Finally, a youtuber who isn't try to sell his/her life as amazing!
@LilyGazou4 жыл бұрын
True. Like van life. So many drawbacks to this!
@MultiSmartass14 жыл бұрын
I agree. This is the most realistic video about Hawaii I have seen on KZbin. This guy is stating the brutal reality .
@kendallevans40794 жыл бұрын
Agree. Not some old codger who moves to the Philipines gets a 19 year old girlfriend then tries to convince you how inexpensive it is to live there. HA! We all know why he moved there!
@whatthebleep28104 жыл бұрын
He’s good but his constant hand gesture was really distracting.
@hothotheat30004 жыл бұрын
It’s irresponsible of those KZbinrs to do that. Younger people will watch that crap and think they can just hop on a plane and everything will be fine. Then, the bills start stacking up and the Bank Of Mom And Dad is closed.
@wldman222 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Hawaii. Lived there for 30 years. Left and moved to the mainland in 1996 and couldn't believe the difference in the quality and cost of living. I was not only able to buy a house, but also take regular vacations. Never would have happened if I had stayed in Hawaii. But, I must admit, Hawaii is one of the most beautiful places on this planet! Didn't have to wear shoes until the 6th grade! Running around barefoot, climbing mango trees for fresh mangos, going to the beach, hiking in the mountains, simply wonderful!!
@jordanvictoria5 Жыл бұрын
I’m sorry circumstances didn’t allow such beautiful experiences for a lifetime in your home. I was born in New York and couldn’t afford to stay. I live in PA now much more affordable. I was able to have children and purchase a home.
@sometimesthereisnocoloraro108 Жыл бұрын
Check Tenerife :D it is the same... 95% cheaper with a cheap and easy flights to Europe for as cheap as 5 usd :)
@hi2ca2fl11 Жыл бұрын
ditto born, raised in paradise UH grad 3rd generation in Hawaii. moved to southern California in 1975 when it was truly beautiful and blessed to experience its glory. got out before the downfall & moved to Florida when it was affordable in 1998. life is an adventure, chose your path wisely.
@mareerogers364 Жыл бұрын
Hawaii is a vacation😊
@foxywhitetip7387 Жыл бұрын
Nowadays it’s all eaten up by fire Ants
@leeannhamilton47203 жыл бұрын
I did a phone interview with a guy who lived in Hawaii. He told me he just felt "stuck" living there. I usually don't hire people over the phone but he seemed so sad. I told him if he came to Idaho, he had the job. I helped him get "unstuck".
@TheMeloettaful3 жыл бұрын
Did you really? That's great you did that 😊! Did he eventually make it to Idaho?
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
That's great. I think a lot of locals can relate to that "stuck" feeling.
@velvet1233 жыл бұрын
Good for you giving him that option.
@ZenDeividdo3 жыл бұрын
Common scenario, especially with several of my Ohana who left the Aina. Even many of them who end up staying (often not by choice,) they seem very "stuck" as well and I feel for them.
@dmitrishostakovich16713 жыл бұрын
@@HelloFromHawaii What is your opinion about Hawaiian independence?
@whirlwindofmemories Жыл бұрын
This is 100% correct. I lived in poverty as a child on the island. My family had to move to the mainland to survive. So coming back to the island brought back a lot of bad memories. My grandmother’s place needed to be renovated on the island so I my dad tasked me to move back and take care of it. Getting on the plane and coming back brought a lot of emotions to me and I don’t think I smiled once while being surrounded by so many people excited for their vacation. Then the hard work started, taking me over a month, dealing with contractors, cleaners and coordinating late shipments. Just so much had to happen and spending thousands of dollars in the process. I’m now contemplating getting a second job because of how much I saw leaving my bank account from all of this and this is coming from someone who makes pretty decent money living in a townhouse on Capitol Hill in DC. There are very few high paying jobs on the island. Luckily I can remote anywhere from work but the cost and quality like he says just doesn’t add up. Also the fact I see so many people here struggle and live in poverty gives me uncomfortable flashbacks. It’s just hard…
@RyuuOujiXS Жыл бұрын
Life is tough when you're stupid
@kaizersolze4 жыл бұрын
Former Hawai'i resident here letting you know that this man is 100% correct. It's beautiful but it is absolutely brutal on your wallet.
@Ifoundnohappinesshere4 жыл бұрын
I guess Hawaii would always stay as a touristic state
@kukapuouhaagunderson86934 жыл бұрын
@Mocha Visions TV or a rich man's paradise
@IvDogg4 жыл бұрын
Yep
@vicenzogoelzer2814 жыл бұрын
it is sad to see such a beautiful place, where people should have time to enjoy the awesomeness of it, having so little time for people to really rejoice themselves
@arizonarebel57064 жыл бұрын
Sometimes it's not brutal. One can spend $20 on wardrobe - t-shirt/shorts/rubber slippers - and wear it all year round. Hang loose!
@mixflip4 жыл бұрын
We miss Hawaii. The food and aloha spirit is unlike anywhere else. My wife and I left Hawaii almost 20 years ago for many reasons. We could have stayed at my wifes parents house is mililani mauka for free and even a free house wasnt enough to keep us. Expensive, crowded, traffic, no parking, no road trips, we had to fly everywhere if we want to see other places, school system not so great unless you send kids to private school, houses are small, electricity is expensive. In Nevada I only need one job. Wife can stay home with our 3 kids. We can afford a big single story home in a neighborhood that looks like mililani mauka lol. We go on road trips and go camping alot. We just went to Yellowstone! We play in the snow in the winter in Tahoe and play in the lakes and rivers in the summer. But most of all....we have quality time together since I get home at 5pm everyday in about 15 minutes and mommy is home all day with our kids since this is 2020 (covid19) We visit Hawaii but we dont miss it enough to move back. Unless things change in Hawaii we will live in the mainland for a long while lol.
@SeaFlower384 жыл бұрын
What is ur avg annual income? Nevada sounds like a good deal!
@mixflip4 жыл бұрын
@@SeaFlower38 Nevada is awesome. I make about $65k a year with a state job. Wife doesnt work. I have a side job with you tube too that makes a few extra bucks.
@SeaFlower384 жыл бұрын
@@mixflip I only make 56 so far at my job. I was thinking of making a youtube or something.
@mixflip4 жыл бұрын
@Heather Mckenzie I used to rent a beach house in Kailua when I was in the military. I miss those days. They needed more room on base so 2 of us pooled our BHA to rent the beach house. The 90s was a cheaper time lol.
@CaliSteve1694 жыл бұрын
How much do you have to make in Hawaii in order to have the same standard of living?
@zangsax4 жыл бұрын
Ive lived on Maui for 40 yrs. In the last 15 yrs rich people from the mainland have worked at gentrifying and make it like where they came from but with a beach. Maui “cruisers” have become bmw, lexus and mercedes. Home prices have almost doubled. The attitude and respect for the aina and culture that seemed to be present in most of the mainland transplants 35 or 40 yrs ago is not present in the majority of people moving here with all their $ now . It,s reflected in driving habits, rudeness while shopping etc. the most beautiful place on the planet deserves more respect. Many people who have loved and respected Hawaii for decades are being forced out financially. It is very sad.
