3:14 someone that messaged you on twitter, I think that was me! hi hello again Sorelle 😃 I said “been following you since 2017, you’re an icon of freedom” and you replied “holyshit! in my diary recently I put that I want to be seen as the face of freedom. and now you write this!” whoa this was 2 years ago!.. following your journey to this day, with all your vulnerability, I think you’re remain the face of freedom! 🙏🏾
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
Dang! We found each other!!! Hahaha. This was already 2 years ago? Wild. Anywho, remain ingrained in my mind!
@cybermücke9 ай бұрын
@@SorelleAmore
@sigma_six9 ай бұрын
My fave saying in the whole world (I don't know why...) "We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring, will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time." -T.S. Eliot Welcome home!
@isheeria9 ай бұрын
I wonder if the nomadic lifestyle is a bit oversold. I like traveling, but I love the comfort of my own home and space more. Even something as simple as, I recognize the trees and the roads and the street foods. I would not want to live out of a suitcase for the next few years, I like having a home base, and then traveling for however long I like, or even not at all for a period of time... there is peace in both :) There is also joy in watching your plants grow :)
@midwestlakelife9 ай бұрын
I traveled for 15 years and then one day, i had enough. I was 35 and I was done. I live in my lakehouse now with my dog in the Midwest in the town I grew up and couldn't be happier. If I never fly again, it'll be too soon. I've been there done that, seen the world, and am back to where I started.
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
Love!!!
@thetrailwalkers9 ай бұрын
I love this! Think I am going to do this too!!
@AveryHart9 ай бұрын
Going back home can be one of the best parts of traveling long term. Everything you learned to love growing up is there. All of the nostalgia, the familiarity, the memories. There's something so delightful in getting to immerse yourself back in the place that made you after taking a lot of time away.
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
I’m feeling this! Great insight. Thank you!
@Ashani1001005 ай бұрын
Sorelle, you look rejuvenated! The magic of grounding yourself i guess ❤ btw I’m loving this comments section!
@d.av.s27989 ай бұрын
Great video! I left Costa Rica to live in USA for over 20 years. Unfortunately; every time I go back home to visit, I get reminded “WHY” I left CR and moved more than 3,000 miles away. I realized I don’t connect with the place and people where I grew up and instead I always crave to get back to my “New” home in U.S. Even when I have all my family and own land in Costa Rica; I am always looking forward to leave. I guess I lost my connection with Costa Rica. You can always find a new home wherever you find true happiness. Cheers!
@DaveShap9 ай бұрын
I like the more frequent vlog style updates. It's been fascinating watching your journey since the DMT trip, it seemed like that was your spiritual wakeup call and then through the course of healing, burnout, the Free Human movement, and now this, it's been fun to watch. I mean "fun" like interesting and engaging.
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹 I love this feedback. Thank you!!
@DaveShap9 ай бұрын
@@SorelleAmore any time. You're doing good work. Would love to interview you sometime on my channel, or vice versa. Learning how to live is critical in this day and age, and will only become more important with the coming changes to society. Offer is always there, but no expectations!
@LASFEO9 ай бұрын
I was living abroad, co-founder of a startup proudly stating I will never go home again and instead move to other countries all over the world. I was judging others for never moving out of the town. When I visited my parents, I spontaneously decided to stay home. Financial struggle and a really stressful time still taking a toll on me but it is making me feel so safe being with my parents. I love the area I grew up in and I get to re-connect with my parents as they are growing older. I think things lead us to where we need to be.
