Seasoned blogger and lawyer Chris Vincent finally travels to the United States and is preparing to visit Iceland, Finland, and Austria, checking off several items on his bucket list.
Founder of Ghanacelebrities.com Chris Vincent is an international immigration lawyer who works remotely, therefore he spent the latter part of 2023 and the beginning of 2024 in Ghana.
Traveller Chris Vincent posted a lengthy list of the nations he hopes to visit this year on his Facebook timeline, listing his itinerary.
Early this year he traveled to Ivory Coast and after returning to usual-based country London he finally checked the second country he wanted to visit which is the United States…
He finally traveled to Washington DC where he went to see the white house and other exciting sites
See His Post below:
I am also heading to Salzburg in Austria–the birthplace of W. A. Mozart.
I intend to explore the city and take a train from Salzburg to Vienna to explore the capital of Austria while enjoying the beautiful countryside views I have read about.
My itinerary so far looks like this:
**Washington DC, USA on 26 April 2024
**Reykjavík, Iceland on 09 May 2024
**Helsinki, Finland, 20 May 2024
**Salzburg, Austria, 31 May 2024The above trips will add up to my January trip to Abidjan, Ivory Coast–making it a total of 5 new countries by the end of the 5th month of the year.
Thus, I will be on track to achieving my 12 new countries in 12 months/each year.
When people say I am broke or have no money, I smile–because I have enviable memories and experiences–and I certainly know where all my money went which you are all witnesses.
I didn’t pour my entire money into cement and sand that I will die and leave behind, into buying some labelled/designer clothing or things to clutter my space or some God or his claimed spokespersons on earth (men of God) for his blessings. They went into living–creating wonderful experiences and exploring the world.
The only antidote to ignorance and narrow-mindedness is; travelling.
Who is in any of these countries for us to catch up?
–Chris-Vincent Agyapong
In another post whe
About 15 years ago, I was introduced to a concept of life called the Dot Com Lifestyle—this is what changed the trajectory of my entire life.
It made so much sense to me as a person who wanted to see the entire world. And as a person who valued personal freedom than anything else–this was kosher.
Today, I call it the Soft Life.
Today, I am responding to some E-mails from a Cafe in Washington DC—next week, I will be writing legal arguments from somewhere in Iceland and the list goes on.
John Chow and Steve Pavlina were the men who inspired my Dot Com Lifestyle journey.
As John Elder put it: “Having a job sucks! Commuting every day, dealing with idiot bosses, putting up with back-stabbing co-workers, and doing work that bores you to death is no way to live…It just sucks! And with the coming automation invasion, who knows if your job will even be around in five years. There’s never been a better time to take control of your life and start living the dot come lifestyle!”
Pavlina stated that conventional work or having a job as we know it “is income for dummies”.
Don’t join the masses. Don’t be a sheep. Allow those who want to argue all they can and wake up each day of their life with an alarm—let them do that.
An alarm is a trauma device for me. I hate it. I can’t even date a woman who has to set up alarms and wake up 5am each day for work—it kills my spirit and sense of control.
The panic at which you have to wake up when the alarm sounds is painful. Sometimes, you even suddenly wake up in the middle of the night—thinking you have missed the alarm.
If this does not contribute to blood pressure, stress, and early death, then what does?
Don’t be that person who lives for the weekend or for retirement.
There is something called intentional living. Many people luck this. They just buy into whatever is being sold and they wholesomely adopt whatever they came to meet.
Even as a lawyer, if I cannot do it remotely, I am not interested.
I stopped practising Family Law simply because it didn’t sit well with my remote working calender–irrespective of how much money it made me.
A man must have control over his life and must prioritize his personal autonomy.
—Chris-Vincent Agyapong