@hotsauce30872 жыл бұрын
Agreed 💯😤
@fnhc20232 жыл бұрын
Money talks…..
@joemonroe94562 жыл бұрын
Everything has double in price everywhere. It's called inflation.
@timelessadventurer2 жыл бұрын
I’m from Chicago and totally agree that people are disrespecting Hawaii when they move there from the US mainland. Not all but a good amount.
@jordanking69392 жыл бұрын
I been to Maui 3 years ago and I'll understand that mindset of wanting to start business, buy real estate, gentrify the area so it can resemble the Hamptons.
@royaleromo83912 жыл бұрын
Loved this. I moved from Maui to Oahu because I wanted to experience the "city" life. Did it for 12 years... And yes, TRAFFIC is bad both on Maui and on Oahu. Inheriting a house from someone is not what it's cracked up to be. When I rented my apartment on Oahu, it included EVERYTHING. So when something broke, the landlord would fix it. Home owners have to either fix it themselves to find a repair person and PAY FOR IT. Yes, cost of living in Hawaii is "HIGH" but I always tell myself that I live in "PARADISE" and some people only dream of it....
@TheLayman3162 жыл бұрын
As I get older I realize “less is more.” Having more stuff in your life is what bring the most stress. Living with less and enjoying what Hawaii has to offer is more.
@Authorthings Жыл бұрын
Do you still live in Hawaii? I so badly want to get out of New Mexico. It's hot, dry, and dusty here with 0 jobs.
@albundy3929 Жыл бұрын
" Inheriting a house from someone is not what it's cracked up to be" what a bonehead statement
@brumels1570 Жыл бұрын
it doesnt sound like you make your own money
@Justvisiting146 ай бұрын
@@TheLayman316 Amen brother!!! I couldn't agree more!🤙🌈
@qwertyasf4 жыл бұрын
Tourists & rich people take over the best spots worldwide 😭 heart breaking 💔
@MrBannnnnny3 жыл бұрын
Capitalism Moment
@mementomori292313 жыл бұрын
Try buying a house in Hong Kong. When there is limited land, like anything limited in supply, prices do go up. That's how the world works. It's heart breaking that I can't own a private jet...but that's life.
@qwertyasf3 жыл бұрын
@@mementomori29231 just heard that HK citizens are rushing to buy London property now.... price hikes incoming! Hope they won't be ripped off by unscrupulous estate agents
@rammo23613 жыл бұрын
This is one world for everyone.
@ryohn54683 жыл бұрын
Hawaii is sinking. Very true
@snotrohmitabc1234 жыл бұрын
I'm not even from Hawaii but I can't emphasize how truly relatable the impossibility of home ownership in present day is!!!! Makes me cry.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
It's tough.
@_mr_cat2 жыл бұрын
What if u live on big island? U can buy a decent house for 200k..
@arwyss2 жыл бұрын
@@_mr_cat but can you get a job that will pay for that?
@_mr_cat2 жыл бұрын
@@arwyss that’s what i wanna know.. I’m assuming most jobs are on oahu?
@barbie6695 Жыл бұрын
That isn't the case in the ENTIRE state of Hawaii. The state has more affordable places than what's described here.
@fishlife70734 жыл бұрын
His voice is so relaxing and soothing , he sounds like a peaceful soul :)
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Thanks :)
@Camelotskin4 жыл бұрын
ASMR lol.
@asciiavatar Жыл бұрын
My uncle and aunt moved from Connecticut to Hilo on the big island about 10 years ago to finally escape the cold winters. They started renovating their house as soon as they moved there and now even 10 years later are still working on it. There are so few tradesman, that the tradesman can set whatever price and timeframe they want and you don't have any alternatives.
@ramcduff Жыл бұрын
The tradespeople on this island are so much cheaper than California (I live half-time in Hilo; half-time in CA)
@joybanks1602 Жыл бұрын
@@ramcduff Yes, but sometimes they don't show up.
@ramcduff Жыл бұрын
@@joybanks1602 They don't show up in California too!
@dhh4883 жыл бұрын
I thought about moving to Hawaii several years ago. One of my Nieces went to college there and said the following: If shipping stopped for whatever reason, Hawaii would run out of food in two days. That was enough for me. I live in the midwest, in a college town with a population of 20k, own my own home and am 5 minutes from work. I had better start counting by blessings. Thanks for the video.
@cyrusjulian1872 жыл бұрын
As someone who’s trying to learn how to homestead, I would only add that I think a Hawaii is a great place to grow your own food, go fishing and water catchment is already normal in many areas. Water shortage is a real problem in several states now but not in HI. The problem is I don’t know which types of crops grow best in HI climate. I love pineapples and macadamia nuts but not sure if I could survive purely on that. Also I’ve heard it’s dangerous in some cases to eat homegrown leafy vegetables due to the bugs I think or slugs (can’t remember) who carry some disease
@helenmak5663 Жыл бұрын
Your life is what it’s supposed to be. Blessings.
@Sch2155 Жыл бұрын
No it would not. Maybe for Oahu, but for the outer islands we would be fine. We are trying to make the state self sufficient on food resources. And the Outer would always pull together with the State.
@scubasteve73034 жыл бұрын
I was stationed on Oahu 1990-1993. When I went back in 2009 for a vacation I was shocked and saddened at how things had changed. The traffic felt like it was a lot worse, it felt very crowded and there were homeless people everywhere. “Call some place paradise, kiss it goodbye.”
@meathook24482 жыл бұрын
If you thought the homeless problem was bad in 2009 you should see it now!
@Authorthings Жыл бұрын
Homelessness makes me so angry. I wish I could solve the problem. It's not right while some people have everything handed to them and others who work hard for nothing.
@darlenegrant86634 жыл бұрын
I total agree with you. I lived in Hawaii for almost all my life. Then one day in my late 50's my daughter wanted me to stay with her for awhile in Washington state. I was so scared cause different state. After a month with her it was amazing. Everything was so cheap, I loved it. Then 6 months later I went back to Hawaii, I regretted. So my son moved to Vegas, and I moved with him I loved. Well I am telling you I will not go back to Hawaii and live. I will visit that is my home and where my mom and dad is buried. So what you are saying is so true. I think people should listen to what you are saying. Thumbs up to you, mahalo to you.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experience. I heard Vegas will have Zippy's. Gonna be great. :)
@415s304 жыл бұрын
@@HelloFromHawaii Well Vegas is a shithole brah, someplace like NM is pretty and not cheesy like Vegas if you like the high desert climate. I like Northern California myself.
@fakawat72204 жыл бұрын
that's the thing most people is scared to make changes in life.
@keithsinclair44384 жыл бұрын
Can't complain about Hawaii. Love the ocean, trade winds, people.
@johnnywhiteshoe2 жыл бұрын
my wife and i thought about moving there. we could both secure really great jobs, we don't have children, we have no health issues, but we would still be living very modestly and have very little, if anything, to save. we visit several times a year, so we have taken time to understand the culture and the islands. we came to an understanding that as non natives, it isn't our right to move there and create struggle for ourselves and take away from the energy of the island and the people. i understand that might seem pretty hippy-dippy, but we are trying to respect some sacred things the island hasn't had stripped away. instead, we can upgrade our situation on the mainland and still have the privilege to visit the island and contribute to the local economy several times a year.