@SchwarczSarah9 ай бұрын
I'm not a nomad but I totally understand where you are coming from. So happy for you that you found the courage to go back home and are embracing it! And I think it's so sweet that your brother has a tattoo on his chest that represents all of you siblings ❤
@incaray698 ай бұрын
It's so true about people not rely wanting to hear your stories. I've been back home for a long time now. My youngest cousins are now travelling and I make sure to ask, listen and be genuinely interested in their stories ❤
@marloesk97538 ай бұрын
I find it really funny, I think your sister is so right! Your brother literally said: ‘it’s comfortable travelling all the time and going out of your comfort zone … I think it can become stale if your stuck in one place.’ So he just confirmed your sister. His comfort zone is the ever changing, it would be out of his (and your) comfort zone to try and not make life feel stale in one place, to get bored, boredom can be such a gift. Anyway off course you also don’t need to always push yourself out of your comfort zone but it was nice to see that unconscious confirmation of what Stef said :)
@tesssins32399 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for that video Sorelle! I had lived abroad for 3 years, 3 different countries 2 of those i did not speak the language of (same, this is on me), I stood in the midst of the most beautiful south of france countryside with vinyards and sea view and just though: what am I doing here. I want to go home. And I am sure that I wanted this far earlier on but as I identified so much with the "girl who moved out from the tiny country, living the life everyone wanted to live" (or not), it felt like a failure to go home. I also identified so much with the "I never miss anyone" and I think it comes from "missing" = weakness, and independant strong women are not weak and don't need anyone. but that day in south of france I knew it was a choice and not a "I have too", and wow coming home, knowing everything, understanding the languages around me, OUTBREATH. so thank you so much, this somehow relaxed an inner part of me once again
@docshreck49 ай бұрын
It is good to see you are coming full circle and going back home. Chasing happiness all around the world, and finding none is because happiness starts from within. And our formative years imprint mostly our core beliefs.
@carolmendes20119 ай бұрын
Sometimes is hard to let go of the “ character “ indeed - I notice that I was slaving my life for this “freedom “ - I’m so in the same page as you ❤loving this phase
@nixxieification9 ай бұрын
I still don't know how to explain it to myself, but feeling my nervous system calming down after coming back home ( same as your situation) has been one of the best things that has happened in a long time. wow, what a thing a human body is capable of
@upandaway58449 ай бұрын
Sorelle, I feel you so much! I've returned home 2 years ago after 17 years elsewhere (other cities in Germany, but also Canada, UK) and have experienced so many of the things you mention. It's a strange mix of this super familiar place - but me not being the same anymore! I have so many added experiences and memories that, of course, make me see the world very differently than when I left. But yes, the soul does calm down! ... just renovating an old caravan, though, because my traveller soul will stay with me 😊
@elisabethypponen39839 ай бұрын
so comforting to have someone go through this literal homecoming simultaneously with me! and thank you for sharing your journey
@MsDoctor9119 ай бұрын
I found this video quite comforting for some reason. Love your vlog style videos. It's so cool to see how your thoughts and views change and evolve over time. You really inspired me to become a digital nomad. Back in March 2022 I was finally all set to start my digital nomad journey. But the war had started just a couple of days before my flight to Germany, the first stop in my journey, and as a man, I'm not allowed to leave Ukraine anymore (unless I bribe the right people). I'm glad I got a chance to travel across Europe as a volunteer when I was 21-23. That's when you learn just how precious freedom of movement is. But ever since the war started I've been beating myself up because I probably should've left the country earlier. So when you said "maybe it's in your control, maybe it's out of your control" that reminded me of one important thing that I'd long forgotten: one should always focus on what one can control. Ruminating about what is out of your control can steal so much creative energy.
@xxshinypinkxx9 ай бұрын
I can fully understand you. I could never leave the country of my origin for good. It's great to spend some time in other countrys and cultures, but I grew up here. My respect to all the people who have to leave their home forever because of war or other circumstances.
@Emma_Kiwi9 ай бұрын
This hit me so much right now. I'm a New Zealander, living in France for the last 10 years, and am going through similar self-introspection about what is home. As much as I love the freedom of jumping on a plane so easily and visiting almost any EU country, there is definitely something to be said about being in a simpler environment. I only had that realisation visting the UK over the years and being surprised at how much I relaxed in a semi-similar culture. The nervous system does calm down. I love what France has taught me but it's all about finding that family and community in the end to help you create that solid safe base. I hope you find that Auzzi :) Oh and the pie shot, YES. The one food I miss from NZ haha !!
