now I work remotely 10 to 20 hours a week while traveling with my partner.

News RoomBy News RoomMay 3, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

My weeks are planned around which cafés I’ll visit, long lunch breaks, spending time in nature, painting, and going to the spa. I schedule my work around that — not my life around my work.

I rejected both hustle culture and the FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement in favor of a solution that lets me work as little as possible so I can have everyday joys.

Working 40-hour workweeks to retire in my 70s and then maybe traveling sounded like I was delaying my life. Working longer hours, investing heavily in a market that can be unpredictable, and maintaining a very frugal lifestyle so I could retire at 40 didn’t sound like a good idea to me either. Instead, my slow-FIRE lifestyle means my life is designed around time freedom instead of full financial independence.

I chose a middle path after experiencing burnout and seeing others struggle

Growing up, I saw both my parents work long, stressful weeks (and often weekends), and health and happiness didn’t seem to be prioritized.

I followed suit and tried putting in 70-hour weeks in my mid-20s (working two jobs while pursuing my graduate degree), and while I made a lot of money, I didn’t have time to spend it.

At 26, I had burned out. I quit my full-time job and found remote work that let me clock a few hours a week while traveling the world. I’m now a freelance writer and researcher. Every job I take, I prioritize freedom over other benefits.

A year later, I met my now partner, another remote worker who wanted to travel. This lifestyle evolved from our values: prioritizing adventure, learning, and health, not status. After seeing young friends get diagnosed with terminal illnesses and recognizing the instability of geopolitics and economics, we decided on a middle path: being financially responsible while living our lives in the present.

I see working less as an investment in my long-term health

Health is really important to my partner and me, and I believe our decision to work less will save us money as we get older. We regularly get 9 hours of sleep, do at least 2 hours of exercise, and eat healthy meals (ones we have time to make) every day.

I’m hoping our daily habits and our overall lower-stress lifestyle lead to fewer medical bills in the future. I see prioritizing our time in this way as preventive medicine.

We keep our monthly expenses low while still enjoying life

As an American, when I see salaries posted at $100,000 ayear, I sometimes wonder if I’m setting myself up for disaster by not chasing a better-paying full-time job.

In reality, so much of the world doesn’t make this much, and I spend much less than the average American. For example, this month I’m spending $150 on my portion of the rent (which includes utilities and a weekly house cleaner), $15 on the gym, $8 on a phone plan, about $100 on groceries and eating out, $200 on activities and weekend trips, and $50 for weekly massages. My partner pays about the same, minus the spa. Most months, our bills as a couple don’t go above $2,000.

We also save money by being childfree, not drinking alcohol or smoking, and being vegetarians. These choices weren’t motivated by money, but they certainly help.

I don’t feel any of our lifestyle decisions were solely driven by finances — they were driven by our values of sustainability and freedom, so what may feel like a sacrifice to some feels like a natural decision to us. We save by not buying a lot of material items, owning a house, or making convenience purchases.

Working less has given me a life I didn’t know was possible

I recognize this lifestyle was partly born of the unpredictable job market and a sense of an unpredictable future, but choosing to prioritize my free time has made me feel I can regain some control.

I decided that not working a full-time job (at least for now) is the kindest thing I can do for myself: both mentally and physically.

I don’t have a fancy job title, a high salary, a retirement fund that would let me stop working at 40, or a closet full of designer clothes. But I can say I’m spending hours every day being happy, and that’s a middle path I didn’t know existed until I challenged my assumptions about what a good life could look like.



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