@Vizcarrasilvana2 жыл бұрын
Amen.
@HairbyLorenaPLolo2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately My Husband and I have decided the same We would be taking our California money and buying property Would make it harder for the native Hawaiians to buy in their home land We have visited Hawaii for 25 plus years We are sad but In our hearts it’s the right thing to do
@bandxzjnmyjeans2 жыл бұрын
@@pxnmalsg i did
@mmp495 Жыл бұрын
I love your hippie dippy philosophy. ❤❤❤🏝
@verothomas1524 Жыл бұрын
Mahalo for your love and understanding . We live in a limited environment . Hawaii is home for us. Our Aina. Our heart.
@JohannGambolputty224 жыл бұрын
Work, pay mortgage, eat poke, go to beach, pay mortgage, go to Costco, repeat.
If I do decide 2 move back to Hawaii someday, I will live a simple life. I will go back to eating Saimin, Poke, Cone Sushi, portage sausage, etc. go 2 Sams club, Costco, and Walmart. Hang out at the beach. Oh yeah go 2 Sams club eat my favorite hot dog and coke for $1.50.
@edwiser35474 жыл бұрын
Very good attitude, my friend
@MultiSmartass14 жыл бұрын
I m born and raised in Hawaii and currently stuck here because of the pandemic and I never see anything on KZbin like this video: clear succinct logical explanation of why Hawaii is economically not feasible to live in. This is a perfect video to show to someone who wants to live in Hawaii.
@sansankudo3 жыл бұрын
Why I left 13 yrs ago for LV,NV
@MultiSmartass13 жыл бұрын
@@sansankudo I'm hoping to iron the final details and leave this year. Can't wait to get out of here.
@skooltyme33793 жыл бұрын
The big island has cheap lots for sale for off grid living. You have to adapt. Who wants to live in a material world?
@MultiSmartass13 жыл бұрын
@@skooltyme3379 You have the wrong video section . Hawaii is expensive no matter where you go. There is no cheap place to live in this state. Clearly you are not from Hawaii. Stick to talking about the mainland.
@skooltyme33793 жыл бұрын
@@MultiSmartass1 I've lived in Hawaii goofy. Land on the big island is adorable. Your the type that NEEDS everything to survive in paradise. I'll be buying land in Hawaii soon. There's a whole community your just not that type of people dude
@stacybee83394 жыл бұрын
Outside people moving here and they don’t live the aloha spirit. I’ve lived in Waikiki for decades and locals are leaving and tourists are moving in. I’m surrounded by A holes that want the Hawaii vibes but don’t respect the culture!
@rastaewabeach4 жыл бұрын
Outside people? Which inside people live in Waikiki?
@simplywoodstudios4 жыл бұрын
Totally agree
@leeho94774 жыл бұрын
Stacy Bee. good
@abdiver124 жыл бұрын
When I lived in Kailua, I found that the amount of violence, drug use, and racism against foreigners by the locals wasn't exactly in the Aloha spirit either. They have become as bad or worse than the foreigners they despise so much and allowed hatred and resentment to destroy their own spirits.
@imthechamp1014 жыл бұрын
Jonathan 916 this is the part people forget to mention. I live in Wahiawa and it’s the same way.
@juliawcj111 Жыл бұрын
💯So true, I live on Oahu. Income doesn't come close to cost of living. The crime, drugs and homeless has risen to a crazy level within the last 5 years. Blessings and Aloha 🌈 Mahalo Nui Loa for the video.
@nicolenotizieeamici6 ай бұрын
Unfortunately this is what the elite (aka millionaires etc ..) want … they want more and more and they push the middle class so down. It is capitalism and Extreme greed the issue .. and it is worldwide
@jlvandat694 жыл бұрын
This video makes it much more easy to understand the resentment I have seen from some Native Hawaiians. Very understandable. Mahalo for making this very informative video.
@gwillis014 жыл бұрын
People don't realize how far away Hawaii is from the mainland. It's a six SIX hour plane flight from Los Angeles to Honolulu.
@chrispowers95173 жыл бұрын
We live in THE MOST ISOLATED CHAIN OF ISLANDS IN THE WORLD! Further from any other point of land.
@arlenestanton99553 жыл бұрын
Try getting back to Boston, 24 hours! You are flying east and the sun is going west, double wammie?
@talksolot3 жыл бұрын
@@chrispowers9517 it is not the most isolated. the most isolated are in the south atlantic.
@chrispowers95173 жыл бұрын
@@talksolot sorry but your wrong, Hawaii is the farthest from any other point of land, what islands are talking about?
@musicalala3 жыл бұрын
@@chrispowers9517 Technically speaking ,Pitcairn Island is furthest from any mainland. In their case NZ. Their population is only 49 so of the significantly populated islands HI would be it.
@AsSeenOnTV08933 жыл бұрын
This is one of the few "Life in Hawaii" videos that doesn't make it seem like 24/7 sunshine, rainbows, and unicorns. It's awful that younger generations that are born and raised there have to uproot their entire lives and move to make a living. It's even worse that this problem is pervasive. People born and raised in New York and California are getting nickel-and-dimed out of their homes as well...but at least sometimes the food is affordable
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Just trying to provide a more real perspective of Hawaii.
@StilettoCutsQuick.2 жыл бұрын
Yep I was actually born in Honolulu and raised in San Diego. I now have two grandkids close to me in San Diego. I am getting closer to retirement and there is no way I will be able to stay here. It’s ridiculous so raised my kids we are close and I will have to retire elsewhere.
@RyuuOujiXS Жыл бұрын
Life is tough when you're stupid
@jeannedouglas9912 Жыл бұрын
I hate to say it but it seems universal . Alot of people are calling it unbridled greed. As the earth is choking on all the consumerism gods.
@dearyvettetn44893 жыл бұрын
As a native New Yorker who left the city after college because I didn’t want to have three roommates in order to move out into the real world, I definitely can relate. Before college I worked three jobs and still couldn’t afford my own place. Twenty five years later it hasn’t gotten any better and I’d only consider returning for family emergencies, or if I could maintain the lifestyle I have at present, minus a car and single family home.
@manuelmoraleda92854 жыл бұрын
I talked with this lady who is a Native Hawaiian here in Florida. During our conversation, I got the impression that indeed Hawaii is being invaded by a really tough enemy - Money !
@jediknight384 жыл бұрын
"So long as I went to school, work real hard, got good grades a home would just be waiting for me." Don't feel too bad. You're not the only one who thought that playing by the rules would get you what you wanted out of life only to find yourself getting the shaft instead. Welcome to reality.
@kateaye35063 жыл бұрын
Gen Xers discovered that pretty quickly.
@pinkpearl19673 жыл бұрын
@@kateaye3506 YES! GenX was the first to get that rude awakening and it's only gotten worse.