@sarandakalaveshi9 ай бұрын
When you talked about people's response to your return back home it made me think of my experience which has been similar to the LOTR scene when the hobbits go back home and the old man is looking at them disapprovingly while sweeping the floor. Some of them don't care about your travels, some do but don't understand and can't relate, and a few are happy you're back. Been following your journey since Covid and am wishing you all the best back in Australia!
@AlinaMcleod8 ай бұрын
Can definitely relate to this ❤ currently in a weird place myself where I thought I did actually want to return back to Canada as a home base but then got a negative wake up call that it was not as I hoped. Now I’m back looking for a new home! Hope your new start in Australia goes great!
@cassandradavis82409 ай бұрын
this video is such perfect timing, i just got back to aus after 4 years away. its so so nice to be home & to know that im not the only one who feels this way
@kyravanbiljon53299 ай бұрын
I feel like theres just something about living in a different Country as a „grown up“ that makes you appreciate your home Country so much more! If I haven‘t been home in over a year I honestly start to crave it, and everything reminds me of it, an I swear I start to anonym the people around me, because it becomes all I talk about 😂 Our home countries are part of who we are and also contribute to the way we think and the way we do things
@gabrielleszafir9 ай бұрын
THIS! I make KZbin videos in a similar spirit as you and have been so lucky to have lived around the world and most recently was doing full time road life across the NA continent and have been exploring so many of these same thoughts and spaces of relating. Appreciate how willing you are to be so self reflective on the ways in which you were not exactly actually free but more wrapped up in the concept of things and appearances (happens to us all!) LOVED what your sister said about comfort zones OMG! Think that's such a powerful point that most people miss - riding the edge is different for everyone. If you're comfortable always traveling well then maybe the growth you're looking for is in being still. QUEEN! Sending love from my little corner of the world to yours!
@andreadybvik9 ай бұрын
If you asked me one year ago, I would have felt inside me that it was a failure to return home and settle. But something inside me has shifted, and I feel really connected to the Norwegian land, the energy of the north. It's coming as a ripple effect, I think, the more inner work I do to return home to my authentic nature. 💛 Love your videos and what you share so honestly and raw - you're such a big inspiration to me!
@animal3559 ай бұрын
As they say 'there's no place like home' the place that shaped you and gave you the confidence to become the next chapter of yourself, the next version of you...I love the next chapter of life, its literally a blank page of what life as for you... I love that I experienced so much life, in my youth, its made me appreciate the 51 years of my life that helped shaped me...and I still get excited about travel and meeting new people...even though life and maturity, being a husband and a father have all created not only a support network, but witnesses to my progress that will witness both my joys, sorrows and lessons in life...perhaps I should have started a KZbin channel. All my moments are in the museum of memories in my mind...and I'm truly thankful. Thanks Sorelle for helping me to be cathartic in your comments section.
@drgemmasampson7 ай бұрын
I went 'home' to Australia 2 years back when the borders reopened after 12 years abroad.. lasted I think about 12 months then ended up back in Spain! For now, I like the blend of both - being in Aus and Europe while I can. That is freedom for me.
@vanichco8 ай бұрын
Happy to see you with your family, Sorelle. A year ago, I moved back to Thailand from Australia after almost 2 years. It's awesome.
@IrishBOBSister9 ай бұрын
Absolutely true!! Thomas Wolfe said we can't go home again -but I believe that refers to time travel more than anything. You CAN go to the PLACE you call home, and be all the better for it!! Even if you're not an entrepreneur and/or digital nomad. If you're someone who is wrapped up in their "work" (even if you work at an office, retail store, etc.) and feeling like something is still missing, HIGHLY recommend going "Home" to learn more about what YOU need. Always remember that home is where your heart is -so for Sorelle it's where she grew up, for me it's where I've made a home for the last 21 years, and for someone else, it might be somewhere else.
