How I see the US after living in Europe for 5 years

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  • @rameses1979
    @rameses1979 Před rokem +13874

    I moved to France 5 years ago. Came home to Maryland to spend Christmas with the family. I got sick, went to the ER, and came out with a bill worth $1,900. The doctor saw me a week later for a follow-up. I needed surgery and it would cost more than $ 45,000. I went back to France after the holidays, saw a doctor, got surgery, 2 months off work and I PAID NOTHING. Technically my taxes paid for it but it feels good to see my taxes at work. Believe it or not, I make half the money I made back home but my quality of life is better.

    • @rameses1979
      @rameses1979 Před rokem +2394

      @@IbangedYaMamacommunism? 🤣🤣🤣. I pay 2% more in taxes than I did in America! That's like moving from Tennessee to Texas (both red states). In a communist country, the government owns all the means of production under 1 political party. Last time I checked, there were 11 national political parties in France and 3 federal parties in America.
      Honestly I would rather pay the extra 2% if it meant I would be alive (haven't died on cancer yet but I would have in America). Also I don't have to worry about losing my home, going bankrupt, paying for my kid's college...sounds like a better deal. If you are part of the 1%, or an entrepreneur, America is for you. The rest of us, the 99% who work regular jobs, we would be better off in Europe

    • @darussalam2022
      @darussalam2022 Před rokem +332

      ​@@IbangedYaMamadeath to america

    • @Jamila91100
      @Jamila91100 Před rokem +186

      I want to move to France but was discouraged due to the lower salaries but Health care and safety is a major concern for me

    • @rameses1979
      @rameses1979 Před rokem +635

      @@Jamila91100Camara Let me ask you this: how much money do you have left or saved each month? If you have the same amount saved in each country, does it matter where you live? I've had cancer once in America and it emptied my savings account. $15,000 gone! After that, my premiums were through the roof.
      I basically had to move to France to stay alive. Maybe that's not your case. I'm going back to school in France to get my master's degree and it will cost me $2,000 a year! You can't have it all. I chose cheap tuition, free healthcare, and half my former salary.

    • @Jamila91100
      @Jamila91100 Před rokem +169

      @@rameses1979 I am left with basically nothing even after getting a raise more money but I don't feel it. You make a great point and this comment will allow me to put things into perspective.

  • @M.C.K.111
    @M.C.K.111 Před rokem +4369

    In Europe we don't have free drinks refill but we have free healthcare.. Of course somehow we all paid for " that free", but I prefer paying for healthcare than for unhealthy drinks!

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +238

      Haha yes Marina =) I hope you got the sarcasm in the video. While I do like my free public restrooms...I would much rather have free healthcare =)

    • @M.C.K.111
      @M.C.K.111 Před rokem +106

      @@hidavidwen even in Europe many restrooms are free.. Malls, caffes, stores hv free restrooms.. Therefore.. Better Europe in any case🤣

    • @gosmarte669
      @gosmarte669 Před rokem +103

      Don't fool your self; it's not free. You pay for it in taxes. Not saying it's bad, but nothing is free!

    • @M.C.K.111
      @M.C.K.111 Před rokem +186

      @@gosmarte669 better paying taxes to hv Healthcare than a big army!!!

    • @khano3o439
      @khano3o439 Před rokem +39

      @@gosmarte669 yes ofc but it’s a good system
      Maybe not for those who don’t need any medical treatment till they die but for those who get 5 times cancer + need a heart transplant in their lifetime it’s awesome cause it will cost them „just“ 14,6%/month

  • @lindasmith320
    @lindasmith320 Před 7 měsíci +1358

    Our experience of US supermarkets was as exciting and overwhelming as going to a theme park. The most insane was seeing a plastic box containing one egg.

    • @Mububban23
      @Mububban23 Před 7 měsíci +84

      When I visited the US, entering my first Walmart felt the same - like a theme park experience! Us young Aussies and New Zealanders went straight to the sporting goods section and there next to the tennis racquets and fishing rods were shotguns and rifles. We took photos holding them (empty of course), Rambo style 😀 We just couldn't believe it.

    • @dang2443
      @dang2443 Před 7 měsíci +17

      I've never seen in in 56 years living in the USA

    • @allenec-1374
      @allenec-1374 Před 7 měsíci +27

      A plastic box with one egg? Where were you?

    • @ruzziasht349
      @ruzziasht349 Před 7 měsíci

      and the eggs in the US have to refrigerated because they washed all the cuticles off, which stops the bacteria getting in. C R A Z Y!

    • @chrisdraughn5941
      @chrisdraughn5941 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@allenec-1374I would love to be able to buy just one or two eggs. It’s rare to find a half dozen box.

  • @bluetickbeagles116
    @bluetickbeagles116 Před 7 měsíci +258

    My family and I traveled to Germany and Switzerland a few years back and I remember being devastated to have to return to the US on the way home.
    Europe was much more wholesome than the materialistic, money driven, career title driven USA. Plus, everybody was quieter, it was safer, the quality of products were far superior, no takeout containers to mass produce garbage…I can go on.
    Much love to Europe❤

    • @N1h1L3
      @N1h1L3 Před 7 měsíci +6

      How can the EU be safer when most are not allowed to have guns ?

    • @5000000EES
      @5000000EES Před 7 měsíci

      because u dont need guns for nothing :) @@N1h1L3

    • @nlbdotexe9656
      @nlbdotexe9656 Před 6 měsíci +54

      ​@@N1h1L3bruh

    • @andrewkuebler4335
      @andrewkuebler4335 Před 4 měsíci

      @@N1h1L3 Because guns make you less safe, not more safe.

    • @juttacard8536
      @juttacard8536 Před 4 měsíci

      2:57 be​@@N1h1L3

  • @cupwithhandles
    @cupwithhandles Před rokem +3783

    This is not a put-down of America in general, which I still think is a fantastic country even though I now live in Tokyo Japan. I'm just sharing an anecdote about an occurrence in Italy. One time in Rome, my wife tripped on a step and suffered a severe cut on her forehead, and we sat on a curb to control the bleeding. A venue attendant noticed us and recommended calling an ambulance. Initially, we declined, but he insisted, so we accepted. The ambulance took us to a hospital where my wife received treatment and stitches. During this time, I sat in the waiting area, and contemplated the cost of the care which I assumed would be several thousand dollar, but we never received a bill. When my wife emerged from the treatment room, she sat with me in the waiting area, and we waited for settlement paperwork. A nurse noticed us after 20 minutes or so, and asked if we needed anything else. I inquired about the bill and learned that as tourists, we didn't have to pay and we were free to leave. As an American, this seemed unimaginable, and I marveled at the kindness of Italians.

    • @digitalleighton
      @digitalleighton Před 11 měsíci +316

      In America that Ambulance ride alone wouldve been 3-5k. Absolutely insane. Thanks for sharing!

    • @cormoranoimperatore8413
      @cormoranoimperatore8413 Před 11 měsíci +227

      The marvels of universal healthcare

    • @GG-ld6eh
      @GG-ld6eh Před 11 měsíci +14

      I love your vids. If we could teleport to enjoy the most enjoyable parts of all countries..

    • @Tia-gy1ij
      @Tia-gy1ij Před 11 měsíci +13

      woww!!! that is... wow.

    • @simonjaz1279
      @simonjaz1279 Před 11 měsíci +8

      ​@@cormoranoimperatore8413 yup and it only cost someone a significant chunk of their lifes worth to get there.

  • @DeniseSalmon-lw3eh
    @DeniseSalmon-lw3eh Před rokem +6064

    I''m a retired working-class American (from Oregon) who has lived in The Netherlands for 2.5 years. I hope to remain here. I do miss the nature - fast rivers, mountains, huge forests, wild coastlines. I do NOT miss the consumerism, social stratification, grinding work culture, rising poverty, and political schism that pervades day to day life there. All my Dutch acquaintances say "We have problems here too" and I know they are right - but things are much better managed here. More civility, more relaxed life style, more peace of mind. People seem not to be afraid they will loose everything if there is a problem with work, or with health, or other uncertainties. Lots of fear in America.

    • @chrispnw2547
      @chrispnw2547 Před rokem +236

      I am 5-7 years from retirement and in my early twenties I decided to take my vacations outside of America. I wanted to see the world and experience it from a local perspective. It was a life changer as I stopped assuming about motive and reason. The American lifestyle is so pervasive and even when traveling many things are designed to accommodate us. 'We Americans' don't have the answers/solutions to so many things. so it benefits us to 'stop talking' and do more listening/observing.
      Everything you describe about America is true but at the same time no one has to fully embrace the culture that permeates everything. In my mid-forties I reflected on how I wanted to live in my later years and set a course to get me to the Netherlands as I approach sixty. As you mention, the Netherlands are not perfect but the nation has made conscious decisions that inform the citizens, spending priorities, and social policies. If you embrace these notions, it can be a great place to live. The Pacific North West is one of the most beautiful parts of America and I too will miss it when I relocate. Thanks for sharing.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +133

      Thanks for sharing Denise. Hope you are enjoying retirement!

    • @mynameisnobody3931
      @mynameisnobody3931 Před rokem +215

      My little 2 cents on the landscape comparison. There's also huger rivers, mountains and forests in Europe too. Just not in the Netherlands lol. I'd say especially not in the Netherlands. But there's flat and boring states in USA too for example. What about Kansas anyone? Lol. So i don't really understand that sentiment tbh. I mean you're not more bound in The Netherlands than you are in Kansas, to go and visit mountainous areas in the vicinity.

    • @BrokenCurtain
      @BrokenCurtain Před rokem +35

      If you miss the nature, just imagine living in Wyoming.

    • @mynameisnobody3931
      @mynameisnobody3931 Před rokem +160

      @BrokenCurtain one could also go to Austria, Switzerland, southern Germany, Italy. Spain. Norway. Sweden. Poland. Bulgaria. Etc etc. Lots of places in Europe with beautiful nature. Which is very close, so i don't understand the sentiment.

  • @jesseniajimenez6913
    @jesseniajimenez6913 Před 7 měsíci +152

    I live in Spain and my experience has been the same. There's something else I noticed, people in general don't look happy in America; they look tired. I love the US of my childhood, the one I return to when visiting family and friends is not something to look forward to. It makes me wish my loved ones were closer.

    • @Desertguy-dg1xi
      @Desertguy-dg1xi Před 3 měsíci +8

      your absolutely right we are tired my friends are tired too it's a rat race out here always worrying about paying bills i let my wife do the shopping because when i go i cant make up my mind on what to get overwhelming is the perfect word for it.

    • @JoeyBarone
      @JoeyBarone Před měsícem +1

      @Jesse - I am considering a move to Spain myself. I am becoming more and more desperate to escape a country that no longer feels aligned with my values before I settle down and try and start a family. Wondering if you might be up for letting me pick your brain about Spain a bit? It's at the top of my wish list for countries I'd like to move to.

    • @OscarUnrated
      @OscarUnrated Před měsícem

      Idk I find the people in the US more friendly than most places, at least pretending to be happy

    • @jesseniajimenez6913
      @jesseniajimenez6913 Před měsícem

      Of course, no problem. I've been here for over 10 years now.
      @@JoeyBarone

  • @crazydobelady6705
    @crazydobelady6705 Před 6 měsíci +176

    I couldn't agree more about everything you said. I grew up in Germany for the most part. My Dad was in the US Army and my Mom from Germany. The way of thinking in the US compared to Europe is totally different especially now. The division and hatred in this country is truly sad! My husband and I are considering moving to Europe in the future. Fingers crossed it comes to fruition. The medical in the US is outrageous. I have insurance and they Approved my sinus surgery in May now they're refusing to pay $22,000. I'm livid! I'm just mentally tired of all of it frankly. But c'est la vie!!

    • @lotuscabrio2937
      @lotuscabrio2937 Před 5 měsíci

      Ich bin arabisch aus deutschland 🙈

    • @countydude8654
      @countydude8654 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@lotuscabrio2937, you are not German,you are a migrant 😂

    • @lotuscabrio2937
      @lotuscabrio2937 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@countydude8654 i am been here since 1985 and married to italian german. Sad reality for you

    • @countydude8654
      @countydude8654 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@lotuscabrio2937 indeed a sad reality,hopefully Europe will be for Europeans one day,once again

    • @lovrovalentic3056
      @lovrovalentic3056 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Yea , ive cut myself so many times at work its not even funny anymore. 😂😂😂And i paid almost nothing.In europe you can integrate yourself easly black, chinese , white, arab , muslim good life -work balance.

  • @darger3
    @darger3 Před rokem +1388

    My son broke his arm in Italy at the park. Some teenagers gave us a ride to where an ambulance met us. They transferred him to a hospital, x rayed and casted his arm. We are American and though we had travelers insurance, they never asked for any information. They just told us not to worry about it. The next day we missed the Saturday bus to the train. A local man saw us, took out his back seat, left it on the curb, packed our bags and rushed us to the station. The people there were incredible; I was gobsmacked. Such beautiful people.

    • @paulsmith1981
      @paulsmith1981 Před rokem +76

      America used to be like that. That is before the 1960s cultural revolution.

    • @erkyderky
      @erkyderky Před rokem +29

      @@paulsmith1981 right. All of these complaints come from places without racial and cultural diversity. Too many choices at the supermarket is hilarious. These are complaints from people who need to be told what to do.

    • @irenedhakde4692
      @irenedhakde4692 Před rokem +99

      Me too, I am a Swiss and my daughter cut open her forehead in Italy. We took her to hospital to have her wound stitched and when we wanted to pay they told "no, no, hospital care is free for children".
      How sweet a people Italians are and children are sacred there. So much heart!!!

    • @lenarae3845
      @lenarae3845 Před rokem +10

      @@juliamaxwellmarin Not true. In 1986, Congress passed the Emergency Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) which prohibits a practice commonly known as patient dumping, which is the transfer of a patient from any private hospital to a public hospital because of the patient’s inability to pay for the treatment. Medicare and Medicaid pay for patients requiring emergency care and inability to pay.

    • @juliamaxwellmarin
      @juliamaxwellmarin Před rokem +3

      @@lenarae3845 I am speaking based on personal experience. So very true sadly. Thank you.