@magiclampboogiesdown97173 жыл бұрын
The Boomer false narrative for we Millennials. The “American Dream” is exactly that…nothing but a dream.
@youtubesucks14992 жыл бұрын
@@magiclampboogiesdown9717 Bull. There are plenty of Millennials making bank. I work with 2 Millenials. They learned a trade, stayed out of debt, and both bought homes. There is nothing special about either one of them.
@boofert.washington24992 жыл бұрын
@@youtubesucks1499 you missed the point. I know this bc you said they got a trade. The OP wasn't referring to the route they chose. Reading comprehension rules. Try it sometime.
@Thisweekinman4 жыл бұрын
This video is spot on! I moved there for two years and it was a constant struggle to stay alive. I was surprisingly and shockingly happy and it changed me for the best. But knowing how much easier it was to live on the mainland and missing family and realizing I’d never own anything I decide to leave. It was such a relief. It’s a magical place for sure and I am eternally grateful to have been able to live there. But it’s very hard
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@theroadrunnerjarhead4109 Жыл бұрын
This is a great video. It shows why so many people born and raised in Hawaii move to the mainland. You are doing a great service to people who are moving or considering moving to the islands. Keep these videos coming.
@edwinrod714 жыл бұрын
is so expensive even magnum P.i. Left
@sissyj8224 жыл бұрын
😂😂
@kelvinkman86834 жыл бұрын
🏆 Awesome comment!
@noahboy63494 жыл бұрын
HI 5-0 left. Magnum PI still here.
@edwinrod714 жыл бұрын
Noah Boy where
@heru-deshet3594 жыл бұрын
@@noahboy6349 Not the one that counts, lol.
@deepshotone4 жыл бұрын
I live in Vegas, and this is exactly the reason why the Hawaiian's consider Las Vegas "the 9th Hawaiian island". Ive met a ton of folks from Hawaii and they all said the number one reason they left was because it was way too expensive! Many of them miss home but they dont have any intention on returning!!
@tay4950 Жыл бұрын
Yes I am native Hawaiian and majority of my family has moved to Vegas because of this
@rsdtknqr Жыл бұрын
@@tay4950 I'm from Europe and I've been to Vegas. Why Vegas? Isn't that one of the most materialistic, crazy, dusty and ugliest places of the USA? If you're used to lush tropical islands, why don't you move to South Carolina or Florida for example?
@billyhiggins1908 Жыл бұрын
@@rsdtknqr maybe because they can easily travel to California, Arizona, and other cool places plus the housing in Vegas is affordable.
@mikejeezy064 жыл бұрын
When I moved to northern Cali I walked into Trader Joe’s, and I looked at the prices for the produce. And I was just shocked at how cheap the food is compared to Hawaii. I love my home, but like many local kids we have to move, because we can’t make it here simply because it’s so expensive.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Hawaii people love Trader Joe's. So many unique things.
@1233-h13 жыл бұрын
YEARS ago in the early 90s I went to Hawaii my first time for a job. I was staying temporarily at a hostel and remember vividly going to star market in Waikiki to get food for dinner. I almost fainted when she added up the few items had. Luckily my job was on Johnston island with literally no place to spend money. After 2 years I had saved a lot BUT going back to Honolulu is started to drain me. Besides i didn't really like it- the culture, weather, beach and obsessive tourism are quite one-sided and get boring after 6 months. I packed up and headed back to the mainland. Paradise my @$$.
@Tropical-Aes3 жыл бұрын
California is cheap compared to Hawaii??? I thought cali was most expensive in us
@mr_smilegaming88423 жыл бұрын
Not true lol. I just came back from Hawaii and the food there is about is a bit cheaper than Bay area. Bay Area is very ridiculous in cost of living.
@1233-h13 жыл бұрын
@@Tropical-Aes I wouldn't say cheap just less expensive because the wage structure in Hawaii is very skewed. You don't have big tech or big pharma or industry there. They dont make or grow anything there really and almost all food must come from mainland so you pay that markup. I will concede that now there are a couple of lower cost option. Walmart is across from Ala Moana mall and there is a Don Quixote (used to be Daiei) as well. I dont know if they still there but I assume they are. Dollar stores have good deals on a lot of things and so does grocery outlet. The thing is now days one has to comparison shop. There are a few apps that take the guess work out of it so you can see who got best price on what. Saves a ton of money.
@dianalugo83272 жыл бұрын
I have family in Hawaii, just returned from another visit, and he is spot on. It's extremely expensive, getting a well paying job isn't easy, and home ownership very difficult. I've grown up with, and worked with Hawaiian 'expats' on the Mainland. Everyone misses Hawaii with plans to someday retire "back home".
@kamiworth85314 жыл бұрын
Thank u for that "raw truth" I lived with 2 lil kids & my husband in Kauai, i had 3 jobs & it put such a strain on me that i left with my kids & my husband I divorced. I saw the hypmatizing force that was not worth holding on to. I'm happier now my kids have grown into adults, my ex & I are happier as friends & know Hawaii is for visiting ONLY!!!!
@giselafiege71694 жыл бұрын
May o ask where you live now? I’m living on Kauai right now, moved here in 2016. Love this island not so much the struggle of hustling for work. I started a great job in February with a helicopter company and felt i could finally breath then this covid hit and the helicopter company had to shut down. Now I’m working with my roommate in his plumbing businesses and getting paid fair for hard physical 10 hour day work. I know you feel my pain. I’m actually a hairdresser and tried to get my license here yet they asked me to jump through hoops I wasn’t ready to jump through. Sorry just ranting. Aloha
@LogikThaAliasThaIsraelian4 жыл бұрын
@@giselafiege7169 I'm a barber in Miami I suggest you do house calls as a hair dresser meaning go to them or they come to you. You can make alot of money that way. God Bless..
@giselafiege71694 жыл бұрын
DJRUCKUSAKALOGIC thank you yes I have been doing so. Just not advertising for it. Blessings to you also!
@eugenecharkov35474 жыл бұрын
Very true.I have been to HI 4 times.I like most Oahu and Maui.Staying more than 2 weeks ,and it is getting very boring ,even in Honolulu. the sunsets and sun rise is the same as in Miami or PR or NYC. U can have that Aloha spirit inside of u anywhere.And after C19 ,with the most leftist state in USA,Hawaii will be the dream for the super rich only(I do not think they stay there for more than 2_3monthsca year).
@romari27064 жыл бұрын
Homelessness is amazingly prevalent in Hawaii.
@willam7794 жыл бұрын
No shit Hawaii has been oppressed
@Morgan24_74 жыл бұрын
I heard. I was really surprised when I heard that. People from Hawaii were telling me about the beaches being like tent city.
@dirtyaznstyle41564 жыл бұрын
Why is it amazing? Things cost money and there is a finite amount of land. The state economy is a one legged stool and the state hasn’t invested in infrastructure and local agriculture etc to where it would be sustainable and provide food or energy at more affordable prices. Once you lose your job or are priced out of the market it’s very hard to dig yourself back out unless you have a situation where you don’t have bills to pay to get back on your feet or increase your salary at one of your jobs.