@MonikaHare9 ай бұрын
The face of freedom is absolutely free to come home. You are interesting and inspiring person wherever you are. The prawn photos are a great example🦐
9 ай бұрын
Sorelle I am following you for like 5 years and you were my biggest inspiration (and still are)! Thank to you I was also motivated to start my journey in the online space (even though it was not about traveling because I just couldn’t afford it, but it was my end goal). And a few months ago I just moved to another country. Even though I had experiences staying abroad or traveling. I never lived in a foreign country without a date do comeback home. And it’s been amazing! So I don’t know when I will feel homesick, but I have to say that your videos always inspired me to be truly free and I thank you immensely! Love to see you glowing, in whatever part of the world 🧡
@exploringthetributaries6439 ай бұрын
We're always home. It's just that some places to live, attract us more than others.
@iamrjdennis9 ай бұрын
Thank you for being such a light in the world, Sorelle. 🙌🏻
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
Thank you for this observation
@iamrjdennis9 ай бұрын
Much love! 😊@@SorelleAmore
@NikkiTomlin9 ай бұрын
As someone who has been forced home multiple times out of fear of too much change and from things out of my control, I can say that each of those stints spent at home have been so necessary! I have a really hard time picturing how I will be living, nomad vs settled in one spot, in the future but I do think that letting the universe guide me in the directions that feels right hasn't steered me wrong. I feel like if I am too comfortable in one place I start to get antsy and thats when I know it is time for change.
@isapisa51969 ай бұрын
"It’s said that you can never go home again, and it’s true enough, of course. But the opposite is also true. You must go back, and you always go back, and you can never stop going back, no matter how hard you try" Quote from the book "Shantaram"
@charliewilliams86279 ай бұрын
I've been traveling for almost a decade and 100% understand how it feels to miss the English language. Welcome back home Sorelle!
@SpringSpark9 ай бұрын
Learning the language is essential. I've been living in Spain for 2 years now, not learning Spanish would make th experience claustrophobic.
@Anna.Ani239 ай бұрын
I can see your inner child glowing 😍 you are on a right path dear ❤
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
I feel it :) :) :)
@JourdanArt9 ай бұрын
I moved to Switzerland 2 years ago, I was 4 months pregnant, had no job lined up and not much money. I moved in with my husband (who is not rich ha ha) and it was the scariest thing I've done. I have learnt so much and really appreciated the experience but now that I'm visiting home (Yamba/Sydney) it's so nice to just have the background tension of unfamiliarity gone and be replaced with childhood comforts is amazing. Btw I flew out of ballina yesterday!
@martinafreyjakartelo18529 ай бұрын
This happened to me now soon to be 6 yrs ago, also lived in Iceland, first moved to UK to pursue artist career, did not work out and returned to my native city just like you. It was mostly not my decision and did not want that, but life just turned out that way and I did decide at the end to come back home as I needed to renew myself. Was also happy to have home to return to where I do not need to make huge money to be able to survive daily as it was the case in Iceland most of the time. I guess life has its own ways, we need to figure out how to make peace with its ways. All the best to you in this huge transition:)!
@martinafreyjakartelo18529 ай бұрын
and I forgot to mention I am European, Croatian, so did not move back home so far as you did, but lifestyle change is lifestyle change, I guess.
@CarlieBonavia9 ай бұрын
I love that you and your siblings all say "so" with the same cadence
@mastandstars9 ай бұрын
So excited for your new chapter Thank you for your authenticity Sorelle ❤️ the only reason he said You can’t go home again was because he laid it all bare was it his story to tell? You decide
@Ana-s3i6k9 ай бұрын
Yes agree with you and feel with you!! I am Swedish but been living in Italy and now in Uruguay since 5 years. I have 4 kids so its a little bit different but I start to feel more and more that I want to go " home" where I really feel home and that is Sweden..talked to my family about it and maybe we go this year to see how we feel but its just a feeling thats comes and we should listen to that inner voice..I never felt really home here and also veru tired to not be able to speak my language to anyone.❤ .