  • @Deepdowndutch
    @Deepdowndutch Před 9 měsíci +1855

    As an American living in Berlin, what you said about the US reminded me of so much... So much I'd like to forget. Most people I still talk to there considers the condition of the US to be rather inevitable. They believe "that's just the way it is" or they know it's not like that but have no clue what to do about it.
    As an example, I had 2 surgeries last year, both went great and I paid zero dollars and never argued with my insurance company one time. My agent literally said, "Yeah, no worries, we'll take care of it." and just paid the hospital. I wanted to cry. I wanted to cry and fucking scream because I, and so many friends, almost lost their jobs because of being injured and therefore being unable to work. If they lost their jobs, they'd lose their healthcare and there is no safety net to keep them from smashing on the proverbial rocks. My European friends looked at me with sidelong glances like, "dude are you okay?" They don't get it. Keep your 47 different types of tomato sauce. The labels are different, the ingredients are all the same which almost always includes HFCS. I'd rather take reliable trains, read books and not go bankrupt when I need medical attention.
    I wish I could start a program to abduct Americans in the night and move them to Europe for 3 months, just to show them.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 9 měsíci +99

      Thanks for sharing your story. Oh wow, well first off, I hope you're recovered (recovering) from your surgeries. But also really nice to hear you got taken care of without stressing out. Health is probably the most important thing for humans, and healthcare is something we all need...it's just awful to hear of people who rack up tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical debt.
      And curious..."Deepdowndutch"-haha what's the story behind the name?

    • @Deepdowndutch
      @Deepdowndutch Před 9 měsíci

      Hey thanks for the response! I was in acting school in NYC and there were too many people with my first name in the class, so my acting teacher said, "I'm not calling out three Sean's every class. Someone give me a nickname." So I said, "Call me Dutch" Which was my gamer tag after Arnold Schwarzenegger's character in Predator xD@@hidavidwen

    • @shawndouglas9605
      @shawndouglas9605 Před 8 měsíci +60

      Lol Wake them up out of the Matrix of America

    • @TheEvertw
      @TheEvertw Před 8 měsíci

      Americans suffer from a disease called "American Exceptionalism". They really believe they are the best country on earth. Whereas in reality, in most statistics that say anything about the well being of its citizens, they are mediocre at best and score well below most European countries except the former Warsaw Pact.

    • @justinemot2282
      @justinemot2282 Před 8 měsíci +33

      You made me feel so much compassion towards you that you can't imagine. Had to go back, find your comment again, and leave a reply. I hope you are good, your family is good and you heal your soul. And that americans become less stressed so that less ppl feel like loosers and less gun violence appears

  • @roconnor01
    @roconnor01 Před 7 měsíci +152

    As a British person, I used to complain about our National Health Service,because of delays and other things, until my wife and I got talking to a waitress in San Luis Obispo,California, who was ill but continued to work because she couldn't afford to pay for treatment. She told us that the only medication she had, had been donated to her, by her friend who was a veterinarian surgeon ! I won't be complaining about our treatment any longer !

    • @karimtemri1664
      @karimtemri1664 Před 6 měsíci +7

      A friend of mine who moved from Italy to the UK is shocked at how poorly the NHS performs. He was terribly sick and they didnt even check what he had, they simply prescribed paracetamol

    • @susangarland6869
      @susangarland6869 Před 3 měsíci

      How many people has the British government killed because it decided that they aren't worth spending the limited resources of socialized medicine on?

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson Před 3 měsíci +1

      my british friend who lives in california says the british system is no better than those in the US. and we have better hospitals and medical schools, and we have more major markets for treatments and procedures.

    • @karimtemri1664
      @karimtemri1664 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@RobertMJohnson The British NHS sucks and the American system is amazing if you're rich. Now... healthcare in France , Belgium and Italy is unparallelled!

    • @adalmar9889
      @adalmar9889 Před 21 dnem

      The healthcare in the UK is shit lol. The US is 10 times better.

  • @Roniboney
    @Roniboney Před 7 měsíci +468

    Brilliant video. Completely sums up my experience living in the US ( 2017-2019).
    I lived in Boston for 2 years ( I'm from Ireland). The amount of people that assumed my country is this underdeveloped hole in the ground was staggering. ''Do you have Burger King there ? Are you British then ? ''. There's a severe lack of education in America. The endless amounts of stupid ignorant things that were said to me could fill a book.
    I found it strange too how so many people think they're from another country. ''I'm irish too'' is one of the most common things I heard in Boston. They're not irish-irish. Of Irish descent but not irish. They're American. I found that most yanks have a very fragile sense of identity and the culture nearly props that mindset up.
    I was worked to the bone for 2 years. 60 hour weeks. 6 days a week. Sure I earned good money but I didn't enjoy that money until I was able to head back to Ireland in 2019. Then I got taxed to absolute fuck on it all and came back with far less than anticipated.
    I made sure I kept up my gym routine and diet regimen and the looks I'd get from US colleagues ( who were totally out of shape, smokers, lived on fast food) began to annoy me.''Why don't you eat what you want ?''. I do. I eat healthy food because it makes me feel good. That's pretty much universal across European and Scandinavian countries. It's not really socially acceptable to be obese.
    Also the irish stereotype of ''you guys drink so much''. Yanks drink more than we do. In Ireland if you're driving you don't drink. I have never seen more people drive after drinking than I did in the US. They would literally have about 3-4 beers and hop in the car. So many yellow license plates in Boston showing that people had DUI's.
    There's just a lack of understanding of how people live in Europe. We have good healthcare, good work life balance. Our entire culture isn't based around earning money and climbing corporate ladders. We work to live not the other way around.
    I wish Americans could spread their wings and come and live in any country in Europe or Scandinavia for a few weeks/months. The pace of life and work is completely different. They'd no doubt enjoy not being constantly burned out by work, getting fatter and resorting to all shapes of substances just to cope with everyday life.

    • @regtowers4914
      @regtowers4914 Před 6 měsíci +28

      Wish I could copy this and give to friends here that all they talk about is how high taxes are in Europe - here no one wants National healthcare so they’d rather die either from medical debt or not being about to get treatment.

    • @poppers7317
      @poppers7317 Před 6 měsíci +43

      How are you able to write a youtube comment without any electricity?

    • @L3th4LQu4rK
      @L3th4LQu4rK Před 6 měsíci +16

      It’s a consequence of our geography. Most people don’t travel internationally. The country is so vast high school geography only covers WW2. You can travel in US to scratch every itch. Want to ski fly to Colorado or Tahoe. Want some beaches, see you in Florida, want to see some deserts Utah baby, how about some thick forests, Appalachia time. I personally like to travel internationally and have been to 15 countries but a lot of my
      peers here don’t and prefer to travel domestically

    • @MrJlee93
      @MrJlee93 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I agree with you on this. There are things you need to experience for yourself. My experiences weren't great in a major city in Europe. That doesn't mean the entire country is bad. Everywhere has nutjobs.

    • @MrJlee93
      @MrJlee93 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Herro1063 there is a youtube search called "why don't people want to move to Dublin". The cities suck. I live 20 minutes from a major one. I prefer to avoid cities, it creates the stereotype that Americans are too simple

  • @ptitecame6688
    @ptitecame6688 Před rokem +1879

    French here. I have family friends who moved to the US a few years ago. They told me although they missed their baguettes (yeah, that was their main complain), they liked the USA in the way that everything is much "simpler" there. As in: you want something, you can get it as long as you have money. Few papers to fill in, few bureaucy. Things go quicker. But one bad injury, and you can be indebted for years. This is very scary to them.
    I remember one of them saying "One accident and you lose it all. No wonder Americans pray so much"

    • @bradl2636
      @bradl2636 Před rokem +50

      That’s a myth. I pay $20/month for comprehensive private health insurance in the U.S. with zero out of pocket and no preexisting condition exclusions.

    • @willvasquez3883
      @willvasquez3883 Před rokem +224

      @@bradl2636 Well please spill the beans because i pay $456 a month for health insurance and my deductible is $2500 with a $20 copay. And i am 35 and healthy for the most part.

    • @bradl2636
      @bradl2636 Před rokem +23

      @@willvasquez3883 Do you file Form 1040 Schedule D and Schedule E with your taxes? If not, no disrespect to you personally but, you’re a “Tax Chump”. Don’t be a Tax Chump. The wealthy are mostly ordinary folks who took the time to study the Tax Code and to structure their affairs to play the game to their advantage. Same thing applies to the Affordable Care Act.

    • @v.m.8472
      @v.m.8472 Před rokem +39

      We carry insurance and probably pay an amount comparable with taxes in France for that “free healthcare”. At least we have the peace of mind knowing there is always a bed, excellent care, and the freedom to choose our physician.

    • @Lassemalten
      @Lassemalten Před rokem +71

      " Few papers to fill in, few bureaucy. Things go quicker" Well thats France. It's not the rest of Europe. In the Scandinavian countries you do your tax declaration on 15mins. It takes 2 days in Usa from what I heard.

  • @TheAVConspiracy
    @TheAVConspiracy Před rokem +1721

    As an American that's been living in eastern Europe for exactly 5 years now, you really hit the nail on the head. I absolutely love coming home for visits, but I really can't imagine living there again. So many societal problems. Definitely not a good environment for raising kids.

    • @yeahnope620
      @yeahnope620 Před rokem +20

      Ive also lived in Eastern Europe for a long time. And although in many ways it's better than the west, their governments are still extremely subverted. In the Baltics you had to show a vaxx QR code to enter a supermarket for example. Ill be moving even a little further east soon, if you know what I mean.

    • @Ksmoovey
      @Ksmoovey Před rokem +12

      @@yeahnope620Can you elaborate wym by further east? I’ve been looking into Croatia , Albania and Czech Republic. I just want to take advantage of the fact that I work remotely while I’m in my 20’s.

    • @craftah
      @craftah Před rokem +46

      @@Ksmoovey I honestly don't understand westerners who move to eastern europe. Why do you want to make less money?

    • @yeahnope620
      @yeahnope620 Před rokem +17

      @@Ksmoovey Yeah, ill give you a hint. It's the only country on earth that has social media that is free of censorship and the country's name starts with an R.

    • @yeahnope620
      @yeahnope620 Před rokem +5

      @@Riwecrew No ty.

  • @AfroMillennialMomma
    @AfroMillennialMomma Před 6 měsíci +132

    Grew up in Inglewood CA, moved to West Africa 3 years ago and this is exactly how I feel going back. The weight gain, talking about work with friends, everyone being so busy, people getting sick, the violence, the news cycle...

    • @FightingSportsMedia
      @FightingSportsMedia Před 4 měsíci +3

      lol I like how you only look at the bad things. You forget there's more opportunity here than anywhere else on earth.

    • @redruby747
      @redruby747 Před 4 měsíci

      U ryt I hate us

    • @redruby747
      @redruby747 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@FightingSportsMedia lmfao

    • @RobertMJohnson
      @RobertMJohnson Před 3 měsíci +3

      because Africa never has violence.

    • @jayfizz545
      @jayfizz545 Před 3 měsíci +14

      ​@@RobertMJohnson guns aren't legal in any african country you goofy. If its a west african country thats not in war trying to rid itself of colonizers its a 1000x safer than the US. Senegal is ranked 34th in safety index, America is ranked like 128th in safety index of all countries get off the high horse

  • @suppayarndechpormsuk3479
    @suppayarndechpormsuk3479 Před 7 měsíci +33

    As an American in SF Bay Area, I have decided after watching this video to make a list of questions that I can ask people in lieu of asking them what do you do for living.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 7 měsíci +5

      Good idea! I've stopped asking that question =) Or well...I'll ask it later on

  • @MrReese
    @MrReese Před 8 měsíci +1263

    The biggest point for me many fail to address that you sort of addressed is that in the US literally everything is some sort of show and entertainment - even serious topics, even violence, even politics. To me as a European that is absolutely insane.

    • @RiaSwiftHealing
      @RiaSwiftHealing Před 8 měsíci

      Gotta entertain the masses and keep 'em stupid and coming back.

    • @kayvahn2141
      @kayvahn2141 Před 8 měsíci

      it's a show because someone needs to make money off of it. welcome to amerikkka where when kids get shot in a school some capitalist scumbag sees an opportunity.

    • @ginucuegghimendule683
      @ginucuegghimendule683 Před 7 měsíci +47

      Finally someone said it

    • @kalyasaify
      @kalyasaify Před 7 měsíci +45

      they are really messed up in their head

    • @elliesart_
      @elliesart_ Před 7 měsíci +19

      This may seem like a random point to make, but are you aware of the helluva boss/hazbin hotel shows? (I recommend, if not, they're a youtube sensation). Short story, it's set in hell, where there are 7 rings (kind of like, 7 levels of hell) based on the 7 deadly sins. An analytic channel I follow posted a video discussing the different rings, and they compared the Pride ring to America. "a system based on milking people as much as possible, based on their vices, keeping you addicted to food, drugs, TV, social media - keeping you entertained no matter how terrible your quality of life is. It's an indefinite prison hoping to get you addicted to as many vices as possible." I found this so so true - it's exactly like America!!
      No surprise being "prideful" and patriotic is such a big thing in America.

  • @HelenLemink
    @HelenLemink Před 7 měsíci +944

    I'm from Belgium, and I broke my leg in the mountains in Switzerland. I had to stay 3 days in hospital and had surgery because it was very bad. Then, 3 mounths of physiotherapy every 2 day at home, and I couldn't work during 10 weeks. My insurance is the basic one that everybody has here, about 10 $ a mounth. The global cost for hospital and surgery was negative ( my country has an agreement with Switerland like with every other country, except the US and North Korea), so it was about 90% covered, but I could come back home by myself with friends ( and normally they should pay for the transport, so they gave me back 380 $ more than I spent for that reason). And for 3 mounths physiotherapy I paid about 150 $. For the 10 weeks out of work, I was paid at 85%. I know that many in the US believe that we are some kind of communists while they are the "country of the freedom". But if I was living in the US, I would be so afraid of the cost of an accident that I wouldn't go to the mountains anymore, I wouldn't ride my motobike anymore and and wouldn't do any sport of any kind. And for me, that, precisely, would be against my "freedom".

    • @XmatineeX
      @XmatineeX Před 7 měsíci +6

      Month and months. Not mounth and mounths :D

    • @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp
      @BernhardSchwarz-xs8kp Před 7 měsíci

      May I conclude. This has nothing to do with communism - but everything with people who are royally abusing the system. You must be out of your f..en mind - how many weeks for a broken leg? Shame on you. The only part that relates to communism is the complexes that you found that helped you fleece the health insurance system.

    • @ruzziasht349
      @ruzziasht349 Před 7 měsíci +80

      @@XmatineeX you can speak Flemish can you, no? I thought not :D

    • @legobuilders6133
      @legobuilders6133 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​Flauw.

    • @ruzziasht349
      @ruzziasht349 Před 7 měsíci +19

      @@stevenmilstead9437 but do you get 5 weeks paid holiday? Oh and try reading the other comments, the best one's are from Americans living in Europe. Read and weap.

