5 comments

  • iberator 1 day ago
    Around 2014 I bought one way ticket to Morocco in order to simply vanish and die.

    I ended up traveling all to south to Mauretania, comming back and becoming well known poor but very popular street perfume seller in Marrakesh.

    I came back after buring my friend who got stabbed to death around one year later...

    Then I become successful backend programmer and husband.

    Now I'm after divorce, jobless for 3 years and homeless for 1 month.

    I consider going back to African mountains and desert everyday...

    • swores 1 day ago
      I can't promise to be able to help (nor can I promise that if I can help it'll work out better than returning to the African mountains!), but depending on your location & circumstances it's possible I could help you either on the job front or with accommodation. If you'd like to find out, drop me an email (see my profile).

      Or if you comment here publicly some more info about your work skills and experience, I wouldn't be surprised if other people might be willing and able to help too :)

    • smcin 1 day ago
      You should blog (under a pseudonym), your story is unique. People could support you financially via BuyMeaCoffee or else Patreon, and make teaser posts on Reddit, LinkedIn to bring new readers to your blog.

      What did you learn as a street perfume seller in Marrakesh? Compared to software sales? That alone sounds more useful than most TED talks.

      • iberator 1 day ago
        There is no comparison.

        Selling stuff as white person (extremely culturally aware) in Africa is like stealing candy from a baby. People want to know you, and your story - not the product.

        Thank you for such suggestion. Yup, I could write few articles or stories...

        • smcin 23 hours ago
          Don't be so quick to discount your experience though; selling enterprise software/SaaS is different to marketing and selling consumer goods/services. Tell us what you learned, about both.

          Were all your perfume sales face-to-face, or did you use text, or word-of-mouth? Did you give discounts for referrals? How much did the brand name matter, or not? etc.

          (Compare to e.g. https://www.ted.com/podcasts/how-to-be-a-better-human/what-w...)

    • mdavid626 1 day ago
      What a story, man. I hope you get back on your feet.
      • iberator 1 day ago
        Thank you. There is more hahaha
    • RickJWagner 1 day ago
      Amazing. Please keep writing, your story is interesting and will have lessons.
      • iberator 1 day ago
        writing here or in general?
    • realxrobau 1 day ago
      Come to Australia.
      • kubb 1 day ago
        With the new immigration policies it will be harder nowadays.
      • rapsey 1 day ago
        He is homeless and you recommend the country with the worst housing affordability problem in the world.
  • farrelle25 1 day ago
    I cycled across the Nullabour Plain in 1998 (Perth to Adelaide)... I have to agree with some parts of this article - there's something Spiritual about the landscape there.
  • Tade0 1 day ago
    I had to do a double take because I used to work for a person with the same name and since he was featured in, among other places, the local edition of Forbes, it wasn't impossible that he would be mentioned here as well.
  • duxup 4 days ago
    Don't want to drive the discussion into the meta but:

    Why is most of the article one sentence at a time? I gave up on the article, seems interesting but was hard to read.

    • mallomarmeasle 1 day ago
      I think the style is intended to evoke the way the story developed at the time, as drips of new information came in on the news. I stuck with it and am happy with that decision.
    • samuelbrian 1 day ago
      I think it's an adaptation of sorts from the podcast "Expanse: Nowhere Man", which may explain the style.
    • hans_castorp 1 day ago
      Turn on "reader mode" in your browser and you can read the text without all the scrolling madness.
    • netsharc 1 day ago
      Came here just to say that... isn't that BuzzFeed's style?
      • brabel 1 day ago
        Australian news websites tend to tell long stories in this style. It’s nice when you get used to it.
    • baq 1 day ago
      BBC also does this.
  • aaron695 1 day ago
    [dead]