@k3th.b.w1224 жыл бұрын
It’s a socialist shithole what do you expect high regulation and tax will never be sustainable. Hawaii will inevitably fall due to their Gov. over reach.
@covfefe17874 жыл бұрын
@@willam779 no blame the Democrats for that they have run the state for all 60 years elected republicans then you’ll see everything drop 50% in prices obviously it wont be as cheap as the mainland but certainly much cheaper than it is now
@4himalone3334 жыл бұрын
A minute in and already amazed. Real talk. It's expensive here.
@antm643 жыл бұрын
Life is a trade off no matter where you go. The price of living in a cold climate is the extreme heating bill. The price of living in a hot climate is the AC bill. The price of living on an island is the import package. There are realistic pros and cons everywhere! Your weather is a big pro for lots of people...everything you talk about is part of the price to pay. Thank you for your honesty on this topic. I have to point out that for many people, living close to family is worth any price!
@irvingsalonga93993 жыл бұрын
Youve got the best comment i just read. Period. Very well said.
@glengamble5263 жыл бұрын
Yeah, but...he has to pay that AC bill AND pay an exorbitant mortgage on his home. Expensive groceries. Crazy shipping. Not to mention being an island, EVERYTHING HAS TO BE IMPORTED and costs more. It’s kind of his whole point-and respectfully, yer missing it. It’s NOT the same everywhere. Pros and cons are one thing...over-priced EVERYTHING IS ANOTHER. At least on the mainland you have other options, you can move to a cheaper neighbourhood etc. He’s saying even basic survival in Hawaii is insanely over-priced.
@vickyrun87963 жыл бұрын
It isn't hot in Hawaii. Usually about 80 degrees. No high air conditioning bills. But other things are expensive.
@MsLouisVee3 жыл бұрын
@@vickyrun8796 it’s hot in Hawaii
@DisinterestedParty10 ай бұрын
@vickyrun8796 False. A/C is needed roughly nine months out of the year, unless you happen to be among the few who live up in the mountains at higher elevations.
@graceandtruthfellowship43474 жыл бұрын
My wife is from Hawaii and I’m from Georgia. The reality of living and working there is not what I expected. We see the tropical beautiful destination on TV and not much else. Everything from shared homes to multiple jobs is a burden that needs to be lifted from the people. Especially the lack of AC in most houses. They’ve also been over stepping the rights of the people in Oahu..all the windmills and the telescope. The people had no say.
@joylynch52042 жыл бұрын
Shared homes?
@Waingro8084 жыл бұрын
Inheriting a home is 99% of Hawaii locals' plan. The prior generations bought homes when the prices were the same or only slightly higher than the Mainland.
@johnsonkahili90974 жыл бұрын
I don't agree that most locals plan to inherit a home. I bought a home and so did many of my friends and family. I am 37, and bought my home 3 years ago. On the Big Island where I live, homes are still relatively affordable. On Oahu, many opt to pay expensive rent or live in far off places like Waimanalo or Waianae.
@Waingro8084 жыл бұрын
@@johnsonkahili9097 East Big Island is another world and is the exception, not the norm. If remote work becomes permanent, maybe more people will go there.
@johnsonkahili90974 жыл бұрын
@@Waingro808 There are already many remote jobs. When I was younger I worked in the construction industry and worked on Oahu a lot while living in Hilo. As a medical worker, I've worked at an affiliated center on Oahu while living in Hilo. There are many companies that have branches of business on different Islands and share workers from other Islands in all lines of work. I just didn't agree with your sentiment that all locals plan on simply inheriting a house from their family. If you have a siblings who gets the house? In my family only one of us is getting it and it is already decided.
@racquelrobinson30304 жыл бұрын
Can you explain 'Mainland'? Is mainland the rest of the island or mainland is the largest one of the islands?
@Waingro8084 жыл бұрын
@@racquelrobinson3030 Mainland=Continental US
@Zerbabilon4 жыл бұрын
Nailed it. I lived there a year and absolutely loved the pros but the cons out weigh the pros for the working class.
@patfromamboy Жыл бұрын
I used to go to Hawaii a lot as a kid and adult until I discovered Brasil and now I’ve visited Brasil 18 times. The culture is alive and well unlike Hawaii which was pushing the hula dancer culture for many years. The food is great in Brasil and the people are very friendly. It’s cheap too. It’s easy to spend 200-300 per night to stay in Hawaii but I’ve stayed in a mansion in Brasil using Airbnb for 9 dollars per night and a nice new place on the beach is 40 dollars per night. It’s a little rough sometimes but 1 day in Brasil is like 3 days in the US because of how fun it is.
@thedon2177 ай бұрын
I'm a 31 year old man, what advice and tips can you give me if I decide to visit brasil? I also only have 1 leg but get around on my prosthetic leg very well. Hiking climbing pretty much anything.
@thedon2177 ай бұрын
@patfromamboy
@Athomeonarock4 жыл бұрын
Right on, especially your last line. I was Born and raised in Hawaii, mostly Oahu. Left when I was 18, and have stayed away. I do miss some things, but I own a great house, don't worry about food or gas. Where I live the traffic is nothing. I have no financial stress compared to all my friends back home, and many of them make more than I do. I used to say I would go back someday, but not anymore.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Lots of great opportunities outside of Hawaii. It's tough, but somehow people manage. However, more locals are realizing how much easier it is elsewhere. When I was on the Mainland, I couldn't believe the housing prices. So cheap compared to Hawaii! :)
@edwardkim25114 жыл бұрын
I moved to the mainland back in 1982. I was born and raised on Oahu. As they say lucky U live Hawaii. Hawaii has amazing foods. So does Chi-town. I live a simple life out here. I have friends who live out in Vegas and Reno who use to live on Oahu back in the day. Of course back in the 60's, 70's and 80's things like homes were more affordable, especially out in the Nevada area where my friends bought homes back than. You pay the price to live in Paradise. Aloha.
4 жыл бұрын
@Ted Montana Sorry to butt in, but yes, absolutely. I was born in Hawaii, moved to the mainland as a young boy, then moved back when I was in my thirties. So I can see the contrasts in the culture and that's another video completely, and a long one.
@ernestobernard14244 жыл бұрын
Yes. Hawaii is becoming expensive even at this pandemic time. I’ve never owned a home, I’ve rented all my life and I Thank God that He provided for us. Which as a Christian we are here only for awhile then when Jesus returns we’ll go home with Him. But for now we are here and doing His work, and living in His Peace. God bless you my brother in your decision making. In Jesus Name. Amen.
@dianemccloud59904 жыл бұрын
@ Ernesto, what you said, for any Christian is all day, all day....as long as we have shelter over our heads, it does not have to be elaborate, if it is, still Praise God....but I feel as you do, be it an apartment or house....whatever, I am here but for a moment, to try to bring into the kingdom....keep, keeping on my brother....God is pleased....
@situated44 жыл бұрын
Yes, the magical man in the sky shall provide now and forever, Amen. John 3:16. Let’s pray. Our Father, who ...
@LilyGazou4 жыл бұрын
That’s a great way to look at the challenge.