  • @loganstroganoff1284
    @loganstroganoff1284 Před 5 měsíci +56

    I remember the first time i traveled to europe i was annoyed at the limited selection of goods. When i got home 3 weeks later i was like you, completely overwhelmed by the choice in everything. Less is sometimes more. Also i noticed, as you pointed out, that people in europe tend to have real conversations. Here all anyone talks about is work. Unless one has a legitimately interesting job like an artist i and most ppl just dont care what others do for work.

  • @MarioMario-my5ib
    @MarioMario-my5ib Před 7 měsíci +17

    I'm from Spain, and one of the things that shocks me the most about the US (among many others) is the way cities are designed and organised there. Here I have everything within a 10 minute walk: lots of bars/restaurants, shops, supermarkets, doctors, the hospital, public transportation (bus, metro and train), banks, lawyers, the post office, schools, and a long etcetera. It amazes me how in the US you can go literally nowhere without a car, to the point that many streets doesn't even have sidewalks. They feel soulless, a bunch of identical residential areas sorrounded by highways, and city centers full of towers and parking lots that are totally dead after 10 pm. I remember thinking as a kid how cool americans are because they can get their driver license at 16 years old. Now as an adult I understand why that is: because kids depend entirely on their parents to move arround, unlike here in Europe.

    • @MsPegW
      @MsPegW Před 7 měsíci

      You take your life in your hands, if you dare to drive in any of the big cities in Spain. Those four-lane city speedways, a la Madrid, are to die for...literally! Spain is very clean, but it smells funny; kind of like Olive oil. BTW, Spain is how many square miles; say, in comparison to the U.S.A?

    • @dalius6633
      @dalius6633 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@MsPegW Lmao, you keep posting your ragebait comments, at least I will not become homeless just because I commited the horrible crime of getting Cancer.

    • @sergiogarpla2902
      @sergiogarpla2902 Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@MsPegW I mean, appart from some streets in tourist sections, I'd say that Spain smells ok.

  • @kaygeayla
    @kaygeayla Před rokem +1542

    I left the US at 16 years old and never looked back, just for visits. I live now in Iceland, and every time I visit the US I am extremely careful not to get injured or sick (it's a real worry).
    My quality of life is unequalled. No hesitation.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +90

      Thanks Karen. Every time I go back, I am also extremely careful too-glad to hear I'm not the only one. I also am never 100% sure of what my insurance covers or not.
      How is life in Iceland???

    • @kaygeayla
      @kaygeayla Před rokem +108

      @@hidavidwen life here is quiet, clean, peaceful, safe, easy to travel to and from, and full of very interesting people, events, culture, arts, and of course stunning untouched purity of nature just half an hour's drive away.

    • @wenderwisney
      @wenderwisney Před rokem +18

      I‘m sure if you have Insurence in Iceland, you can get sick everywhere in the world.

    • @TeamCykelhold
      @TeamCykelhold Před rokem +49

      @@wenderwisney the thing is you don't have to have insurance in most of the developed world. If you get sick you get treated at no cost. So she does not necessarily have insurance in Iceland, as it is a developed country.

    • @lucas-ge4qh
      @lucas-ge4qh Před rokem +36

      @@wenderwisney yes, except in the US. because it's the only country in the world where you'll get billed 10 000$ for fainting instead of, at worst, a couple hundred. They would rather fly you home at no cost to be treated.

  • @ddemoss
    @ddemoss Před rokem +1491

    I visited Italy this past year in my first European vacation. I was shocked at the cultural differences. The inexpensive amazing food, fast cheap trains, friendly chill people, beautiful historic sites, public spaces to just hang out and more, I loved it. I'm confident it's not perfect, but it definitely made me realize that we've got a lot to work on here in the US.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +63

      Italy is beautiful! Glad you had the chance to visit. There’s always room for improvement and things we can learn from other cultures

    • @alessiozini4855
      @alessiozini4855 Před rokem +58

      Glad to hear that you had a good time in our country! We are faaaar from perfect, we simply have different problems... That's all. And you have a lot of problems too, but you are a great country made of strong people, and you will find the courage to face those problems! We don't forget what america has done for us, deep inside we all belive in you!

    • @pedrozembruskinunes4858
      @pedrozembruskinunes4858 Před rokem

      Lot of work? All of America, from Canada to Argentina, will never be Europe.

    • @coolbreeze5683
      @coolbreeze5683 Před rokem +14

      I love Italy. It might be different depending on where you go in the country but I found people a lot more social and relaxed. The food tastes fresh and amazing. Every country has it's pros and cons.

    • @MissMoontree
      @MissMoontree Před rokem +15

      Corruption is a big problem in Italy, and sometimes freedom of press. Food is amazing though.

  • @ds043x
    @ds043x Před 5 měsíci +38

    this was so educational and refreshing for me as a Dutch person. i honestly never knew how the differences when returning to their home country can make some Americans feel

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 5 měsíci +3

      Thanks for sharing and nice to hear from you too :)

    • @friskytwox
      @friskytwox Před měsícem

      you should also look at videos of people moving from Europe to the US and see the positive. this doom and gloom of america you see on CZcams is wild. no doubt the USA have its own share of problems, but there is a flip side to that coin.

  • @meSNakeIce
    @meSNakeIce Před 7 měsíci +30

    Congrats on your wider understanding of your own country. It's a fantastic feeling to find something you dislike and things you're in love with. You know that there are things to improve and things that work perfectly already. Things that people could miss. You're growing as a person!

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 7 měsíci +2

      Thanks for the kind words 🙏

  • @daano465
    @daano465 Před rokem +678

    These videos make me appreciate the fact that I'm Dutch. I don't have a degree, and here you can have a decent life by just working in a supermarket.

    • @dutchman7623
      @dutchman7623 Před rokem +138

      And supermarket workers are appreciated, by someone who just works in an office.

    • @daano465
      @daano465 Před rokem +138

      @@dutchman7623 I feel like thats a huge difference too. All the ''flipping burgers'' jokes come from the US. Those easy low paying jobs are not disrespected at all here.

    • @sonia417
      @sonia417 Před rokem +30

      @@daano465 love that!!! Its wonderful living in Europe now that I think of it.

    • @arturobianco848
      @arturobianco848 Před rokem +43

      Thats how it should be, i don't mind somebody with a lot of responsebility and/or a job that requirers years of training to make a very nice salary. As long as the peeps om the other side get a normal living one. It's not that they don't provide an essentiel service. Heck the avarage cleaner or supermarket employee is more importent then me boss. We could function without him (not as good as with him). Now i hate to think how a supermarket looks like after a week with none filling up the shelves....

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +83

      Thanks for sharing. That's a beautiful thing that I respect about the Netherlands-that one can live a decent life by working in a supermarket. That's not possible in the US unfortunately

  • @down-to-earth-mystery-school
    @down-to-earth-mystery-school Před 10 měsíci +897

    My husband and I moved to Mexico eight months ago and I’m still detoxing from US culture. Reminding myself that I came here to slow down. Hardly anyone asks me what I do, the people here are warm, friendly, helpful and community oriented. Everyone walks, in fact we sold our car to be less dependent. Went back a couple of months ago and I’m glad we made this move, the US was literally killing us from stress!

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 10 měsíci +36

      Thanks for sharing. Glad to hear you are doing better in Mexico!

    • @Deuce7Off
      @Deuce7Off Před 10 měsíci +23

      You're living my dream! Once I accumulate enough funds to leave I'll be off again to Mexico where I have friends that actually care about me.

    • @ivettesantana4319
      @ivettesantana4319 Před 9 měsíci +2

      That's my plan! I am glad you said all that!

    • @comeforaride
      @comeforaride Před 9 měsíci +16

      Yeah not a lot of people talk about the detox from US when you move abroad. Then you find it hard to figure out why you lived in that stressful environment for so long.

    • @PipoGirlTv
      @PipoGirlTv Před 9 měsíci +10

      Mexican here. Happy to read you're doing so much better down here!

  • @jameschan6
    @jameschan6 Před měsícem +9

    Traveling to ten countries in two weeks defeats the whole purpose of a vacation. It is stressful work. A wonderful, sober and personal presentation. Bravo.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před měsícem +1

      It’s stressful indeed. Thanks 🙏

    • @clementm9161
      @clementm9161 Před 28 dny +1

      I concur, i usually prefer taking 2 weeks for just one country 😊

  • @muchomacho79
    @muchomacho79 Před 7 měsíci +14

    You speak to my heart dude, grew up near Stanford, then moved to Berlin at 34. The states just don't look the same way anymore, thanks for articulating some of what I feel going back.

  • @mojcakosi5567
    @mojcakosi5567 Před 8 měsíci +590

    I live in a very small country in central Europe and I'm shocked to read other people's comments about needing medical attention and paying huge sums of money for that. It's unfathomable to me that one would get charged so much money for even a basic checkup. I work as a teacher in a public school and earn an average salary which enables me more than a decent life - I can rent my own apartment, get a loan if I ever want to buy my own flat, I can travel and have paid both sick and vacation leave. If I decide to get pregnant, I will also get a 12-month paid maternity leave. For this standard of living in America, I can't even imagine how much money I should make to live this comfortably. It's just crazy.

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 Před 7 měsíci +34

      An older friend of mine collapsed from exhaustion and overheating doing a 100K bike ride in 35+ deg. centigrade temps. The ambulance trip cost him over $2,000. The next time it happened and another rider saw him lying on the side of the road they called EMS but he got back up and finished the ride rather than incur the expense a second time.

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Před 7 měsíci

      The US is in decline and it is clear now a lot of this is being done deliberately. There are geopolitical forces at work that are trying to reshape the world and they have to diminish US power to do it.

    • @maxbachvaroff1967
      @maxbachvaroff1967 Před 7 měsíci +18

      Believe me, here in the US teachers in public schools do not earn an average salary.

    • @deirdrekiely6187
      @deirdrekiely6187 Před 7 měsíci

      America sucks. Healthcare exists here to make insurance companies rich and patients get surprise bills even *after* paying co-pays, monthly premiums and deductibles!! Oh, and some of our teachers need a 2nd job to make ends meet. teaching in public schools here is not a respected profession like in so many other countries. Politics here in America is SO toxic no matter what side you are on. Some other countries just have elections to elect leaders. Here, we have endless "official" debates that exclude 3rd party candidates, a YEARS-worth of paid advertisements on tv and major politicians who now regularly state that when they lose an election it is fraud every time.
      Rent, healthcare, childcare, college, food and transportation are very expensive here and that's one reason 70% of workers live paycheck-to-paycheck.
      I am an American (with European parents) and I think America *really* sucks.

    • @jimpollard113
      @jimpollard113 Před 7 měsíci +25

      In 2003 bought an abandoned house on 80 acres in rural America. My two sons and I made the house habitable and they learned many skills during the process. We chopped wood for heat and lived simply. However, my work was very stressful. I traveled from the Midwest to New York City and the east coast about one week out of every month. In 2007, my sons were in college and the stress of paying for their education eventually gave me a perforated ulcer that sent me to a hospital. In rural areas, medical rescue ambulances are operated by volunteers (mostly farmers). They put on their overalls and arrived at my farm in about 20 minutes, at 3AM. From the nearest hospital I was flown by helicopter to a larger, regional hospital. After patching me up (I nearly died), the bill came to around 100K. Insurance covered a portion, but the remainder of the hospital bill ate up most of my savings. Later that year my son, who joined the Marines after college, was wounded in the shoulder. He was discharged, but the US Government did not fix his arm (all ligaments were torn, only his muscle was holding things in place). I found a doctor who was a Corps Medic in his earlier days and he fixed up my son for less than what it would have cost elsewhere. Still, it cost me another 10K.
      My son, who is built like a Navy Seal and is very stoic, decided that he wanted to continue serving his country and joined the navy as a linguist (he speaks Mandarin and Pashto). It's a bitch living in this country, and now we have Woke madness to contend with and the resulting urban hellscapes. I wonder how long the USA will be able to find people like my son who are willing to defend it?

  • @itsthequeenfatima
    @itsthequeenfatima Před rokem +916

    As an American who is currently living in Paris and has been here for 6 years. I really related to this video. I LOVE America but I am also frightful of the "mess" we have gotten ourselves into regarding healthcare, lack of affordable food, gun violence, and excessive work culture.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +23

      Thanks for sharing, glad you could relate. Also relate to what you just shared too 🙏

    • @sharon6981
      @sharon6981 Před rokem +26

      I’m also an American, and while I also love it here, I desperately want to live in Europe because the lifestyle seems much more healthy and stress free. My father was born in Poland and my mother was born in Nigeria, so it’s really only my generation here. Do you have any tips for an American moving to Europe?

    • @kender2272
      @kender2272 Před 10 měsíci +10

      @@sharon6981 Hey I'm from Poland, but if you want to move to Europe, you should know that every country is a little different, different culture, people, etc., what country are you planning to move to?

    • @CastleKnight7
      @CastleKnight7 Před 10 měsíci

      How’s life there at the moment?

    • @logician3641
      @logician3641 Před 10 měsíci

      Update....France is burning and the rest of Europe is next...

  • @lawriefoster5587
    @lawriefoster5587 Před 3 měsíci +11

    Years ago, I was fortunate enough to spend 3 months in Europe. Even then,
    the differences were striking. Europeans were friendlier, Europe was so much
    cleaner. No rushing...Even in Paris and London. Rome, however...the rush rush
    there really got to me.

  • @blastofo
    @blastofo Před 7 měsíci +15

    I went to Japan for 5 weeks when I was 9. When I arrived back in the US, it felt foreign. The sights, the smells, the sounds, it all felt different, for like a day. It's hard to describe. Being immersed in a different culture at that young changed my perspective. I've gone back to Japan as an adult, but didn't have that same experience when I returned.

    • @dang2443
      @dang2443 Před 7 měsíci

      You were 9, you pinhead. EVERYTHING is new and weird when you are 9.

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly Před rokem +1274

    After living in Rome for a year I went to the grocery store in my hometown in the U.S.
    What I remember was experiencing the same sense of being overwhelmed.
    Too much variety, most of it ridiculous. The cereal aisle was where I lost it.
    I think Americans are given these unnecessary choices to distract them from their empty lives.

    • @the_grand_tourer
      @the_grand_tourer Před rokem +110

      It's a cycle ... endless consumerism - endless want - endless dissatisfaction ... keeps everyone hooked on the coporate skewer.

