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16th Oct 2023

‘I sold my home to travel the world with my family – I’m fed up with woke UK’

JOE

‘You can’t say boo to a goose anymore. Everybody’s offended’

A couple sold their house to travel around the world with their family – after the cost of living crisis squeezed their disposable income.

Chris and Tamira Hutchinson, from Corby, Northamptonshire, packed their bags and left for Thailand in May.

After the pandemic, the family craved more quality time and the cost of living crisis was the breaking point.

The couple sold everything they owned and took their daughters, Olivia, 9, Scarlett, 7, and Bella, 3, on an adventure they would never forget.

Chris, who was a personal trainer and videographer, said the family’s life in England was “really stressful.”

”You work all the time and finally get to the weekend and you can’t afford to do anything,” he explained.

“Everything we saved up would be eaten up by the prices going up.”

So far the family has travelled around Thailand and Malaysia but they plan to visit 9 more countries over the next year.

In England, the family would spend an average of £3,000 a month on their mortgage, bills, petrol, groceries and other basic expenses, now, they’re spending about a third of that.

The family spends around £30 a night on accommodation and $40 on food and spending money per day. They rarely exceed their budget and often spend far less. Monthly expenses average around £1,200.

Tamira, a swimming instructor said: “There are some days where we go slightly over, and some days when we spend nothing at all.

“When we planned the travels we took into account where we would be more comfortable with our money and which places would be more expensive.”

The couple have enough money saved to travel for a whole year without worrying about work and generate a small income from their social media channels.

Tamira said: “We didn’t want the ongoing cost of having things in storage so we sold everything: furniture, cars, everything.

“We only kept small things with sentimental value that we could keep at relatives’ houses.”

The family can now enjoy time together and are far happier, they homeschool the girls in the British curriculum, and are giving them “world education”.

Chris said: “Our stress and anxiety levels have massively come down. We sleep much better, get outdoors more, and are generally happier as a family than before.

“Family time is the biggest benefit to us. The time we are spending together is irreplaceable and that’s the main reason for doing what we are doing.

“We decided during covid, when we were able to spend so much time together, we realised that that was what we wanted to do.”

The cost of living crisis last Christmas also gave them a final push, with Chris saying that was the “breaking point.”

Tamira continued: “We would have done it one day either way but the cost of living pushed it along. It made the decision so much easier.

“If it hadn’t been because of the cost of living, we might have thought twice when we ran into any difficulties along the way.”

Chris said he had also had a guts full of the the “woke ideology” in the UK.

“You can’t say boo to a goose anymore. Everybody’s offended, everybody’s appalled, and it just leaves everyone feeling awkward and scared to say anything.”

And the weather.

Chris said if you can’t afford to get away at least once a year, “it can get pretty depressing.”

“We have about nine months of the year with doom and gloom, when it finally gets to the ‘British summer’ it’s pretty much raining all the time, but you might get that one freakishly hot day.”

Chris and Tamira say that they see many Britons looking to do the same thing as the cost of living crisis eats away at parents’ work-life balance.

Chris said: “We get so many messages from people in tough positions looking to do the same as us, I think there will be more and more people doing it.”

Related links:

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Landlord, 22, says young have ‘no excuse’ for not owning a home

Pregnant mum-to-be fears for unborn child after being forced to live in ‘cesspit’ flat riddled with mould

Last person living on ‘Britain’s loneliest street’ after demolition order is now re-decorating

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