@topnftart9 ай бұрын
Oh, yeah, definitely can relate to that. Thank you for this video! I travel in South-East Asia for 1.5 years, and I wanted it for years. However, I hoped that when I start travelling, everything will magically improve. I will meet new people, find a profitable job, meet new love, and so on (none of that happened lol). Now I will probably have to go back to my country of origin to make a student visa for my Master degree in Europe, and you can make it only in a country of citizenship or residence. I feel like there will appear a giant sign 'Looser' at the moment my feet touch the ground ahah)
@DayleMickle6 ай бұрын
i wish i could understand your inner battle. you are an amazing person. you are freedom! I have a 76 series. your 78 series is amazing.
@girlwithoutacountry6445 ай бұрын
9 years living unconditionally, and when I visit home. people don’t know what questions to ask me, and even if they did, there wouldn’t be a relatable context in which I could answer them. No context for it 😅
@tarvindurbin59749 ай бұрын
I Absolutely LOVE This Woman ❤ I think she is Freaking AMAZING !!!
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I appreciate that! :)
@tarvindurbin59749 ай бұрын
@@SorelleAmore ♥
@barryhill64829 ай бұрын
I feel like home is in our DNA. Hard to explain but felt it when I was abroad. Good to be back!
@yvonneandbeyond9 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you made this video! Agreed, there seems to be pressure out there to "never miss home." I just returned to the States and flirted with staying "home" for a while (mostly because I miss my family and my nephews are growing up SO FAST) but now I've decided to move to New Zealand on a Working Holiday for a year (seems like a good medium because it's slower travel than I've been doing lately). Then my older sister (who lives full-time in the States) made fun of me and said "You KNOW...a year is really NOT a long time," which cracked me up, because to me, a year feels like AGES. I guess like you've been saying in your past few videos, it's important to keep questioning ourselves and where we really want to be. It's important to be open and listen to our intuition about whether it's truly best for us to remain nomadic or not, and see if we're noticing any changes in how we relate to our environments in general. 💚🌿
@caesarsalad84849 ай бұрын
I have lived in Canada for uni exchange and Sweden for 2 years and learned the language, then I moved to Melbourne 1.5 years ago and just came back home to Brisbane at the start of the year after breaking up with my partner of 7 years. It's been weird coming back home it feels familiar but distant at the same time, I guess only people who have lived overseas understand. I'm having a major shift in my life especially as the quarter life crisis hits at 26... I have my goal of owning my first apartment soon and then moving to Europe again. I just don't see myself not living in another country ever again!
@gabytesta9 ай бұрын
My heart felt just full watching this video, I supposed yours is showing it💥
@bumblebee_ms9 ай бұрын
When I came back home 12 years after living in EU, everything had changed as everyone moved on without me. Australia is not the same as it was growing up. If you love isolation, this is the place to be.
@caradimiller77129 ай бұрын
I love travel and love being a nomad. Many of my friends and family don’t get why I don’t stay in one house/space/place long enough but I get bored. However, as I age I have found that I like to have my own place where I can return too and know that everything I need and own is in that one spot. Once a nomad always a nomad though. I will always continue to travel and explore.
@lanehartwell9 ай бұрын
In my case, home is many places. Born in Canada of American parents, spent equal amounts of time in both countries as a dual citizen. Wherever I am, I miss the other. I’ve tried to go home, but of the handful of places I consider “home”, all but one I am pretty much priced out of, and the town I was born in is not a place that I could live right now because of my husband’s job, which is remote to a degree, but not that remote. It’s a struggle!