    • @nickfavata4487
      @nickfavata4487 Před rokem +39

      This is one of the weirdest arguments against the US…I can get it being overwhelming, but how is having every grocery store stocked with unlimited food a bad thing? There are things to gripe about with the US but having too much selection of food and goods is definitely not one of them compared to most f the rest of the world

    • @rr7firefly
      @rr7firefly Před rokem +63

      @@nickfavata4487 I have seen many indications that the food industry involves a high level of waste. Excessive quantities of food items are produced, maybe as a strategy to deal with the competition. So a lot of products end up in the garbage. Competition is a big deal in the food industry. Take a basic cereal like Cheerios. In order to bump off other cereals Cheerios is produced in versions that imitate those cereals. At one time I remember there were over 10 varieties of Cheerios. What is the point of that? It seems to be just greed for a bigger share of the market. It appears that just about all cereals do that. All the while companies say they are satisfying customer needs. Yeah, right.

    • @rr7firefly
      @rr7firefly Před rokem +12

      @@the_grand_tourer I think you are right. Long ago advertising companies came up with strategies to keep the masses in bondage. I remember when I was a kid I was just as much in love with the box that junk cereal came in, maybe even more so than the junk food inside. There were all those Saturday morning cartoon shows that had animated characters pushing novelty cereals. Who can forget those jingles? 1) Silly rabbit... Trix are for kids; 2) Coo coo for Cocoa Puffs; 3) Snap crackle pop, rice crispies... 4) Sugar Bear, etc

    • @the_grand_tourer
      @the_grand_tourer Před rokem +10

      @@rr7firefly 40% of all food between farm and fork is wasted in the US, not far behind are other western nations. I also think volume is used as a selling trick, people think a moutain of food on your plate is good value, then a lot of it goes un-eaten.

  • @intodevnull7984
    @intodevnull7984 Před rokem +1296

    I'm a Canadian who has lived in Amsterdam for almost 7 years. Like you I miss the nature of North America but going back for me is quite a culture shock and a bit cringy at times. The consumerism, work-first, car-first culture, "false friendliness" and lack of directness are all things I don't miss. I also feel overwhelmed by the comical level of selection at stores and how good ingredients and quality take a back seat to synthesized ingredients, way too much sugar and preservatives. And last, while Canada has some similarities in social systems, rights, etc, I feel like the government and European Union makes a more honest effort to improve the lives of citizens first and not line the pockets (bail out, etc) of big, evil businesses. I feel this people-first mentality is a product of a lot more maturity and a focus on personal happiness/life over work

    • @matthiasek
      @matthiasek Před rokem +10

      No bail outs unless it is a big bank that gambles with money of their customers.

    • @petersq5532
      @petersq5532 Před rokem +65

      about people first: European approach to legalise unknow stuff: prove it is harmless than go. USA approach: until it is not proven harmful go.

    • @Steak818
      @Steak818 Před rokem

      Left-wing policies are still strong in Europe. Americans brand anything left-wing as terminally evil communism, so they rather die in the gutter.
      Young country with quite immature views of the world and destructive foreign policies.

    • @inso80
      @inso80 Před rokem +33

      If you miss the nature, Finland is a very short flight away from Amsterdam and you will find a very similar, but not the same experience as in Canadia. Go there hiking or a long weekend retreat, I guarantee you will enjoy your time. While there, do try the classic Finland experience things. If you plan ahead couple of months, you can find Flights very cheap, around 250e there and back, so it would not be very expensive for a weekend +1 day or so. Rent a cottage. Up north is more rural.

    • @rasmuslindegaard2024
      @rasmuslindegaard2024 Před rokem +12

      Norway is awesome too, though not part of the EU. I traveled there during summers as a kid. It was amazing

  • @DaveBessell
    @DaveBessell Před 7 měsíci +56

    Interesting perspective. I've lived in both the US and Europe (UK mainly). What I like best about the US is the nature and sense of space once you get away from the cities. What I like most about the UK is the free health care, the less polarised society and lack of guns.

    • @barboralitvanova5111
      @barboralitvanova5111 Před 7 měsíci +6

      You should have gone to other parts of Europe, we have amazing nature on the continent.

    • @Ionabrodie69
      @Ionabrodie69 Před 7 měsíci

      Well if you insist on living in cities then you’re not going to see the beauty of our islands..,,, and personally with your attitude I’d rather you DID bugger off and live in the US… if you can’t appreciate the beautiful countryside and nature in Britain then you’re better off over there.. our country is more than the health service it provides or the laws that keep you safe… 😡

    • @abarnybox
      @abarnybox Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@Ionabrodie69 I think the comment was meant more as a criticism of the US and their lack of health care.
      Concerning the countryside...I've lived in a few places around the UK and while there are plenty of places where you can get out of a city and see some nature, the "countryside" is no where near as untouched as in the states (or indeed on the continent). You get crops everywhere and even in most of our national parks (The peaks, The Lakes, the Brecon Beacons etc.) there are sheep roaming all over the place and that has a huge impact on the land. Now I'm not saying that there are NO untouched areas, but they are few and far between and generally quite small. National parks in the states are bafflingly big in comparison, they really are pretty much untouched by agriculture simply because there is so much other space for them to grow crops/rear animals.
      Sadly, as I love the British countryside, there is very little comparison :(

    • @Ionabrodie69
      @Ionabrodie69 Před 7 měsíci

      @@abarnybox Well ours is a small island and a beautiful one.. they have space and money … but they ruin everything they touch.. they have no care for their environment or their people .. give me my tiny island with its ( in your view ) crappy countryside over that monstrosity they call the US ANYDAY.. 🙁

    • @abarnybox
      @abarnybox Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@Ionabrodie69 incredibly judgemental to say that "they ruin everything they touch" as I mentioned, their national parks are some of the rare places where there truly is wilderness and nature, very much un-ruined.
      I also don't think the British countryside is crappy at all! As I said, I love it, but I would equally love to see parts of it as they were before humans arrived and changed the landscape, how incredible it would be to see a truly natural Britain.

  • @dustinwelbourne4592
    @dustinwelbourne4592 Před 7 měsíci +108

    All rings true. I am an Aussie, but lived in the US for 5 years doing a couple of postdocs. I found the US a mix of the extremes. Some absolutely great things about the place and some terrible. These extremes have often driven me to wonder whether we cannot have some of those upsides without the downsides. For instance, the entrepreneurial spirit, which I think great, but can it exist without the interpersonal comparisons and hustle culture. Or its worst form, a literal hustle. Partner and I did a road trip across the US before we left, and there were some places where it felt like the point of 80% of the activity was just to separate people from their money, unashamedly.

    • @cupwithhandles
      @cupwithhandles Před 7 měsíci

      exactly - the USA has the best and worst of everything. People who will give you the shirt off their back, and people who will murder you for your sneakers.

    • @dennisengelen2517
      @dennisengelen2517 Před 7 měsíci

      Aussie? You mean Austrian?

    • @mgp1203
      @mgp1203 Před 7 měsíci

      Australian @@dennisengelen2517

    • @dustinwelbourne4592
      @dustinwelbourne4592 Před 7 měsíci

      @@dennisengelen2517 Australian

    • @karimtemri1664
      @karimtemri1664 Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@dennisengelen2517 he means Australian

  • @coolbreeze5683
    @coolbreeze5683 Před rokem +883

    Coming back to the US after being abroad for 2 years was a shock. Things I felt were normal in my first 25 years of life living in the US seemed strange when I came back. Each time I turned on the TV or radio, I felt like I was being yelled at. Just going shopping, I felt I was seeing so much waste. Everything felt like it was covered chemicals.

    • @toastedtarts4044
      @toastedtarts4044 Před rokem +45

      The last sentence is something i noticed. I want to eat healthy and every food has some hydrogenated something. I’ve heard in Japan that people there look younger than their age. It makes me wonder about the food we have here in the US

    • @coolbreeze5683
      @coolbreeze5683 Před rokem +54

      @@toastedtarts4044 food in the US is definitely quite processed. I was in an area of NZ where most people would go to a butcher for fresh meat and the bakery for fresh bread. There were farmer's markets every week where you'd get your produce fresh. I got accustomed to the taste of fresh food and ate a lot less packaged foods. Coming back here, I got sick eating packaged foods for the first little bit and my tastebuds would sting when eating foods I used to easily eat before. Even the produce and meat here has a chemical taste to it. Probably from preservatives to make food last longer. I think we're so used to terrible food here and addicted to it that we don't even realize how bad it is.

    • @toastedtarts4044
      @toastedtarts4044 Před rokem +7

      @@coolbreeze5683 fresh farmers market foods sound very good. It also sounds fun to get fresh meat from butchers and fresh bread from bakers

    • @christilehman-starr4428
      @christilehman-starr4428 Před rokem +24

      Well those things are true! The treatment I got after getting back was really shocking to me I got hate stares from someone for trying to leave the bathroom when she was entering like it was my fault (it’s a swinging door hello) and someone screaming and cussing at me at a stop sign for making them wait two seconds to go. People who never leave the states turn into a compartmentalised version of humanity for some reason. They can’t see out of their own head and life It’s a box

    • @theragnarok13
      @theragnarok13 Před rokem +9

      @@coolbreeze5683 the shelf life is prioritized over everything else. That must speak loud for itself

  • @stefanodepino8292
    @stefanodepino8292 Před rokem +683

    I visited twice USA for tourism. I came fron Italy. I didn't find variety of real food at all at supermarket....Just processed and industrial...but the variety of real and fresh food that you find in Italy...of genuine products grown in a area of max 100 km with no brand...USA consumers can't Imagine. If sodas artificial ..cereals with a ton of Sugar...are considered variety then you are right

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před rokem +51

      You are spot on! I already noticed that 20 years ago in California. Everything was junk or EXTREMELY expensive, some high quality food was available in specialty stores, but not for the masses

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +51

      Thanks Stefano. Yeah, there are a lot more regulations in Europe over what goes in your food.

    • @graysonsoldahl
      @graysonsoldahl Před rokem

      We do have health food stores, at least in the bigger cities

    • @amandeep23man
      @amandeep23man Před rokem +7

      You are comparing a tiny country population wise with the US with more than 330 Million people living in it. There is no way that much food can be produced the healthy way

    • @missesLMA
      @missesLMA Před rokem +44

      @@amandeep23man 60 million is not tiny but ok😂

  • @yaboyjay7202
    @yaboyjay7202 Před 7 měsíci +47

    When I grew up in the 90s the only MTV we had on TV was the US channel (they had MTV Europe and localized channels after). That influenced me immensely. Rockstars, Popstars, Beavis & Butthead, The Real World, Cribs, ... My dream was to travel the entirety of the US - living there was a dream I wouldn't dare to dream, so far fetched.
    Now, I would think twice about going there for a short trip. It's sad.

    • @Frivals
      @Frivals Před 7 měsíci

      It's not sad, it's just that you have been manipulated to think USA is great. TV is manipulation.

  • @IndieUpbeats
    @IndieUpbeats Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for this video! I share a lot of the sentiments, and I have only lived abroad for three years total so far!! 😮

  • @bluefox5331
    @bluefox5331 Před rokem +460

    What's interesting to me is that you equated that getting a better job and being ambitious makes you a better person. The first thing that comes to my mind when I think being a better person for me is staying healthy, being kind, etc. So that's definitely something we differ in.

    • @TheBrazilRules
      @TheBrazilRules Před rokem +7

      How do you think being healthier and being able to be kind came to be? Surely not by frolicking in nature like our ancestors. You wouldn't even be writing this comment if it was not for the workaholic Americans. Tell me 1 modern innovation that Europeans created?

    • @sebastianstadler4799
      @sebastianstadler4799 Před rokem +27

      ​@@TheBrazilRulesyi think your wrong. Just think about asml and Zeiss as one example. They invented and have a monopoly on euv machines. Probably one of the most important innovation for present and future.

    • @AkselGAL
      @AkselGAL Před rokem +65

      @@TheBrazilRules UK invented the steam engine. Which is the most game changing invention in terms of BIP in mankinds history.
      The jet engine, TV, nuclear reaction, dowel, anti baby pill, chip card, air bag, mp3... and this is only Germany... not even touching chemical stuff.
      Linux is from Finnland and without Linux, no android.
      As an european, modern american inventions? Internet, plane, windows, smartphones/tablets, Boston Dynamics is interesting, Tesla is only developing and has not pioneered electric cars.

    • @cornheadahh
      @cornheadahh Před rokem +19

      @@AkselGAL Linux is definitely one of the greatest things ever created, but it wouldn't be as good as it was without the GNU core utilities which was created mainly by Americans. I think it just goes to show that technology is a global collaborative effort. Every country/region creates innovations that the rest of the world can benefit from.

    • @Greentrees60
      @Greentrees60 Před rokem +4

      I agree - that was a really interesting statement!!

  • @BruceBoschek
    @BruceBoschek Před 7 měsíci +211

    I moved to Germany in 1965 and never looked back. I see the US as an immature, adolescent country, unwilling or unable to grow up. Everything is a spectacle; high-speed chases, politics, sports, entertainment and religion. When I meet Americans here in Europe I am often impressed by their superficiality, disinterest and ignorance of history, geography and civilization. We showed some American guests castles on the Rhine and the whole time we were there they talked about the best ice cream flavours back in their hometown in Indiana. When I explained how superior our health insurance system is I got the response "Socialism is not the answer." I often think of Isaac Asimov's "Cult of Ignorance" and anti-intellectualism in the US. The attitude that 'My ignorance is worth as much as your intelligence" spells the downfall of a country.

    • @Para_dachs
      @Para_dachs Před 7 měsíci

      Sadly I have to agree. I am a german who lived in many diffferent countries around the world. Americans really seem to be uneducated in general. I don't want to rant but they seem to have not much knowledge about the world, history and science. Again, that's just my perception and there are many educated americans for sure.

    • @mitza420
      @mitza420 Před 7 měsíci +17

      Imagine going to another continent and debating which ice cream flavour is the best 😂😂

    • @BruceBoschek
      @BruceBoschek Před 7 měsíci +14

      @@mitza420 ...and ice cream flavours AT HOME, at that..

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude Před 7 měsíci +8

      'Socialism is not the answer' is not surpising to hear from a couple from Indiana, a state where nearly everyone is connected to the hard work of farming and self-reliance. Many americans also don't want it because they fear the freeeloaders. Several countries in Europe went much too far with govt spending in the 1960s and 1970s and really wrecked their economies- and many wealthy people fled. There has been a big pull back from that. But many places in Europe the unemployment is still high, the taxation still too high- thats a huge complaint of the french at the moment. One other thing: the cutting edge (and expensive) medical treatment and pharmaceuticals come out of the USA- and many places in Europe you have to wait far too long to be seen for a major issue, like cancer.

    • @janverbanck
      @janverbanck Před 7 měsíci +8

      This is a great post! I had the same experience with Americans on a restaurant terrace in Brussels. The man, some kind of government official constantly tried to tear down all positive things we mentioned of living in Europe. I had the impression his wife was almost ashamed of his constant tirade...

