OG Trotter: Why We Didn’t Become Digital Nomads for Freedom—and What Actually Sustains the Lifestyle

Digital Nomads for Freedom

Digital Nomad System with OG Trotter: Why We Didn’t Become Nomads for Freedom—and What Actually Sustains the Lifestyle

Most people don’t leave their country permanently.

They take a trip.
They test the idea.
They keep a safety net.

We didn’t.

Before leaving Montréal, we sold everything we owned. Not stored. Not paused. Gone.

We made one decision that made everything else irreversible:

We were not coming back.

This wasn’t a vacation.
It wasn’t a gap year.
It was a complete reset.

And like most people at that stage, we thought we were chasing freedom.

We weren’t.

Digital Nomads for Freedom

The One-Backpack Rule (And What It Really Means)

We gave ourselves one rule:

One backpack each.

We chose the Pakt Travel Backpack 45L—not because it was trendy, but because it forced discipline.

You don’t negotiate with 45 liters.
You decide what matters.

We also made two quiet moves that turned out to be more important than the backpack:

  • We secured proper insurance
  • We spent real time with our family before leaving

Then we said goodbye to our four kids—Valentina, Sebastian, Emrick, and Louka—and boarded a one-way flight to Lisbon on July 28.

That moment feels bold when you tell it.

In reality, it feels heavy.

The Illusion Most Nomads Start With

Like many people stepping into this lifestyle, we had a romantic framework:

  • follow the path of Anthony Bourdain
  • discover places through food
  • let the road guide the experience

We even used ChatGPT to build a travel roadmap based on our preferences.

It worked surprisingly well.

But it also revealed something we didn’t fully understand yet:

Planning destinations is easy.
Designing a life on the road is not.

Lisbon: Where the Idea Broke—and the System Started

Digital Nomads for FreedomWe stayed in Lisbon for a month.

Not to explore.
To adjust.

That’s where things shifted.

After 10 years in VR360 production—over 600 projects—we weren’t stepping into freedom.
We were stepping out of burnout.

The industry had changed.
More pressure, less margin, less clarity.

Sheri, on the other hand, already operated in a different world—medical tourism, patient facilitation, and business systems tied to real human outcomes.

Between the two of us, something became obvious:

We didn’t need another travel concept.
We needed a system.

The Real Problem With Nomad Life

Here’s the uncomfortable truth most content avoids:

People don’t fail at nomad life because they chose the wrong destination.

They fail because they underestimated:

  • health issues across countries
  • lack of consistent insurance protection
  • poor gear decisions that compound daily friction
  • no structure for work, routine, or recovery

The lifestyle looks simple online.

In reality, it’s operationally complex.

And complexity without systems eventually breaks people.

OG Trotter Was Never Meant to Be a Brand

Originally, we called it “Original Globe Trotters.”

That name didn’t survive long.

OG Trotter did.

Not because it sounded better—but because it meant something:

  • “OG” = you can’t fake experience
  • “Trotter” = slow, intentional movement

But more importantly:

It stopped being a name.
It became a framework.

The First Test: Can Anyone Take You Seriously?

In September, we tested the idea the only way that matters:

We tried to partner with an insurance company.

Not hypothetically.
The one we were already paying.

We sent a direct email to the director.

They said yes.

Immediately.

That moment mattered more than follower count, branding, or content.

It answered one question:

Is this real—or just another travel story?

The Rejection That Forced the Strategy

Next target: Pakt

We believed in the product.
We used it daily.
We wanted the partnership.

They declined.

Not because they didn’t like the idea—but because we weren’t established enough.

That was the correct decision.

And it forced ours.

Instead of chasing partnerships, we focused on one thing:

Relevance.

The Unsexy Phase That Actually Builds Brands

From October onward, we did what most people underestimate:

We showed up consistently.

  • Content across platforms
  • Real experiences, not curated highlights
  • No paid growth

Result:

  • 15,000+ followers
  • 100,000+ likes
  • 80+ posts

Not massive.
But credible.

And more importantly:

Earned.

Building the System Behind the Story

We didn’t do it alone.

  • Atif (web development) helped build the platform
  • Sally (LinkedIn + VA) added structure to distribution
  • Nano (Telegram) supported community thinking

What changed wasn’t just output.

It was clarity.

OG Trotter stopped being an idea.
It became an ecosystem.

The Return to Pakt (And Why Timing Matters)

Pakt.

Months later, we reached out again.

This time, the response was different.

Not a partnership offer—but an affiliate invitation.

That’s how real progression works:

  • First contact → rejection
  • Proof of work → opportunity

No shortcuts.
No hacks.

Completing the Missing Piece: Health

There was still a gap.

And it was the most critical one.

Health.

Sheri’s background in medical tourism—working between patients, doctors, and hospitals across Mexico, Turkey, Thailand, and Vietnam—made one thing clear:

Digital Nomads underestimate health risk until it’s too late.

So we built the final layer:

A wellness program in partnership with a functional doctor.

Not symptom treatment.

Root-cause thinking.

The OG Trotter System

This is what it became:

1. Health

A system to maintain performance, not react to breakdown

2. Insurance

Protection that matches mobility, not static living

3. Gear

Tools that reduce friction daily—not once

4. Structure

The invisible layer: routine, decision-making, sustainability

Who This Is Actually For

This system is not for:

  • short-term tourists
  • casual travelers
  • people chasing aesthetics

It’s for:

  • professionals building a life across countries
  • couples relocating long-term
  • people who want sustainability, not novelty

Final Verdict: This Was Never About Travel

We didn’t leave Canada to travel.

We left to redesign how we live.

Travel was just the environment.

The real work was building something that doesn’t collapse after the first few months.

 

If you’re thinking about becoming a digital nomad—or already living it without structure—this is where most people either evolve or burn out.

You have two options:

  • Figure it out alone over time (most do)
  • Or build a system before it costs you time, money, or health

👉 Join the OG Trotter ecosystem
👉 Or reach out and get clarity on your next move

Because the difference between a good trip and a sustainable life abroad is not the destination.

It’s the system behind it.

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