In recent years, Mexico City has generated a lot of buzz as being the next hippest place for young creatives-- after New York in the '80s and Berlin in the '90s. The reality is more complicated than that for a city so large with such clear socioeconomic disparities, but the truth is that neighborhoods like Roma and Condesa have become a magnet for young people from around the world looking to find their way-- professionally, personally-- and in search of good company for the journey. Mexico City for People with Destiny Problems is a collection of essays by one such wanderer who made good on her promise to leave the US if Trump was elected and has been working at making a life in Mexico City ever since. Mostly a memoir with travel tips mixed in, Mexico City for People with Destiny Problems is for anyone who is curious about the city and its creative scene or anyone searching for solace as they muddle their way through life trying to figure out what to do next. While they may often feel like a headache, destiny problems are truly the best problems anyone could hope to have.
In recent years, Mexico City has generated a lot of buzz as being the next hippest place for young creatives-- after New York in the '80s and Berlin in the '90s. The reality is more complicated than that for a city so large with such clear socioeconomic disparities, but the truth is that neighborhoods like Roma and Condesa have become a magnet for young people from around the world looking to find their way-- professionally, personally-- and in search of good company for the journey. Mexico City for People with Destiny Problems is a collection of essays by one such wanderer who made good on her promise to leave the US if Trump was elected and has been working at making a life in Mexico City ever since. Mostly a memoir with travel tips mixed in, Mexico City for People with Destiny Problems is for anyone who is curious about the city and its creative scene or anyone searching for solace as they muddle their way through life trying to figure out what to do next. While they may often feel like a headache, destiny problems are truly the best problems anyone could hope to have.