  • @oceanlover3530
    @oceanlover3530 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great vlog! You seem like a kind soul.Thanks for sharing!
    ✌🏻✌🏻

  • @matthias_tonitz
    @matthias_tonitz Před měsícem +2

    Love the low-key honesty in this. Subscribed from Austria 😊

  • @sydverse127
    @sydverse127 Před rokem +554

    I'm also an American living in the Netherlands and everything you've pointed out is spot on. I've only been here for 2 years but whenever I return to my hometown once the joy of being with my friends again wears off I find myself itching to return to the Netherlands. I love my home even with the many problems the country has and I hope that things can change in the future, but you can't deny that the difference in the quality of life is striking

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +31

      I feel you. I still call California home but at the same time, it doesn't really feel like home anymore. I miss it. And I miss my family and friends a lot...but yeah I'm still enjoying the ride over here in the Netherlands-life is different here.

    • @user-ci7vu7eo9w
      @user-ci7vu7eo9w Před rokem +3

      Globalism

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse Před rokem +18

      It's not entirely accurate. There are many more than 2 brands of toilet paper in NL, even if someone doesn't make it beyond AH. Not 40 I grant you, but enough. Also lots of different versions of the same product for other things, especially coffee. Whilst NL might seem very different on the surface, it's one of the birthplaces of capitalism and that spirit runs very deep here. So all the competitiveness and class divisions and political divisions are there, even if they're not paraded around all the time. And homelessness? I've watched it skyrocket over 20 years in NL as the EU has implemented standard neo-liberal economic policy.

    • @sydverse127
      @sydverse127 Před rokem +4

      @@baronmeduse I definitely agree, I think any country has these sorts of issues beneath the surface, and discussing them in the depth they need/deserve can be difficult. I think the point of this video/my general sentiments is just that there are striking differences in everyday life for someone who grew up in the US and then moves to the Netherlands/many other places where the lifestyle is similar to NL. This video is albeit a bit idealistic maybe, but also clearly rings true for many immigrants from the US. There's definitely a real discussion to be had about issues in NL (rising homelessness like you said, housing costs/shortages, the very real capitalistic/colonialist history here, healthcare issues etc) that just wasn't the point of this particular video from what I gathered though I don't want to speak on behalf of David. You definitely make valid points though :-)

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse Před rokem +3

      @@sydverse127 That's a fair point. Not everything can be addressed in a single video.

  • @studiodebris
    @studiodebris Před 8 měsíci +340

    All of this rings true. We spent a month overseas, not doing what most Americans this summer were doing in Europe (i.e. frenetic touristing in a heat wave) but stayed put in one place. No cars, walk on foot everywhere, tiny market we'd go to daily, tiny fridge, socialize every day - and by the way nobody I socialized with asked me "what I do" even though I was working from there. I left the US behind. The minute I got back I was confronted with the politicized headlines, another shooting, my inbox dinging, the stress of driving, the lists of "things to buy", the simmering rage everywhere. We talk very seriously about planning our exit strategy. I do not want to grow old in this country.

    • @AlwayzFresh
      @AlwayzFresh Před 7 měsíci +29

      Not many are able to shake the conditioning they receive, well done.

    • @arau8310
      @arau8310 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@stevenmilstead9437 I really like your measured response. I live in the Northeastern US (outside of NYC). It's truly, truly a rat race if you allow it to be. I seek to live relatively simply and pursue a less stressful existence. I don't earn as much money as others / as I could, but I also try not to participate in the race either (but it's not always up to me). My friends and family all have a conceptual problem with the notion of not chasing money at every opportunity / at all costs- and most are very competitive with respect to obtaining things that they think will impress others. I have a family (wife, 2 kids) a home and cars which I maintain / repair pretty much on my own unless it something I really cannot do or learn- and work a day job (I'm a self-employed consulting engineer) and a part-time night job (I'm a tennis pro). I love what I do for work and love my family (kids are really stressful and expensive) and friends. I do wish that I could assign myself more "down time" that isn't dedicated to sleep, but I try to strike a reasonable life-work balance. It's doable, but very difficult. I never lived outside of the US, and I know life hands each person situations that are beyond their control, but in general- I always thought it was the same in most modern countries (life is as stressful / complex as you insist on making it).

    • @dantizzle00
      @dantizzle00 Před 7 měsíci +8

      "the simmering rage everywhere" is so accurate

    • @Frivals
      @Frivals Před 7 měsíci +2

      Please stay in your beautiful USA, don't come to pollute Europe. ❤️

    • @Frivals
      @Frivals Před 7 měsíci

      @@stevenmilstead9437 waiting for you to keep your military in your country only and don't bomb half of the globe.

  • @TravelingTum
    @TravelingTum Před měsícem

    I enjoy watching your video. You give great insight. Keep up good works!

  • @fabberry23
    @fabberry23 Před 7 měsíci

    Great video - Great story. Thank you for sharing your experience!! All the best from Germany.

  • @himosaid146
    @himosaid146 Před rokem +799

    I am a German citizen, I studied computer science and programming, and because of my love for this profession, I wanted to travel to the United States with the aim of visiting and discovering this wonderful country . I was crazy about the technological development of the United States and After the visit, I changed all my thinking about this country! It's not what they say in Hollywood!
    Homeless people everywhere !
    The cleanliness of American cities and roads is very low compared to European cities!
    Health insurance in Germany is free, and you can be treated in any hospital or clinic for free, and even medicines can be purchased at a nominal price that does not exceed five euros.
    If you lose your job, you will receive support as long as you are unemployed, and the government will pay the rent for the apartment and the price of health insurance, and you will be given a salary, and this assistance is not limited to time!
    Time in the United States passes very quickly.
    Many foods are not healthy in the US
    I am really happy in Europe and I really appreciate it .
    Thank you David

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +19

      Thanks for sharing your perspective!

    • @vlasov18
      @vlasov18 Před rokem +38

      You know what's crazier? People in the usa thinking that's wrong!!! fml

    • @auxrush
      @auxrush Před rokem +38

      But German healthcare isn’t free. Everyone pays for it. I’d argue it’s covered. Healthcare in the United States would also be covered if people opted to buy health insurance.

    • @himosaid146
      @himosaid146 Před rokem +43

      @@auxrush Hello ,
      When you are an employee you will pay for health insurance through taxes ! You will not feel it, because it will be automatically deducted by the German government.
      But when you are unemployed, you will not pay anything for health insurance, and it will be free for you, and the job center will pay the insurance for you. This continues until you find a new job

    • @auxrush
      @auxrush Před rokem +6

      @@himosaid146 does it make you feel better when you don’t have a choice and it’s automatically taken out of your wages vs choosing to have health insurance and paying for it?

  • @BenGreggSweden
    @BenGreggSweden Před 8 měsíci +736

    Yup, agree 100%. Moved to Sweden from the US a year and a half ago, and just don't think I could ever go back. My quality of life is so much better! Although my current salary is about 1/3 what I was making in the US, the crazy thing is that I have more money left over at the end of each month than I did living in Boston. Everything is so much cheaper here, but when you add the relaxed work / life balance and 5 or 6 weeks of vacation, you just can't ever go back. And I mean REAL vacation--no one emailing, texting calling or slacking you! You get enough time to not only travel to someplace new, but also actually hang out and enjoy the places you visiit rather than just ticking off a list of places you've "been" (so American). Or you can just chillax at home or get work done on projects and hobbies. Oh, yeah, and I love all of the well-maintained roads and infrastructure complete with separate bike paths that barely even cross a road.

    • @NinaKatharinaWeber
      @NinaKatharinaWeber Před 8 měsíci +26

      Now I wonder how expensive Boston is :-), because compared to Germany (where I live) Sweden is quite expensive. We would love to take our kids there on vacation, but haven‘t done it yet because of the cost involved.
      It was funny: We went to Sweden on our honeymoon, 18 years ago. All tourists were conplaining about the high costs - but we were living in Munich at the time, so nothing felt expensive for us. :) I guess it always depends on what prices for food, drinks, accomodation you are used to.

    • @BenGreggSweden
      @BenGreggSweden Před 8 měsíci +22

      @@NinaKatharinaWeber I think Sweden is cheaper now because the exchange rate is 1€ = 11.9 kroner. Today we went down to our local Thai Restaurant (Thai Palace) here in Karlshamn and had a buffet lunch for our family of 4 and it cost us 420 kroner (2 adults @ 125 kr and 2 kids @ 85 kr) which works out to 35,20€ or $38 US (at today’s exchange rate) That would be an incredible bargain in Boston (although in the US you would also be expected to add a 15% tip, bringing the total to $47.30-which would STILL be a bargain for an “all-you-can-eat” buffet lunch for a family of four. Meanwhile, one of my best friends lives in Lübeck, and now owns a summer house not far from here. He told me (when I visited him in July) that the food prices here seem much lower than in Germany. So perhaps it’s time for you to start planning your next trip here. 😊

    • @RiaSwiftHealing
      @RiaSwiftHealing Před 8 měsíci +13

      I know. I went to an international school in CA several years ago. The students from Germany, only working part time and having their own apt's., on that part time wage and got a scholarship from the country to study in another country for $10,000 back in the 90's. We were floored at those things. I/we could never do that here. Their lives sounded so much more relaxed and humane. At the end of the day all the European's would walk outside for an hour, not power walking, just walking, then go home, a small dinner and read, to bed. Sounded lovely.

    • @Confused2023
      @Confused2023 Před 8 měsíci +8

      I had the same experience moving from NYC to NL. We took a 75% paycut and still felt like we came out ahead. I dearly love the US friendliness and optimism…..though for me the quality of life trade-offs stop me moving back every time.

    • @KateLate____
      @KateLate____ Před 8 měsíci

      Would you say everything is cheaper at the same ratio, or is it particular things like rent/mortgage, and what else?
      I'm in Australia, apparently expensive, and may need to consider living in the US.
      I'm worried about the lack of vacation time in the US. And having to work a lot of unpaid overtime as a professional.
      Europe appeals to me more, but I don't want to learn another language.
      Also I love not needing to deal with snow in Australia!

  • @scottabdavidson88
    @scottabdavidson88 Před 21 dnem +1

    Really fascinating video, really thoughtful. I appreciate the videos edited in, but overall as a foreigner it’s thought-provoking. The sharp contrast between rich/poor is something that must confront any discerning person.

  • @newenglanddogmum7725
    @newenglanddogmum7725 Před měsícem

    I actually like this video and a format of it. It was very insightful, thank you for sharing your experience of your life in California and your experience in Amsterdam.

  • @yola6139
    @yola6139 Před rokem +538

    Seeing 10 countries in 2 weeks sounds like an absolute nightmare

    • @craftah
      @craftah Před rokem +6

      ?

    • @superplaylists1616
      @superplaylists1616 Před rokem +21

      Sounds overwhelming, what if you like one country, but then youre off to the next, like whiplash, no time to feel it truly, or have any permanence to it

    • @TheChessNeck
      @TheChessNeck Před rokem +31

      Yeah that doesn't sound nice lol. Would rather spend at least a week in each

    • @MultiRingtail
      @MultiRingtail Před rokem +2

      Most looks the same. It is the equivalent of going to different states

    • @MultiRingtail
      @MultiRingtail Před rokem

      @@euskoferre I’ve been to both Norway and Sweden. It is not very different from Alaska and Canada. Most of the stuff in Europe are already in the Americas. There is no need to go cross an ocean for it

  • @dudoklasovity2093
    @dudoklasovity2093 Před rokem +185

    Spot on! Actually, there are studies proving that if an individual has too many choices, the body releases cortisol (stress hormone). Overconsumerism also leaves you with nothing but emptiness in the end (and incredibly taxes the environment). Superficial hustling for money is also a short-sighted lifestyle. In Europe the emphasis is on friends, positive social interactions and hobbies.

    • @TheBrazilRules
      @TheBrazilRules Před rokem +6

      Friends in Europe. What a joke

    • @NightinGal89
      @NightinGal89 Před rokem +8

      Depends on what part of Europe

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +5

      And beer! You know it's illegal to drink in the streets in the US?
      Also, being drunk in public is an offense - what is deemed an individual choice in Europe gets you in jail in the land of freedom. Not joking.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +7

      ​@@TheBrazilRules we have real friends, not the Brazilian type.

    • @truxton1000
      @truxton1000 Před rokem +7

      @@TheBrazilRules No time for friends in US. When people have worked like dogs for decades you are so tired that you just give up, and when you retire you just have enough energy left to lean back and die, great.

  • @Songfugel
    @Songfugel Před 6 dny +1

    Coming to drop a like, view and a comment to here as well after seeing this great video on a reactor's channel. While I don't agree with everything you said, your stances and viewpoints were all very understandable and well thought out. Great job

  • @mikeo.4203
    @mikeo.4203 Před 7 měsíci +58

    Spent 2 months in Italy and another month in the rest of Europe. The U,.S. truly has major problems. I agree with the points he made you realize that very quickly in the E.U. It goes well beyond many of these issues he pointed out. Unfortunately, auto companies have lobbied hard and won and it is why America is the way it is. I believe many of the U.S. issues can be fixed if we learned from our western counterparts especially when it comes to culture. I found it so surreal that no matter what city I was in in the E.U. you could find people walking around at night talking having coffee talking amongst friends etc.. I had some of my fondest memories doing just that meeting new people going to hostels talking to locals.. Maybe it does happen in the U.S., but not nearly as often. I think especially the younger generation if they were given better access to public tranportation, this would encourage our young adults to explore America by Train it would encourage so much. Everything car based is what is isolating us as people. This was completely anecdotal, but when I was in Florence watching the sunset it was so cool that I was able to strike up a conversation with random strangers and that night we went too a bar all because I was talking about something to a friend. Those kind of connections are truly missing in the U.S. we are so focused on politics, news, etc dividing us we need to come back to what matters. That is being kind to one another having meaningful discussions even with divided opinions over coffee etc.. We are truly losing our way as a country and maybe it's too late to see a turning point. Our economy is tanking, our healthcare system is utterly corrupt, we have two pretty bad candidates for this up coming election we are in dark times for sure. I was just going on tangents, but Europe will change your views of the U.S. 100%. As someone who loves the U.S. I truly want to see it succeed, but we need a change.

