Soon enough, the morning grind will begin again. The congested traffic, the crowded trains, the elevators and escalators whisking workers to their designated boxes. But that's not how the workday begins here in Ponta do Sol, an ancient village on the subtropical island of Madeira. It starts at sunrise with clifftop yoga.
Inhale, reach for the ocean, Lindsay Barrett, a nimble, sandy-blonde instructor tells a half-dozen millennials one crisp, clear morning last October. They're perched on a stone patio a few hundred feet above the Atlantic, which noisily crashes against the lava rocks below. Pink-orange light spreads across the vast blue horizon, far past the green terraced mountains and cascading waterfalls.
But these aren't trust-funders on vacation. They're professional-class international expats who've moved here during the pandemic to live and work. Thirty-one-year-old Barrett used to punch the clock at a giant New York accounting firm but booked a one-way ticket here in 2019 to reclaim herself. I want to work hard, she says, “but I also want to enjoy my life and not do the rat race.
She has company. All along the winding cobblestone streets nearby, outside cafés, inside parks, on laptops and iPads, this old town teems with about 200 guinea pigs in the wireless workforce of tomorrow. In the taxonomy of wanderlust, they're called digital nomads, early explorers of Generation Zoom, liberated by technology and changing norms to work anywhere there's Wi-Fi. As John Weedin, a longhaired 30-year-old freelance copywriter from Kansas City, Missouri, says as he rolls up his yoga mat, “I want to keep travelling, man. People are making it work.
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