@82xmas-j7w9 ай бұрын
thanks for this, i can relate to everything that was said here. i don't think there's anything wrong with going home, but for me it seems that after 2 weeks or so of being back i loose my traveling perspective and i start thinking of going away again. i think there is a quest to master being at home and keeping the free mind (by not getting dragged into everyones discontentment)
@onemindonline9 ай бұрын
Your conversation brings to mind the old saying, "No man steps in the same river twice. Because it's not the same river, and it's not the same man (or woman 😉) We can never go "back" , so in that sense it can't be a failure to "return" home. The best that we can do is be present right where we are, what a cliche right? But being "present" is a much talked about and less understood theme that perhaps links quite well with your meandering thoughts about being a nomad. I'd love to know your thoughts on "being present". Are you ever? What motivates your travels? Curiosity? Discontent? The need to prove a point? Adventure? All of the above? 😁 Thanks for putting out thought provoking content. I LOVE the Cruizer and and the one arm freestyle 😆
@Yonneax9 ай бұрын
I am so happy that you put this out there. I am currently in South Korea and plan to leave next year. I miss my family but I feel like I’m going to be shell shocked. 😮😮😮
@martacypress28269 ай бұрын
I can't stop smiling when watching your last videos!
@markhyphon9 ай бұрын
I hope we hear you singing soon, got a band to work with yet? Cheer up mate, home is where the heart lies. Enjoy watching your journey. Keep it up and keep going.
@Piexus_8 ай бұрын
Your videos give me such a warm feeling, thank you for sharing your thoughts! Take care of yourself ⭐️
@No-ux2te9 ай бұрын
Freedom is in the mind
@isabellesheffield6599 ай бұрын
I loved everything about this video actually might be my fav and I’ve been following you for many years…so relatable..big love 💕
@mysmilesarah9 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your feelings about this change with honesty and vulnerability. You are BADASS *and* super real. It makes me feel better about myself haha
@nicknorris44888 ай бұрын
The purpose of a journey is to return home with a story.
@Adam-ld3rs6 ай бұрын
Looks like a Martin's pie or a Wardell pie. Best pies in Australia!! I grew up in Ballina also and I'm constantly disappointed by the pies on my travels. Keep up the awesome videos!! Refreshing content 😊
@hannaseiler61009 ай бұрын
In 2020 (ya great year 🙃) I had moved to Sweden for school from the usa and I got severely depressed, plus a bunch of financial issues and government things were going on that all forced me to go back to the states. I felt HORRIBLE I felt like a complete failure. I was the person in my family who has traveled and wanted their life to *be* traveling, so it felt like I let all my friends and family down. My anxiety made me feel like others would scoff at me and say “see i knew she couldn’t do it”. - I’m in a much better place now. I live in a different state from my home and I’m still trying to travel, but I’m finally recovering from the feeling of that “failure” and training my brain that I didn’t fail and that it’s okay to go back home. - Anyways this is just me saying that I get it Sorelle, maybe not all of the experiences you had but that depressive feeling and failure feeling? I get that. Sending you all the love and good vibes! 💕✨💕✨ Looking forward to the future for both of us!
@chantalmarcionetti97649 ай бұрын
Since covid I am not traveling as much as before. I am still attached to the person I was before and not 100% sure who I am now. The last 3-4 years I traveled inside of me and also discovered much of what is around the place where I live. I am more attached to nature than ever before now. But still trying to figure out if I want to leave again or build something like a homestad. I am in between.
@Holly_seems_okay9 ай бұрын
also weird how you knew i had just moved home... loving how much you're posting!!