    • @ambiarock590
      @ambiarock590 Před 7 měsíci +5

      I went on a vacation the The Netherlands and Germany this year, and one of the absolute highlights of my trip was on a bus trip from Baarle-Hertog to Tilberg. A dutch woman was also waiting for the bus and I started chatting with her. We chatted all the way until she got off the bus and it was an amazing conversation. You just don't get those kinds of experiences in the USA due to car dependency. Every time I bring up car dependency to my family I get reasons to why they think that we can't fix it, we absolutely can and we absolutely should. The Netherlands didn't become the cycling capital of the Western World overnight, it happened over decades. Change takes time, and the USA is in a do or die spot (IMO) where we have to make major change or the USA will either (near) collapse or the planet will cook us all to death.

    • @karlk.6819
      @karlk.6819 Před 2 měsíci

      I like my life here in Wyoming (that is also so much better than my previous state, Texas) so much more than when I was in my home country in southern Italy. If you like Firenze feel free to move there. imho italian cities are cool for vacation, but incubo (nightmare) for living. Goditela.

    • @mikeo.4203
      @mikeo.4203 Před 2 měsíci

      @@karlk.6819 Sono felice di sapere che non ho mai vissuto in nessuno dei due stati. Ho solo 29 anni e le esperienze sono sicuramente molto diverse. Sì, sono assolutamente d'accordo. L'Italia ha molti problemi, non iniziamo a scioperare sempre con Trenitalia. Se dovessi trasferirmi in Italia, Bassano del Grappa sarebbe la mia casa. L’ho trovato il mix perfetto tra montagna e vita cittadina.

  • @rookiepoo
    @rookiepoo Před rokem +520

    as a military brat for 17 years now and living my third year in germany now, ill miss europe a lot. incredible public transportation, generally cleaner, stronger environmentalism, and just overall more relaxed environment. Im goiong back to the states for college and i really do fear for myself living there. the amount of gun tragedies and inflation is seriously daunting
    also: the nature in the us is not unbeatable imo. having visited the tremendous autrian alps, the white cliffs of dover, the rolling plains of german fields, the sunny beaches of croatia, and the olive trees of greece, i would say europe's nature far exceeds that of the u.s.'s- but to each their own

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +25

      Thanks for sharing. Well I hope you have a good time in college...the gun tragedies are statistically high (c..but the fear is always bigger than the reality...and I hope you can just enjoy it without worrying what could or could not happen. Anything in life can happen. Anyways, I am just saying that thinking about college...one of the best times of my life so I hope you enjoy!

    • @chickenfishhybrid44
      @chickenfishhybrid44 Před 11 měsíci +14

      Fearing gun violence in the US as a law-abiding citizen is completely irrational.

    • @Rebelgoose
      @Rebelgoose Před 11 měsíci +10

      If you want awesome nature in europe you got switzerland and italy. Lots of other countries too but these 2 are my favorites

    • @ThePk8mile
      @ThePk8mile Před 10 měsíci +2

      Lol

    • @remcovanvliet3018
      @remcovanvliet3018 Před 10 měsíci +54

      Do yourself a favor, and go to college in Europe. Save yourself the crippling debt that comes with American tuition fees.

  • @elshaddai3182
    @elshaddai3182 Před rokem +266

    I wish people could travel more to experience different cultures and norms. It would give people a better perspective on things

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +20

      Well said. Travel opens up the mind to all that makes us different and similar as humans. It brings empathy. It brings clarity. It has been and is one of the most transformative types of education for me.

    • @ashishtrehan1
      @ashishtrehan1 Před rokem +3

      is it worth the greehouse emissions?

    • @thomaskositzki9424
      @thomaskositzki9424 Před rokem

      That's something the USA has been lacking ever since they turned the leading superpower of the world. The overall level of (I'd call it) "cultural awareness" is abysmal.
      Instead you have a weird, arrogant sense of grandiosity that is in many parts completely unjustified.
      I think, that's one reason why so many parts of the world hate you by now.

    • @baronvonjo1929
      @baronvonjo1929 Před rokem +8

      I agree. Never traveled but watching other countries through YT has definitely opened up my mind.

    • @xtinafusco
      @xtinafusco Před rokem +9

      Totally, the people adamant that USA is the greatest hasn't tried living elsewhere. A 3 day vacation in Europe/Asia isn't enough to see how the set up of basic infrastructure, healthcare, schools, grocery shopping etc completely alters how you live. And USA does NOT have it the best way at all.

  • @ssshil7177
    @ssshil7177 Před 4 měsíci

    What a raw and vulnerable video! As an American planning to living abroad, I thank you! 😇

  • @katherinekier
    @katherinekier Před 6 měsíci +2

    Left the US back in 2020, lived in Central America for about a year and a half, came back home in spring 2022. My body, mind and spirit still have not been able to get comfortable here. It’s so much, not just the consumerism, but the people’s mindsets here, the way energy is transferred and exchanged, and the drastic nature of getting a $15 latte on the same block as tent city. I, too, went to the ER cause the food here is so hard on my kidneys. It’s been hard for me to re-adapt to this environment. Actively seeking my next destination.

  • @user-zq5nn5yj5g
    @user-zq5nn5yj5g Před 9 měsíci +290

    As someone from Asian who studied and worked in Europe for 4 years (France and the Netherlands), I moved to the US for pursue a master degree at a so-called "elite school". Really feeling everything that you are sharing - I don't have a car here and I literally feel trapped here. I started to fear the violence/shooting/rubbery when it's dark outside, so I basically only stay at home after 5/6pm when it is dark in winter/fall.
    Got sick 2 months ago and went to the EU at the University which is supposed to be covered by our mandatory Uni. Student Insurance, still I received 2,800 USD bill last week, all these are crazy. I only can say I miss my life in Europe so much. See if I can find a job here.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 9 měsíci +9

      Thanks for shading. I hope you are better now. What brought you to the US in the first place?
      It’s different for sure in the US..I can understand your culture shocks

    • @user-zq5nn5yj5g
      @user-zq5nn5yj5g Před 9 měsíci +15

      @@hidavidwen I meant ER instead of EU above. haha.
      I came here for law school, a master degree. But now just graduated. moving to NYC next week, and hope to find a job in Europe soon.

    • @jovanvranes8038
      @jovanvranes8038 Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-zq5nn5yj5gdont you study common law in america? or can you study civil law there and move to eu?

    • @nightowl5475
      @nightowl5475 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Hi, sorry you got a bill but don’t even pay it. If you’re only here to go to school, don’t worry about it. I don’t know how these hospitals come up with an amount for their billing but the amounts are ridiculous. The worst thing that can happen is it messes up your credit. They’ll keep mailing you bills. Then they’ll send it to a collections agency. By then, your credit is already messed up so why pay it at all. The collections agency will eventually write you and tell you, if you pay half, that will be acceptable. Don’t pay any of it. Your credit is already been messed up, paying half won’t help your credit. Just do what most Americans do, throw it in the garbage. I wish we had a system like the Netherlands. Our system here in the states is one big ripoff. I wish you well in your studies. Don’t let this upset you. We’ve all been through the same situation in the states. They can’t do anything but mess up your credit and after a few years, it will go away and you can redo your credit. It will all work out. Take care and be well.

    • @reshmamarymarratte5072
      @reshmamarymarratte5072 Před 7 měsíci

      I totally get that, was born and raised in Austria and I moved here 4 years ago to the US to be with my husband. I often feel homesick also because of the culture difference.

  • @stefanomartello3786
    @stefanomartello3786 Před rokem +112

    Fun Fact: "The Good, The Bad and the Ugly" is not an american Hollywood movie at all.
    It's italian, even if starring some american actors in the main roles. The director was Sergio Leone, the music was from Ennio Morricone and it was filmed mostly in Cinecittà in Rome.

    • @viquiben4919
      @viquiben4919 Před rokem +23

      It was filmed in in the one and only european desert in Almería Spain, as the other Leone's westerns as well.

    • @mstoni7791
      @mstoni7791 Před rokem +24

      Spaghetti Westerns 😊. That’s what they used to be called

    • @BeyondUselessMedia
      @BeyondUselessMedia Před rokem +14

      Spagetti westerns are italian movies pretty much. Best westerns ever made!

    • @marcbuisson2463
      @marcbuisson2463 Před rokem

      ​@@viquiben4919 there are other european deserts. One of them is in bulgaria I believe.

    • @viquiben4919
      @viquiben4919 Před rokem +2

      @@marcbuisson2463 yes, you are right. Tabernas and Pobiti Kamani are both natural deserts though with very different lanscapes, like Sahara and Gobi.

  • @davidroberts9037
    @davidroberts9037 Před 13 dny +1

    Very well put together video. I have traveled Asia and I always miss the peace in my soul when I return to the USA. I look forward to seeing more of your introspective work.

  • @vicwilli6435
    @vicwilli6435 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Loved this video :) super insightful and interesting

  • @digitalleighton
    @digitalleighton Před rokem +333

    I lived in America for 8 years, I've been living in Thailand for the past 6 Months. These past 6 Months have been some of the most calming and low stress months of my life. While Ive had to deal with a couple work stress issues, overall I feel safer and more at ease than I've been in my entire life.
    Great video David.

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Před rokem +22

      That has to do with the fact that your US earnings go very, very, very far in Thailand.

    • @oliveryt7168
      @oliveryt7168 Před rokem +3

      @@Ivan-fm4eh How do you know what he's doing in Thailand... If he's working there or not? And if he does, does he earn US dollars? Or is he living off of his savings (which are 10 million USD of course)?

    • @digitalleighton
      @digitalleighton Před rokem +34

      @@Ivan-fm4eh its not necessarily only about the earnings, its more so about the fact that I can leave my house without having to conceal a firearm. I can get lost and not worry about getting robbed on my way back home. I can walk around at 3/4 in the morning just because.

    • @Ivan-fm4eh
      @Ivan-fm4eh Před rokem

      @@digitalleighton what kind of scary ghetto were you living in in the US?! managed to live my entire life without needing or even seeing a gun, and there are parts of thailand dangerous at night and parts of the US safe at night.

    • @stuartaxon2898
      @stuartaxon2898 Před rokem +2

      If living in Thailand is calming it really says something !

  • @garrett3338
    @garrett3338 Před rokem +417

    Your videos are always spot on David. People are slowly seeing for themselves that America is not what Hollywood portrays. Like you said it's very competitive, consumer focused, and many live in poverty or fear. Thanks for another high quality production.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +10

      Thanks Garrett and enjoy your time in NL!

    • @dutchman7623
      @dutchman7623 Před rokem +7

      "it's very competitive", really? Truly think that in the US people are rewarded for their merit and not the cobweb they are in? Will the smart girl get the job or the niece of the board member? For the smart girl to get the job she must really distinguish herself in excellence, and even than...
      We Dutch think the opposite, we expect the niece to get the job because of her network. We constantly complain about 'kruiwagens' (good connections), but the employer will consider the interest of the company as well.
      So at the end the differences are not that big, only the perception on how things work.
      Same goes for the toilet paper... Everyone knows that there are only three toilet paper factories. Who each produce three qualities. So if you would test the inside, US citizens have actually the same amount of choice, though we have nine on display and they have thirty different wrappings.

    • @jenniferazor9814
      @jenniferazor9814 Před rokem +1

      Wow! I love this. I like how respectfully wise you are about this garbage system we live in

    • @tomsmith6513
      @tomsmith6513 Před rokem +1

      I thought every country that was Western or in Europe and wasn't part of the former Soviet Union was competitive.

    • @luciannebeans6679
      @luciannebeans6679 Před rokem +4

      Connections are everything in the US workforce, too.

  • @Jamie5633
    @Jamie5633 Před 3 měsíci +1

    What a great video
    You are super cool
    Thanks for that and simplifying it
    🙂

  • @user-pe3tt7iu7g
    @user-pe3tt7iu7g Před 7 měsíci +3

    As a British/Canadian living in both countries extensively, your viewpoints are so fair and balanced. I'm always scared of watching these videos but I can tell you really are authentic. Great video!

    • @evernight.
      @evernight. Před 7 měsíci

      UK has nothing to do with the rest of the Europe. Completely different culture, just like the USA and Canada are.

    • @CardrisCreations-iq7zs
      @CardrisCreations-iq7zs Před měsícem

      @@evernight. nah that's a bs people keep repeating to themselves... Canada REALLY looks like the US tbh lol Yes a little slower, but still quite consumist, people only talk about work and buying stuff as well lol

    • @evernight.
      @evernight. Před měsícem

      @@CardrisCreations-iq7zs ok. If someone asked me when did I post this comment I would say a month ago. I am now in shock that 5 months have passed by...

  • @jasoncallow860
    @jasoncallow860 Před rokem +310

    All countries have their problems, the UK is mess right now, but I feel that the problem with the USA is the unwillingness to change. I feel that Europe is generally going in the right direction with continuous improvement. In the USA things seemed to be going backwards, abortion choice, violence, etc and the perception is that better gadgets = improved society. Society should always be about improving the life of everyone, wealth is only a means to an end. The ideal life is maximum free time not maximum money.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +8

      Thanks for sharing your opinion!

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před rokem

      I loathe the man, but Trump got one thing right, america is ruled by an elite class of parasites.. drain the swamp! Unfortunately he is not better but even worse......

    • @May04bwu
      @May04bwu Před rokem +7

      I agree but maximum money also means maximum free in this day and age. Idk.

    • @alanpotter8680
      @alanpotter8680 Před rokem +9

      Europe will have problems until everyone is unified and pay + pricing is equal everywhere. You can't have a poor Romania or Bulgaria to pay double the prices for the same thing Germans or French pay cents, while having 3x or 4x the minimum wage of those countries. Right now, what we see is a Western EU keeping Eastern EU poor *on purpose*, so Western EU can maintain low cost, low inflation by exporting shitload of low-quality product to Eastern EU for double the price, since most of the market in those parts of Europe is monopolized by mostly Germany, France and Austria. Supermarkets, DYI stores, Discount stores, not to mention a lot of people in EEU work in German/Austrian/French companies, who keep payment low intentionally.

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před rokem +11

      @@alanpotter8680 I don't follow your chain of thought.. the richer EU countries do NOT export all kinds of crap to eastern EU, we don;t make crap because our wages are too high... Crap comes out of China and other (mostly Asian) countries. Sadly we still buy a lot of that crap ourselves (bad habit) , but the poorer countries do also buy it because it''s cheap.
      I also don;t see how German and French conglomerates can dominate all markets, Poles or Bulgarians are not stupid, they are certainly capable of starting their own trade holdings.
      Or do you mean that western brands have more money for marketing and thus can gain an advantage that way?