@wadecarol4 жыл бұрын
Even though we were fortunate enough to live on Oahu and own a home with one income, it probably meant working until 67 or older. There's a saying, "Work to live, don't live to work". So I transferred to Utah for my Govt work, but built a home in Las Vegas. In a year, I realized that we could probably manage if I retired and just moved to Vegas, so we did. Like you said, there's things we all miss in Hawaii, and there's definitely things we don't miss. Your video hit it on the head. Vegas is definitely the 9th island with so much locals here. Locals that opened food joints, food trucks, from chicken katsu to poke bowls, you definitely don't get homesick for the food. :)
@islandbeauty35404 жыл бұрын
So true! And I was surprised to see so many ABC stores when I went to Vegas!
@situated44 жыл бұрын
That’s awesome!! Enjoy, bruh!
@jenanalleman62854 жыл бұрын
Why do you think so many from Hawaii are in Las Vegas? It's warm in Vegas, but a desert. I would think more Hawaii transplants would be in California or Florida unless they don't miss the beach.
@wadecarol4 жыл бұрын
@@jenanalleman6285 me personally, Florida puts me too far from family back home. Florida can also be extremely humid, like 95-100%, plus all their hurricanes. As for California, too much of everything...traffic, expensive housing, gun restrictions, etc. Also, of the 6 or 7 states with no income tax returns, I chose #1 as Nevada, #2 Wyoming, #3 Washington, and pass on the rest. LOL!
@Justvisiting146 ай бұрын
I know this video was made 4+ yrs ago and things are different now. I currently live here on Oahu, I moved here in 2013. Lately I've been watching videos like this about life here on the islands. This gentleman's perspective I believe represents the masses who have lived here a long time or those who were born here. However, after living in over 30 different places my feelings are quite different. I absolutely love living here and don't think it's hard at all. The topics he brings up are real, the facts regarding cost of living are real. But, it's not that way for everyone. You create your life through your thoughts and beliefs, so if you believe it's hard... then it will be hard. Everyone's perspective is different and therfore their experiences are as well. So if one learns how to change one's perspective, then you can change your life. I had the same perspective as this man did for the first 5 yrs I was here. The island is still the same, even getting worse in most people's eyes, but it's life in paradise for many people! I hope people could learn that life is what you make it and not what other people say it is, no disrespect to this fine gentleman.
@gwillis014 жыл бұрын
I've always noticed that in the TINY fine print of almost every contest and sweepstakes promoted nationwide it says "Prizes will not be awarded in Hawaii or Alaska except for electronic transfer of cash prizes. " If the grand prize is a new car, it costs too too much to ship the car to Hawaii by sea freight or air freight.
@KojiLiving4 жыл бұрын
We always get nothing lol. Shipping for us is like 5 times as much as the item
@Diddy1970AD4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the housing issue is also happening everywhere else in the developed world.
@margietucker17194 жыл бұрын
Not on the same level by any means! On the mainland--here in the Midwest...decent housing can be very cheap.
@usetherightbrain.4 жыл бұрын
Using round numbers of say one percent of 1 billion people with new disposable incomes and wanting a piece of Western Society and lifestyle ( Aust/NZ Hawaii, Western America Coast, Vancouver) either for their own use or for "investment", then that is 10 million potential buyers ( and growing) that are out there buying property. The 98% North American citizen has no chance and the future is bleak unless the laws, statutes, and rules and regulations are changed. Eg in Mexico non-citizens cannot own any land that is within x miles adjacent to the sea coast , only leaseholds. A radical change is needed in who can buy property, keep America land and property for American citizens, and if this is offensive to anyone, tough beans.
@jameswest48194 жыл бұрын
Especially on the west coast where 1000s of people are living under bridges and on the streets.
@zac99334 жыл бұрын
@@jameswest4819 absolutely, as a CA native it is astounding the amount of people I personally know who have either left the state already or want to leave, myself included. The driving factor being the outrageous living costs and over population that leaves employers no incentive to pay barely over minimum wage because if you want more money they will just find someone who doesn't and you'll be out a job.
@Christa-tl8jb3 жыл бұрын
@@margietucker1719 Where the affordable housing is are the wages low or are they decent livable wages? Is the affordable housing in the ghettos?
@slopolopez77414 жыл бұрын
So you live in "paradise" but have two jobs, working seven days a week, everything is expensive and really bad traffic? Alright.
@stevejeffrey114 жыл бұрын
@@BrokenCircuitRanch big island is my favourite, kauai & moloka'i also awesome forget maui and oahu :D
@dirtyaznstyle41564 жыл бұрын
@@BrokenCircuitRanch What’s the average income on the outer islands? I’d assume most opportunity to be on Oahu just due to job availability.
@dirtyaznstyle41564 жыл бұрын
@@BrokenCircuitRanch is the cost of living higher on Oahu? Fuel prices aren’t as high as outer islands, are food and other things cheaper? I find it hard to believe that the outer islands have lower costs or higher paying jobs to offset the cost of living where it’s more economical to live on an outer island. At the very least there are potentially more shifts I can pickup on Oahu for my second or third job hahaha
@dirtyaznstyle41564 жыл бұрын
@@BrokenCircuitRanch just looking at median selling price big island is around the $400k mark. Those folks must be retiring and selling million dollar houses on Oahu.. I own a fixer upper worth maybe $650k(would be worth closer to $800k if family members weren’t idiots) but if I sold and bought a $180k new construction on big island I think I’d still outlive the money. Especially since I’d be paying taxes on the profit from selling even if I put it into an IRA. An uncleared lot on Hilo side is maybe $20k? Not sure what the cost to clear, scrape level, and run utilities and a road to some of those lots is.. it still seems like you would have to have money to begin with or I guess you could camp on your parcel while working and paying for improvements? I still think at a median selling price of $400k for Hawaii county you could get way more on the mainland and no risk of lava flows.
@Kyosuke7004 жыл бұрын
if anyone thinks thats bad go live in california and let me know how that goes in 4 years
@adamcristoforo40912 жыл бұрын
Love your illustration of the Monopoly board and coming into the game late - so accurate! My wife stands to inherit a home through HI Homelands - and I still have serious misgivings when we talk about the possibility of moving there…
@HelloFromHawaii2 жыл бұрын
I know that the Hawaiian Home Lands waiting list is pretty backed up. Hope you figure out what to do when the time comes. 🤙
@sharonbowers99294 жыл бұрын
When we visited fifteen years ago. I was shocked by the prices. Outrageous! 🙁
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, and the prices are getting higher.
@rj5214 жыл бұрын
Have you tried buying a home in Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles or San Francisco?
@justinb70394 жыл бұрын
Milk was 5 a gallon when I lived there. Its gotta be 10 now
@southbreezealoha59214 жыл бұрын
@@HelloFromHawaii That is too bad to move to Hawaii. I wonder to change the place to move,just for sightseeing might be good.
@7yrbs4pm3fsD6Nseoqe_Dw4 жыл бұрын
A native Hawaiian said that real estate prices keep going up bc foreign investors buy up so many properties as their summer or second or Nth home or as an investment. And local ppl can’t compete with that and many ppl are moving to main land.