@coryadams64789 ай бұрын
It’s such a joy to watch your videos 🙏🫶
@davidhoff95419 ай бұрын
Thank you for always being so real
@tamiami419 ай бұрын
Rolf Potts talks about what to expect when coming home, in his book Vagabonding. That most people don't really want to hear the stories and their lives have just continued on without us. 😊
@Yamu_b9 ай бұрын
hmm since I'm home to work for only a winter season I still don't know how I feel about it🙃😄 But I can see that I can have adventure and meet new people here too.... so I guess this urge of leaving is coming from somewhere... maybee childhood... so beeing aware of it I guess is a good thing whilst traveling... for myself I know where it comes from but I don't know what to do with it yet...🦭 Much love to all the travelers outthere!🫶🏽
@georginawardmusic9 ай бұрын
Always loved your videos and watching your Silver investments to Photography and Travel I've watched them all. I'm also an Aussie singer songwriter and was loving your song You Said It. I had added to my spotify playlist - Australian Independent Artists , Enjoy the pies again x
@allyy33489 ай бұрын
Currently feeling so torn about heading home! Would love to have a bit of a reset, but not sure I'm ready to face all that comes with it
@KenzBee9 ай бұрын
This is what im currently dealing with, it felt like you made this video for me. I promised myself I'd never return to Philly, and its starting to feel more and more like I won't have a choice I'm dreading it so much
@Starla_snow7119 ай бұрын
Hi Sorelle!!! I love see your adventures!! Thank you for sharing your journey ❤🥰
@robindamn9 ай бұрын
Your experiences always sync so much with mine. I love your videos sorelle!
@doodsanddudes9 ай бұрын
Wow you hit a million Sorelle. Congratulations. I am working on 10k. 😅 not a nomad but perhaps one day I will cast off. Going home is weird. We always expect it to stay the same.
@divinelymoowah61049 ай бұрын
@5:05-5:06 I fully support that (yes the cozy save haven to hermit in until butterfly phase, but also), the pause to comprehend “fact check” what has been said and really feel that truth (and thus the big childlike grin-nod lol)
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
Hahahahha. Yeah, this was a funny moment 😂😂🥳
@troymihoyminoy38899 ай бұрын
the big prawn was amazing! It reminded me, cuz where i live, we have the Big Duck, but it's actually also a building! You can walk inside and there's souvenirs you can get, its the best
@hamerful8 ай бұрын
Which country has a big duck?
@troymihoyminoy38898 ай бұрын
@@hamerful it's in new york, usa
@danielbeddows20896 ай бұрын
Great reflection. I've recently returned home after 20 years away and doing similar. Catch you on the road one day.
@emiliehammes62999 ай бұрын
Hey Sorelle, thank you so much for your videos!
@Cheers_Warren9 ай бұрын
Great that you home country is still familiar and livable. London my home is now priced so far from reality a different problem.
@lorenbush88769 ай бұрын
I haven't been on a horse since I was a young child, my legs were so short by feet wouldn't reach the stirrups when I had the luxury of a saddle so I bounced all over the back of the horse with or without a saddle.
@Nayz139 ай бұрын
You seem so much more chill
@noodledoo12349 ай бұрын
Ok but the Big Prawn is the coolest hometown landmark I've ever seen
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
😂😂😂🥳🥳🥳
@yarakok66289 ай бұрын
Sweet Sorelle, really enjoy everything you do and have done over the years! May I ask what lens you’re using for this vlog? I can’t seem to find it in the description or your website. Especially around 2:45 it’s a good wide lens, is it a 16mm or wider? Thank you 🙏🏼 love, Yara
@wherestheparty_9 ай бұрын
you got me at: "The big prawn!" Yes, baby!!!!
@corriespapertrail9 ай бұрын
WOW such reflection Sorelle what a rush
@ktrekvi9 ай бұрын
What if I miss home but home doesn't have the optimal conditions for me?
@DanielaPerez-l6f8 ай бұрын
I love your channel!! And your life philosophy 🧬🤙
@alsnowgrrl9 ай бұрын
Going home is good for regrouping and getting centered again... No shame in the game!
@MichaelTrainer9 ай бұрын
so fun welcome home
@MicroFourNerds9 ай бұрын
The big prawn 🤣
@SorelleAmore9 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@merryfergie9 ай бұрын
Welcome home
@piesdepau9 ай бұрын
I dint feel like I can be me at home... :/
@craigmooney26307 ай бұрын
Love the production quality of your overseas videos , if you can replicate that around Australia , they should be very popular 🤠
@BILLY-O-19828 ай бұрын
I might have to go to Manchester soon. (I’m from the UK).