  • @andykeith1
    @andykeith1 Před rokem +502

    Having just returned from my first visit to America on a family holiday, here are few observations I made as a European:
    - Crazy amount of choice in supermarkets. As you said in the video, what’s going on? Surely no one needs that many types of coffee?!
    - Super friendly people (mostly). Everyone we met was very friendly and open. The waiters were a different league to Europe, always very helpful and attentive (obviously they want the tips but still).
    - Good roads. Driving was very easy compared to Europe (in general). Big parking spaces.
    - Intersections - really you need roundabouts! Wasted a lot of time at red lights at busy intersections.
    - Gun culture - a local family attraction near where we stayed was called “Machine Gun America” where the whole family can try out machine guns 😬
    - Expensive fresh ingredients vs. cheap fast food. Bag of salad was $7, hamburger was $5.

    • @PremiumFuelOnly
      @PremiumFuelOnly Před rokem +17

      America is a big place, it depends on which state and city you visited. My county here in GA uses roundabouts.

    • @franceslock1662
      @franceslock1662 Před rokem

      Salad and veg is real food, burgers are junk.

    • @vielumiereg9794
      @vielumiereg9794 Před rokem +13

      Machine Gun America, you must've went to Orlando FL lol. The way I look at it, is that every country has it's ups and downs. Most people seem to focus too much on negatives and less about learning and being open minded. There are lots of things in Europe that are considered normal that I find strange or unnecessary, but at the end of the day, I don't really care because I'm not there to focus on that stuff. I'm there to enjoy a DIFFERENT culture than what I'm used to.

    • @ethan.9415
      @ethan.9415 Před rokem +6

      Biggest lesson of 2022 in the stock market: Nobody knows what is going to happen next, so practice some humility and follow a strategy with a long term edge like Mr Sam strategy...

    • @williamdarren9263
      @williamdarren9263 Před rokem +5

      My 4000 dollar earned with the help Mr Sam Deymon an hour job feels like I'm making sum an hour these days with Sam.

  • @cmoinico94
    @cmoinico94 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Hello David, I am a French and i was thinking about experience the American dream. Having the European point of view (hope this will not offend you but after these 5 years in Europe I think that you really know the way of life in Europe) is really helpful for me.
    Thank you for your feedback. Hope the best for you and that you will be able to come back soon to Europe.

  • @jeremyaquino8946
    @jeremyaquino8946 Před 7 měsíci +21

    It's interesting to see how your lived experience in the US has influenced the differences you see between US and Europe. For instance, living in the bay area as an Asian male and working in finance, having friends in finance/tech, etc. I bring this up because the competitiveness seems to be magnified in major economic centers like Silicon Valley and cities overall. In other regions it may not be as prominent. Though this may be more an issue of the integration of urban and non-urban communities in US vs Europe and even vs Eastern countries.
    You also mentioned that the majority of police officers you've met are genuinely good people and that "we tend to label people based on this profession, it's a bias". While I don't disagree that many police officers are good people, your statement makes it seem like some peoples' perspectives are all bias, when the unfortunate reality for many people, especially minorities in low-income communities, is that their lived experience with the police can be largely different. Perhaps their many encounters with police haven't been so friendly. And this experience negatively affects their outlook on the people in this profession and the people like them. People are going to pull from their past experiences versus having the presence of mind to consider that others have had different interactions with the police.
    I guess these are just points to consider that I thought of. I appreciate your words and your perspective, and you overviewed well some key issues the US has.

    • @sinfool6585
      @sinfool6585 Před 7 měsíci

      You make a good point, especially when it comes to more focused regions & cultures. I've lived in Germany, a neighbor to the Netherlands, for over a decade & a half and some of the differences can be pretty stark. We tend to bundle up so many different countries into just "Europe" when so many of the EU countries have much different takes...and that's not even getting into the European-but-non-EU countries over here.
      I find that Germany is still capitalist AF, yes, with protections but, after so long living here, calling out so many "protections" that never actually get enforced or get shadily worked-around is a hill I'll continue to die on, as I've seen it with my own eyes and the through the many stories of my friends, family members, clients, and even personally experiencing alongside my German Ex who was mobbed out of their job.
      But, that gets even more focused and goes deeper into what you're saying...personal perspective and background does play a role. As a self-employed person here, I don't benefit from many of the protections & benefits that 9-to-5'ers get here. In fact, Germany's outdated job-skills system and it's bureaucracy have stood in my way from the very first day I arrived...and I was actually scouted to come here. Years & years later, the system hasn't even been remotely modernized yet, despite it's severe, across-the-board worker shortage.
      I could build a Skyscraper-O-Text with a zillion other examples, some agreeing with the OP and others disagreeing with him, but again...what you said rings true: there are so many factors & variables affecting one's experience of living in a particular country vs their part of their own country. And, then there are some things that are just reality, across the board, pros/cons or not. I'd move back to the US in a heartbeat if we'd just get our health insurance & paid education thing sorted. All the other stuff, I'd happily deal with, and I say this as a liberal progressive...because a lot of the liberal stuff over here that we wish we had back home is far from rainbows and hand-holding. I can't tell you how much I miss meritocracy, like what the OP has mentioned in so many words, for example. *shrugs*

    • @robertfarrow5853
      @robertfarrow5853 Před 7 měsíci

      Exactly . When every person in a set neighbourhood you have contact with is a violent drug abusing, gun using thug, wouldn't you be influenced into acting on your experience?

    • @alexis8936
      @alexis8936 Před 21 dnem

      is finance really a job?

  • @douglasflatley1178
    @douglasflatley1178 Před rokem +259

    We moved from Phoenix, AZ to the southwest of France almost 2 years ago. It's been an eye opening experience. The transition has been easier than some might expect. We are part of the French healthcare system and find it easy to use. Fresh and delicious foods are easily available and we frequent farmers markets regularly. We've made an effort to buy local, avoiding big stores whenever possible. We are very glad we made the move and have no regrets.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +10

      Thanks for sharing Douglas! Glad to hear. I love visiting France and hope to see the south of France next month. Do you know French? I hear France is a place where you need to know French...

    • @Winters.C
      @Winters.C Před rokem +6

      That sounds so amazing! My sister felt the same about Germany and I’m so jealous of everyone commenting getting to live abroad. I’ve only been out of the US to Mexico and Canada those kind of don’t count since at the time you didn’t need a passport 🤣 I’d love to leave here if I could make all my family go too haha but they hate change so for now I can dream! My dad is considering Portugal though🤞

    • @douglasflatley1178
      @douglasflatley1178 Před rokem +12

      @@hidavidwen We both speak enough French to get by nicely and continue to study the language. I feel that if you live in a large city like Paris (touristy) you can get by with much less French but in our area English speakers are not the norm.

    • @douglasflatley1178
      @douglasflatley1178 Před rokem +6

      @@Winters.C We had wanted to make a life change like this for years and feel lucky to have been able to make it a reality. Dream big!

    • @marceelino
      @marceelino Před rokem +7

      @@hidavidwen I went for a road trip through France. Visited small villages and I never had a need to know French. We all managed with hand gestures or a mix of English, German, French. If they are willing to sell and you are willing to buy, nothing will stand in the way.

  • @catrinaruhter5784
    @catrinaruhter5784 Před 11 měsíci +269

    I think it really depends on where you live in the USA. Most people live in big cities. I live in a very small town in the USA. It's slow paced, little to no stress, the medical bills are mostly covered by our local hospital through different forgiveness programs. Mountains, rivers and streams with lots of clean air and wildlife. Our stores are smaller and don't have a lot of verity. It's very easy to shop. The people are friendly and the small businesses here are locally owned by wonderful people. It's nice :)

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 11 měsíci +39

      Thanks Catrina, it really does depend on where you are...big city vs. small town life anywhere in the world is gonna be different. I personally think I'll settle in a small town at some point, friendlier people and culture =) Thanks for sharing!

    • @bigcedarranch
      @bigcedarranch Před 9 měsíci +15

      This. I live in a village of 8200 people… a good friend of mine lives in NYC, originally from a city not far from me with 18,000 people - little bit bigger then 8000, but not NYC big.
      He says he hates living in the city because of the the craziness of it all…

    • @Agrover112
      @Agrover112 Před 9 měsíci

      @@hidavidwenWhere in the US?

    • @JustLetTerenceExplainIt
      @JustLetTerenceExplainIt Před 9 měsíci +11

      A part of the point, I think, is that outside the US there are multiple entire countries that are the way you describe your one small town (that sounds very nice).

    • @HistoricLife
      @HistoricLife Před 9 měsíci

      Forgiveness programs don't stop you from going broke in the USA, no one goes broke in Europe. Small town USA is now as crime ridden as the cities thanks to current drug crisis.

  • @KrisMoe
    @KrisMoe Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent perspectives. Well done

  • @enc897
    @enc897 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. I, too, am from the Bay Area and that comparison culture is very much from that area, especially in the tech-centered cities. I now live in a rural area outside of California and it is less like that. I love Europe as well and look forward to retiring there soon. I love your perspective.

  • @jarrodh8041
    @jarrodh8041 Před rokem +106

    I totally agree with you. I left the USA in 2005 and moved to Europe and I still love it. Once you get use to the work life balance in Europe vs USA moving back isn’t really for me.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +7

      Thanks Jarrod. Where did you move to in Europe? Did you ever consider moving back?
      Nice to hear you're enjoying life!

  • @anneliesS04
    @anneliesS04 Před rokem +43

    I love to hear your reflections about your home land. It bears the positive as well as the negative sides. The vibe of this video is contemplative, it reflects the bitter sweet feelings you have towards the country you were born and raised. Beautiful video!

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +4

      Thanks Annelies :) the reflections seem to change over time as I change.

  • @MichelleVisageOnlyFans
    @MichelleVisageOnlyFans Před 7 měsíci +6

    The "Cheese Sandwich (Dutch food)" pic after the varied and lavish display of vast food selection in the US floored me! LOL! So funny! Europeans (although I hate to generalize when it comes to Europe cos we're so different country to country) go out to small local grocers, and by fresh produce, bakery, etc. several times a week, e.g. on our way from work, or just popping out from our home at a whim, and rustle up some healthy stuff at home for dinner with it. Very few of us have a fast food joint as an option for food outside of a lunch break at work., maybe, and even that is not a usual thing. Also if your local corner shop, which in Europe is almost always small in square meter size, carries only two types of toilet paper and you happen not to like any of them, there's another store or a shop few meters further down the street or around the corner, where you know they'll have what you like, and you go to get your favorite brand there. I regularly have few stores I pop into for various favorites of mine that I know that they carry. It's part of knowing your neighborhood well and generally a part of living in a European city, everything in your neighborhood is walking distance, and you pick up your favorite stuff and food when walking around. We do have big box retailers, too though, but it's not as much a thing for people to necessarily drive there and buy in bulk for the whole week, although many, especially with families and living in the suburbs in bigger houses as oppose the city folks in small apartments, do, just like Americans. But don't get me wrong, If European cities were designed like American cities, for driving, and with vast suburbs, we would be acting the same way you guys do! It's just a nature of out environment and what it evolved from historically that forces us into a certain lifestyle that we just follow naturally, I guess! Also America is designed since its inception for a robust consumerism and selling. Everything has to be marketed in a way, and pushed on you to buy it! Free refills! huge portions!, cheaper price! bigger and better selection! they all are trying to get your attention and make you to buy! All this beautiful presentation, big, glossy ubiquitous adds in your face scream come to us and consume! Whereas in Europe I have a feeling the merchant is more like "This is what I sell. Buy it, if you like it. If you don't like it, well you can kiss my as..." LOL!

  • @lauren.tamayo
    @lauren.tamayo Před 4 měsíci +4

    I really enjoyed this video!! As an American who's been living in Australia for the past 5 years, I can relate so much to what you shared especially when you drove 2 blocks to your local supermarket 😂 I'm absolutely guilty of doing that at times when I'm home in the U.S. I also miss things about living in the U.S. but there are things like the U.S. Healthcare system, Corporate America and our culture around work, consumerism, and gun violence that I don't like/don't agree with.

    • @chippyjohn1
      @chippyjohn1 Před 4 měsíci

      The US is ruining Australia, please leave and take your politics and junk products and businesses with you. Also take your tens of thousands of military personnel and military bases back!

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Thanks Lauren, glad you could relate and wish you well to the next 5?

    • @lauren.tamayo
      @lauren.tamayo Před 3 měsíci

      @@hidavidwenthank you!

  • @eduardasilva5421
    @eduardasilva5421 Před rokem +96

    Hi David! Loved your video, I will start sharing it with my friends and family. I am Portuguese, but I lived in Boston for a short period of 6 months and whenever I am asked about the experience and how different it is from life in Europe, I struggle to put it so clearly in words. Most people just assume it should be better because you gain more money in the US.
    You just put it so nicely in your video, it is exactly this. I had a great time in the US. Like you said, I could feel the drive and ambition people had regarding their careers and that was inpiring for me. Also loved the multicultural environment and how much there was of everything, literally. I was constantly astonished 😅 On the other hand, I missed having "real relationships" with people, i felt a lack of connection. As if people were being extremely nice with me because it was a duty but they really did not care much about what you were saying. Too many conversations revolved around the job, the new house someone was moving in, where they were going to on their 2 weeks holidays...it always felt like a competition. I did make some life friends in Boston 😊 After living now in different European countries for 4 years, I guess I just prefer my coffee "not to go" at the little coffee shop in my street and to "waste" my time after work just living and enjoying my loved ones

    • @TheBrazilRules
      @TheBrazilRules Před rokem +7

      Funny, because I live in Portugal and my neighbors don't even speak to me. Let alone having friends. The only people who talk to me are Brazilians

    • @eduardasilva5421
      @eduardasilva5421 Před rokem +7

      @@TheBrazilRules not that strange, many Portuguese people have some sort of prejudice against foreigners. I would say older people mostly, I don't truly understand why, but I hope it's changing. Give us a second chance, not all of us are the same. Bem vindo a Portugal e boa sorte 🙂 Tenho certeza que com o tempo vai ficar melhor e conquistas os teus vizinhos mal encarados. Há muitos, e não são só assim contigo. Eu também tenho desses 😅

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +3

      Thanks Eduarda! Beautifully put! Oh yeah Portuguese culture is really about relationships, yeah? I've spent some time there (walked the Camino from Porto)...and loved it. Lots of hospitality.

    • @user-tv3no9gm4q
      @user-tv3no9gm4q Před rokem +2

      You should visit Russia. Sincerity and genuine care is the only reason why we communicate. There is no hypocricy. Talking about job and/or money occurs only if the person is asked about those topics. Otherwise it would be either nagging or bragging, which is not welcome in a conversation. In a conversation, with a friend or a stranger, you can learn a lot of personal and/or sensitive information. That's because we trust each other. You may be sure that you won't be reported. You are safe if you are sincere. We call it "soul".