@yvonne29654 жыл бұрын
Happens in Colorado too & the homes just sit empty most of the year
@hothotheat30004 жыл бұрын
That happens in all major cities. Chinese buyers come in and pay cash outright, and they’ll pay over market prices to get the property, tear down the house, and rebuild it.
@desii19724 жыл бұрын
We were there for holiday in Jan. Spoke to so many locals who confirmed same. Hubby and I were also in a bad road accident at the time and in our three weeks in hospital found that the nurses were working multiple jobs. (taxi drivers had other full time jobs. Teachers had second and third jobs). It was crazy to hear that so many people were working so hard just to survive and support their families. No time to enjoy their island paradise. It was Very sad to hear. And yes we noted cost of living was in generally expensive.
@darlenebryant88 Жыл бұрын
My daughter lives on Oahu for 10 yrs now. They work very hard. She helps the homeless on the island. People think that if they move there and can't afford it that they can just live on the beach. But that is not true. The police will run you off. If you are lucky you will end up in a shelter. She was in a car accident and has been waiting for 6 weeks to get her car repaired. All this time she has had to find another way to work. (Uber and Lyft do not work where she lives.) Their home is very small and friends always want to vacation in their home which ends up costing them alot of extra money. They are loving and caring people and have really enjoyed living there. They have had to make alot of changes to continue having their lives on the island but they believe it is well worth it. Aloha to you all.
@Honeybee1975.. Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Hawaii as a child to young adult. Miss it a lot but like you said, affordability. Unfortunately I am one who can’t afford to live there although I’d love to and wish I could.
@Alakazam0244 жыл бұрын
This is true for most tropical islands. Source: Former USVI resident
@ron87.4 жыл бұрын
Come to the Dominican republic. Get you a nice one bedroom apartment for $450 a month
@kristoffliftoff93164 жыл бұрын
What about non tropical islands?
@ron87.4 жыл бұрын
@@kristoffliftoff9316 depends where you want to live. Do you want to live somewhere where it's warm all year round? Don't like cold weather?
@travisdwoo4 жыл бұрын
I live in Waianae and love it. Work on an organic farm here so I dont have to worry about traffic or cost of food. But I can relate to working 7 days a week. Gotta have a side hustle to feel like you can make it anywhere
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Aloha! I enjoy your videos about Hawaii. You have an interesting perspective with your farming lifestyle. It must be great to work close to where you live. Glad to see farming is happening here. I really enjoyed a tour I had of Ma'o Farms.
@learningwithron4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. I've always felt that way. Currently one year on the mainland bc I never got a good job offer in HI after graduating with my Masters. Not to also mention that home prices aren't just BC of local competition, but wealthy Americans, Japanese, Chinese investors buying up property and driving the building of luxury condos, which also increase the property prices in the area.
@frejajones5792 Жыл бұрын
I’ve lived between the mainland and Big Island since 2006. We left several times because it was just so hard to get by. If it wasn’t for food stamps and Costco, no one and especially not families could survive except the 1percent. The snow birds show up this time of year with their range rovers and shiny sports cars that have been in some air conditioned garage for the last 10 months, and the rest of us are in traffic with the windows down because our air conditioners stopped working a long time ago but there is no money to fix it. My husband is a white collar professional. We both work, but in Hawaii our family has faced hunger and homelessness. We were evicted from our rental with our children because our land lord decided she could make more money renting it out as an airb&b. We love Hawaii. Our children were born here. But we can’t even get to the beach very often because we are really so busy just getting by. Also, it used to be before the pandemic, going to the beach made it all with it. It was community. You met friends there and if you didn’t know anyone that day, you made a new friend before you left. Kids I never met would come get snacks from my cooler bc I am the mom. All kids are our kids. If a kid is hungry on the beach, a mom would find that kid a snack. But now with Covid, all that seems to be a thing of the past. It’s sad. Now my husband is Ubering in addition to his white collar job. I think anyone moving here should consider this: a gallon of milk is$18.29 at choicemart in Captain Cook. My boys can go through a gallon of milk in a couple of hours. We love the island. But it’s tough. Aloha
@HelloFromHawaii Жыл бұрын
Mahalo for sharing. Definitely appreciate you sharing your experience here. It's tough.
@albundy3929 Жыл бұрын
$18 for a gallon of milk? nothing online to back this up.
@dawnrandazzo9790 Жыл бұрын
@Al Bundy I looked at Walmart in Maui and it's $5.98 a gallon there
@albundy3929 Жыл бұрын
@@dawnrandazzo9790 that's believable.
@Lisa-ou3pj Жыл бұрын
@@albundy3929That does seem a bit high, but it is a LOT, especially at Choice Mart.
@jni93624 жыл бұрын
Thank you talking about the cost of food here in Hawaii!! I was just in California visiting family and I was floored by how much more it was here in Hawaii for the same products 😭😭 And not as fresh.
@markettradinggenius4 жыл бұрын
You posted your video on my birthday...lol...haha...We are from Hawaii and it was my cousin, who trades the financial markets, that first left hawaii over 5 years ago. He moved to the East Coast(Virginia) where the regulations are very soft and the environment, unlike Hawaii, is actually "Pro business" and not 'anti-business' like hawaii is. I was the second person to join my cousin, then a few months later, the rest of our "family structure" moved to Virginia. All 33 of us family members are now in Virginia and we've been here for 14 months now. Virginia is a breath of fresh air and we don't ever see ourselves going back to our native Oahu island. There's nothing to go back to. People forget that 'Hawaii' is NOT a place, it's a people. And, where the people go, so does Hawaii !! Everything, here in Virginia, is so much cheaper. Matter of fact, our cost of living went down over 60%, rent is cheaper for a much bigger place. Buying a home 3 times the size is 4 times cheaper than even the lowliest shack in hawaii!! The cost of food is cheaper, and gas is at least a dollar less per gallon(as of July 28, 2020 gas price where we live is at $1.89 per gallon). And, come to think about it, 90% of everyone on Oahu will NEVER own a home in their life! Also, I had Amazon Prime and a few times I overnited a package, and paid a dear price for the overnite shipping just to find out that it still took 2 days for me to receive it !!!! Now, living here in Virginia, I often get my overnite package the same day simply because northern Virginia has a major Amazon warehouse facility :). We were thinking about moving to California, but that place is just as bad as Hawaii !! We have more entertainment and it's all at a much closer driving range. The beauty of Virginia is unparalleled and a person would not know that unless they truly lived in Virginia, while coming from a place like Hawaii. There's so many things to do and see in Virginia that no person could possibly do and see everything in their life time !! We all love it here in northern Virginia :) We have met at least 12 other families, now, who are also from Hawaii(maui & Oahu) and they also love it here. We've even met a few Tungans and Micronesians. How cool is that !!! By the way, Virginia has the 2 wealthiest counties in all of North America(beating out any other county in the United States). Those two counties are Loudon County and Fairfax County and we can tell you from experience that it truly shows !! Finally, we don't see or have nearly the amount of homeless people here in Virginia versus hawaii where the homeless are literally ruthless all around the Honolulu library like cockroaches fighting over food...lol...