    • @eduardasilva5421
      @eduardasilva5421 Před rokem

      @@user-tv3no9gm4q That's really beautiful. I do hope I have a chance in my life to visit Russia

  • @kristinavsworld
    @kristinavsworld Před 9 měsíci +161

    I have been living in the US for the past 8 years (6 years in Los Angeles). Im originally from Prague and I can relate to this so much! I cannot wait to graduate and go back to Europe…😅

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 9 měsíci +12

      Thanks for sharing, especially as a European in the US. "Cannot wait to go back..." curious to hear what your experiences have been like!

    • @DK-ty5ue
      @DK-ty5ue Před 9 měsíci +11

      Prague ❤

    • @chechnya
      @chechnya Před 9 měsíci +5

      I can't wait for you to go back too

    • @thepoliticalanalyst5684
      @thepoliticalanalyst5684 Před 9 měsíci +36

      @@chechnyaWeird comment

    • @gez-ye-oku
      @gez-ye-oku Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@chechnyago drink kefir 😅

  • @BirgitBettina
    @BirgitBettina Před 4 měsíci +1

    Nice video David! I live in The Netherlands and I'm always amazed of how big your supermarkets are. Looks a bit like the Makro (supermarket for business owners) we have here with all those pallets. And your food looks delicious, I think it would be a challenge for me to stay thin 😅

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Haha it is a challenge indeed

  • @MKristensen
    @MKristensen Před 7 měsíci +3

    I live in Denmark and work 37 hours a week, which is a full time job. Taxes are high, but so are the wages. It doesn’t cost anything to go to the hospital, to school ect. Crime are low and people are generally happy with their lives. I would never trade my life with a American one. Having balance between work life and off time is important. Studies says Danes work less, but are more efficient. If you don’t have an education, you don’t need 3 jobs to survive here.
    Danes have another life view than many other peoples. An Englishman ones described how Danes could be happy without having a lot and this is true. Our cars and houses are smaller, but why have more than you need. It just forces you to work more, with less time with family.

    • @paulm2467
      @paulm2467 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I don’t get this American obsession with massive houses, 500 sq. metres for a couple or family of 3/4 is totally ridiculous, I live in a 100+ year old 150sq. m house in London and it is considered a large family home, there are 3 of us and we have 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, dining, living and kitchen diner plus a cellar for storage, Americans must spend a lot of time just moving from one room to another and it’s no wonder they are the world’s most prolific energy consumers if they have to heat or air condition those huge spaces.

  • @vmoses1979
    @vmoses1979 Před rokem +217

    The biggest issue with the US is that people know what the problems are, they are fixable but the political class is totally uninterested/corrupt - Trans bathrooms get more traction.

    • @Steeler-wg5zo
      @Steeler-wg5zo Před rokem

      US needs kinda 'workers revolution' like Europe had centuries ago..

    • @cosettapessa6417
      @cosettapessa6417 Před rokem +26

      For real. The trans discussion is crazy.

    • @geraldbutler5484
      @geraldbutler5484 Před rokem +23

      @@cosettapessa6417 It’s just another distraction. Money is America’s real god, plus the myopia of being unable to concede that many countries do many things better.

    • @marcbuisson2463
      @marcbuisson2463 Před rokem +9

      ​@@cosettapessa6417 to be fair, it makes people elected on the right, so why would they stop enphasize it? Getting reelected allows them to get more corrupted. We have the same over here with Orban and a large part of the right.

    • @ashdav9980
      @ashdav9980 Před rokem +20

      @@marcbuisson2463 As a woman and mother, have voted left many times in the US, but I am certainly not a fan of the erasure of voices of biological women over issues like biological males in women’s sports, biological males having access to girls locker rooms, biological males having access to female prisoners…….but do go on minimizing this as a “right issue” for elections.

  • @metameulenbelt2733
    @metameulenbelt2733 Před 9 měsíci +134

    I’m Dutch, I live in the Netherlands. We watch shows from all over the world. In these shows you can compare the personalities and mentalities of people from different countries in a same situation. We can watch Masterchef, a cooking competition show, from different countries, for example the UK, Australia and the USA. I love watching the Australia version. Lovely people, they are competitive, but in a supportive way and they accept when they are elimitated from the show. The contestors also speak positive about the other competitors. The UK version is also okay, British are polite and don’t speak bad about their fellow contesters, but I think it’s less enjoyable than the Australian version.
    The USA version on the other hand, the contestors speak bad about each other, they fight and don’t agree with the jury. They are so competitive that I don’t like to watch this version. I think that the viewing numbers of the USA version were also low here, because I don’t see the USA show anymore, but the Ausralian one is still available, even on repeat.
    I don’t think being competitive in your job or in school makes you a better person, supporting your fellow worker and be being nice to other people makes the world a better place.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před 9 měsíci +11

      Thanks for sharing. Interesting perspective...but I get it. US culture definitely is more competitive...I think that's what I'm used to growing up (even watching shows). Actually, competition is why people watch (in the US)...that's what get views...the emotions involved...and I do think they cast people on shows based on if they can make things "interesting" (like getting in fights).

    • @kezziahhh
      @kezziahhh Před 8 měsíci +2

      I love masterchef UK, have to watch the aussie version

    • @Dbb27
      @Dbb27 Před 8 měsíci +4

      That’s a really interesting observation. Thank you so much for sharing.

    • @Scrunchie_777
      @Scrunchie_777 Před 8 měsíci +8

      That's the USA in a nutshell. Extremely competitive at school/work. Coworkers, colleagues, and even people you consider friends are mainly out for themselves. I think that's what grew the "fake nice/happy." It's everywhere here and an extremely stressful way to live.

    • @Libellulaire
      @Libellulaire Před 8 měsíci +7

      I think it also shows how the different cultures perceive entertainment.
      In the US, if there's no harshness, verbal vioence and intense competitiveness people will find it boring and not watch it. While in Europe for example while we enjoy the wholesome moments more, we're watching because we're interested in what's going on and to see people trying their best, and achieving something. We're moved when they succeed.

  • @acidburnisive
    @acidburnisive Před 3 měsíci +1

    Very nice video, good job. I am more in love in Europe right now. Greetings from 🇭🇷😊

  • @sdls92110
    @sdls92110 Před 7 měsíci

    ha! definitely can relate even though I have only lived in europe 14 months; however, I found shopping here in Europe very overwhelming at first and got super stressed trying to pick out laundry detergent and yogurt because there were more choices than I knew what to do with.... In the US, I shopped for specific items at specific places and hence it was super streamlined for me. In general my quality of life is better and I love the walkable lifestyle of my community. And don't get me started about how affordable and transparent the prices are in the health care system here.

  • @blinkybillist
    @blinkybillist Před rokem +66

    We have this current obsession here in Australia that you must reach your full potential, well I'm Dutch and a 6 out of 10 is good enough for me. I literally don't feel or have the need to reach the top, and the ambitious people, well they're usually miserable, brownnoses and backstabbers.

    • @Glenn-ei3xp
      @Glenn-ei3xp Před rokem +6

      Garbage. People in Australia work to live, not live to work. Overly ambitious is something I would never describe Australians as. If anything I would say the opposite

    • @jameswalker68
      @jameswalker68 Před rokem +2

      @@Glenn-ei3xp
      I’d say it’s probably midway here Glenn. I think there’s certainly a lot of people that are ambitious - but I think more and more people here are realising the whole rat race thing is just that, a rat race!

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před rokem

      your username does not check out. Dutch Are Six Out Of Tens, ftfy

    • @spellandshield
      @spellandshield Před rokem +3

      Waarom ben je überhaupt naar Australië verhuisd als je in Nederland kan wonen? Snap ik helemaal niet.

    • @Glenn-ei3xp
      @Glenn-ei3xp Před rokem +1

      @@spellandshield if you ever get the chance to go to Australia then you would understand why

  • @melocoton7
    @melocoton7 Před rokem +163

    I lived in the USA for a few months, going to the grocery store was anxiety inducing. I am not used to so many things. I couldn't decide. And the sad thing is that 90% of the "food" is processed shit. It was SO hard to eat healthy. Especially going back as a tourist. Eating well when you can't cook at home is a challenge; it's almost impossible to avoid fast food.

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +2

      Thanks for sharing Mela. Where did you go home to? Yeah depending on where you are, it can be challenging to find truly healthy food

    • @melocoton7
      @melocoton7 Před rokem +8

      @@hidavidwen to Switzerland. Food quality is amazing here.

    • @paullewis2413
      @paullewis2413 Před rokem +7

      I agree about quantity over quality. Of course there are specialist stores that sell “real” food but the average supermarket is crap. I live in London and while there’s plenty of junk food here there’s also a large amount of high quality foods even in most supermarkets and the pop up markets are great for variety of delicious often home made products.

    • @270eman
      @270eman Před rokem

      Just eat meat, vegetables, berries, fruits, and nuts. Everything else is garbage. Its actually easier than you think. No seed oils or processed sugars.

    • @DA-db9bi
      @DA-db9bi Před rokem +8

      @@melocoton7 I live in the US an it’s VERY easy to eat healthy and avoid fast food💀 just say you have no self control an know nothing about the US.

  • @justicelaub9094
    @justicelaub9094 Před měsícem +1

    your perspective is refreshing

  • @joeleneashker346
    @joeleneashker346 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you David! What an accurate depiction of living in the U.S. I look forward to moving asap.

  • @cv5420
    @cv5420 Před rokem +177

    Just discovered your video. I'm from East LA and now living in Tokyo, Japan.This video perfectly describes my feelings and thoughts when I returned to visit my mom last summer. Most people I spoke to seemed on edge and stressed out their minds. I could feel the tension if I said something that may not be considered acceptable. Even though my life has improved 10-fold in Tokyo, I still got judged and looked at as though I was crazy to say someone could actually live a better life outside America; more specifically LA. But the weather is perfect right and everyone wants to live here? Lol...
    Anyway, glad you made this video. I'll never forget where I come from and will always have my good memories of LA. But moving out was the best decision I've ever made.

    • @channelnein6365
      @channelnein6365 Před rokem +5

      How is life in tokyo compared to socal if you don't mind me asking? I'm considering studying abroad there next year

    • @maddie3831
      @maddie3831 Před rokem +9

      Isn't the work culture more stressful in japan/Tokyo?

    • @akiko3688
      @akiko3688 Před rokem

      @@maddie3831 for natives

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +5

      Thanks for sharing! Everyone will have their opinion, and that’s ok. Continue enjoying Tokyo! I feel like everyone I know is visiting Japan this year

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před rokem +3

      Next time rub it in their faces with "don't worry, immigration wint let you in".
      Most people still think it's easy as 123 to move elsewhere, whereas the reality is that you, just like everyone else, had to meet certain criteria in order to emigrate.
      Greetings from Germany.

  • @soniarodriguez3810
    @soniarodriguez3810 Před rokem +68

    Very good comparison. I lived 5 years in Europe and also 5 in the USA and I can tell you, I miss Europe! I learned in Europe that there is a different way to treat many health issues and I was amazed how you can go to the University almost for free, compared with the crazy tuition fees in US. Enjoy your life and relaxed time in Europe!!

    • @Bialcure
      @Bialcure Před 9 měsíci +7

      I was born and raised in Brazil, and paid nothing for my 5 year degree in Architecture and Urban Planning (I had to pass a selection, which consisted of one objective and one written series of tests). We also have universal free health care there (it is called SUS). It has ZERO luxury, and for some procedures you might have to wait more than you would like, but it is available to everyone in the country, even for isolated communities in the middle of the forest. Just sharing that so people learn that the social benefits also exist outside of rich European countries. I don't understand why a country like the U.S. treats its people so bad.

    • @DK-ty5ue
      @DK-ty5ue Před 9 měsíci

      @@Bialcurebecause it’s all for profit, not for people

    • @holomurphy22
      @holomurphy22 Před 9 měsíci +1

      in France elite schools you even get paid for studying (enough to live on your own)

  • @DavidLovesToTravel
    @DavidLovesToTravel Před 3 měsíci +1

    Awesome video. Loved it. ❤

  • @justinahlmann
    @justinahlmann Před 7 měsíci

    I appreciated your open-minded approach to this. Very refreshing and insightful. Thank you for sharing, good sir!

  • @kristinagoller3720
    @kristinagoller3720 Před rokem +87

    I could not agree more. I’m from Europe and have spend the last 11 years in the states. Now being back in Europe I do miss the diverse culture and professional drive americans have (especially in regards to science)… but I don’t miss the 70h work weeks and little to no vacation:)

    • @hidavidwen
      @hidavidwen  Před rokem +3

      Thanks Kristina. Where in Europe are you? What brought you back to Europe?
      Yeah I do miss that "drive" but...those 70h work weeks...I've had those before too so I can relate.

    • @bonnie_gail
      @bonnie_gail Před rokem +1

      it's inhumane and not necessary

  • @jacobseal
    @jacobseal Před rokem +278

    I also moved to Europe about 6 years ago. I went back home last year for my first visit and I was shocked. For instance, yes, the grocery store has a TON of selection. 90 percent of it is total garbage that I would never consider putting in my body anymore. Just processed chemicals...not food. Products that I used to love and use everyday just taste of chemicals to me now.
    Not only that, there was garbage everywhere....roads and bridges crumbling. Honestly my home town looks like a 3rd world country compared to my new home in Munich. Everyone is poor, can't afford health care, can't afford to retire....etc.
    Between all this, the incredible violence, political division...etc...I would never consider moving back there for any reason.

    • @danielosorio9841
      @danielosorio9841 Před rokem +17

      Everyone in German is also poor and can't afford to own a home or retire also.

    • @GrandTheftChris
      @GrandTheftChris Před rokem +24

      @@danielosorio9841 Even without pension you can survive in Germany and have a flat. Try that in the US.

    • @amedm89
      @amedm89 Před rokem +2

      Omg! How do you living in Munich? I’m thinking about moving to Munich later this year as I’m getting my European citizenship. I’ve been there and thought it was cute! I love the US but I’ve been so disappointed lately just with everything going on…

    • @jaykay415
      @jaykay415 Před rokem +10

      Where I live in California, we have plenty of healthy food local grocery stores and farmers markets. If you buy crap that's on you - I'm sure there are healthy choices?

    • @blackvulcan100
      @blackvulcan100 Před rokem +9

      @@normabates1925 Might be your UK but certainly not mine.

  • @jharrisvball
    @jharrisvball Před 7 měsíci

    Watched 2 of your videos now David. You are fair and spot on. Thanks for sharing. :)

  • @kennethgimpayan3418
    @kennethgimpayan3418 Před 7 měsíci +2

    subscribed! This video essay is amazing! It's like prose!