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment. Glad that you've found Virginia a place to call home. I know a guy from Kaneohe who moved there with his family too.
@Madedanielle4 жыл бұрын
Hawaii is my favorite place for vacation but i get it, I wouldn't live there. Im from nyc and hawaii is waaay more expensive...the rent is about the same, but the cost of life is so high and minimum wage is ridiculous. I briefly worked as a recruiter in the California/Nevada area and met a lot of people from Hawaii moving to the mainland bc they couldn't afford it anymore :( Hawaii and its people have my heart, so warming and welcoming.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's just not affordable. They are now estimating that 30,000 locals will leave by 2022 because of the economic impact of the pandemic. And that's a best case scenario. Worst case is 60,000. With that, goes the culture and future local generations.
@moncorp14 жыл бұрын
I don't even like visiting Hawaii. Takes 8 hours on a packed plane with the great unwashed. No thanks. I can get to the Caribbean in less than 3 hours.
@gigilabrador81894 жыл бұрын
moncorp1 Inc your comment is irrelevant. If you do not want to visit, that’s fine but you didn’t need to post that.
@esperantoviro4 жыл бұрын
I spent little money in the three weeks I was there. We ate fish, local beef, local veggies (kalo, `uala, laulau, lūʻau heʻe, lūʻau moa, moa laiki loloa, saimin, nā pā mea ʻai, macaroni salad..... and drank ʻawa. We stayed just outside of Pahoa, in a kind of B&B. Biggest expense: rental car and flights. We ate and drank very little from the mainland. There is also cheap local fruit. I took language lessons in the a.m. and in the p.m. we hiked Waipio or talked story with friends. Some students from the Hawaii study section of the university took us on hikes. We wore kalipa, mostly, and shorts and a t-shit. No dress up, no disco, no luxury hotels. I loved it there. - Now I am addicted to some of the foods. I have to grow taro on my own, but in Florida `a`ole pilikia. I take lesson languages online with a 1 hour group facebook face-to-face chat. I want to return, and yes, to the same area.
@mikekings52654 жыл бұрын
Daniela Meza are you married?????
@parkercroft61832 жыл бұрын
Aloha Nephew, Now three months later and I have been living and working in Vermont and India. Your message rings as true as ever. I will come home in November, but my work will keep me traveling. I will perpetually return home to Hawai'i. I write to add something to my previous comments. The world is very much changing, in addition to the changes that you note in Hawai'i. For example, homelessness is nearly everywhere. Important to recognize, this is not only a problem in Hawai'i, but rather a symptom of a larger cultural problem. Our social fabric is being ripped apart many places in the world. The kindness that is part of the Aloha Spirit is perhaps one important part of getting through this. Another part is for our larger community to acknowledge that what is going on is broken. We are experiencing the unfortunate results of some bad policy decisions. Beginning by acknowledging this fact is essential. As always, your work brings me home. Mahalo nut loa.
@andreamarr72134 жыл бұрын
I have some Canadian friends who pulled stakes and moved to Hawaii. There must be some downsides as they were pretty excited to leave here. So surprised to see them back after only one year.
@nadiacoffey26094 жыл бұрын
My husband and I love vacationing in Hawaii. We often have wondered what it must be like to live there. Last time we went, we talked to some people on the plane who lived there and were moving back to the mainland because they said living there was a tough lifestyle and that they needed better cost of living.
@dominicthedominator27964 жыл бұрын
I was a part owner of two condos in Maui for years. I had to sell because of the astronomical cost increases. HOA fees went from about $250 per month to about #1,000 per month in seven years. Food, groceries....everything was so much higher than the mainland. Also, there isn't a really good hospital on Maui, so don't go there if you have a chronic illness.
@thecalmwayhome84834 жыл бұрын
Hoa fees can go up that much? OMG....I always wanted to own a condo, but your comment makes me reconsider.
@paperroses76153 жыл бұрын
No kidding! Have to be helicopter to Queens medical center on Oahu ! If you have any mobile disabilities and something happens your on the floor waiting for days and could die due to no medical access! Not a good place to live if you have medical disability
@moe4meswtdg Жыл бұрын
@@paperroses7615 My friend who lives on Maui said that the locals voted down a hospital. Not sure the reason but I think she said the locals were afraid it would encourage more people to move there. ??
@paperroses7615 Жыл бұрын
@@moe4meswtdg There's a tendency to build on land that's sacred and the environment very irresponsible and prejudice to vote down a hospital 🏥⚡🔥 I'm not surprised because they make up their own rules as they go over there I had a few nice friends but the rest was so prejudiced to the point of it being dangerous to live there sadly this was early 2000 year . Okay to visit but not live there to much prejudice and hostility and can be dangerous life threatening. A cruise ship company tried hiring all native locals but they sabotaged it by rehanging dirty bath towels and putting dirty sheets back on the bed rotten food yes they really did it! The cruise line was trying to help the unemployment ⚡🔥 but they just threw it back in the face ! They ended up hiring a whole new crew due to many complaints when things happen in the islands things happening travels fast . There's a small island between Hawaii and Maui island one guy comes in where I worked intending to snorkel over to it but he was warned to not go even close because it's only indigenous people and they will hurt him they have guns over there too and they use them people very commonly go missing due to hatred and prejudice ⚡🔥 Sadly the local law is crooked too and doesn't protect anyone but their own interests It's to primitive living and too expensive $ One day I woke up and was mostly paralyzed and the nearest hospital is on Oahu and no ambulance to come get you to get on a helicopter to Oahu to Queens hospital That explain another reason why they don't want it they rather people die than have a hospital Not worth living there ⚡🔥😈 too much Prejudice 😈
@moe4meswtdg Жыл бұрын
@@paperroses7615 I agree with every thing you’ve said. All the people on this thread talking about how nice the Hawaiian people are. -- ?? Not been my experience. I was almost run off the road twice by angry native motorists. And my friend who lives there, said the people don’t take education seriously, skipping class when the surf is up. And they continue to talk a gibberish form of English. And I had a three hour talk with a former college history professor who lives in Maui, and he said one of the reasons there is so much poverty among the natives is that previous generations sold their land and homesteads to rich mainlanders, and left nothing for their grandkids. Just so they could spend their golden years laying on the beach. And that there are few native blood Hawaiians. They all immigrated from other places, mostly Japan, and the other Pacific islands, to work in the sugar fields, farming, etc. and your story about the snorkeler going to a remote island is true. On HBO documentaries, Anthony Bourdain visits and island there just like that, and that’s exactly what the natives said too.
@lewisshock6153 жыл бұрын
This is a thoughtful video; my wife and I recently moved from a suburb of Baltimore where real estate values had gone up very sharply to a smaller town in south-central PA - about a 60-mile move but the three-bedroom home we bought was literally 1/3 of the price. I am very thankful we had this option to lower our debt load and also buy a smaller house that is less to take care of. Hawaii though is a closed system. Here in the US there are some places that are very expensive, some moderately expensive and some areas that are actually pretty inexpensive from a cost of living perspective. But it seems in Hawaii there is only "very expensive" and "expensive" leaving the "in-expensive" off the menu. I've never been and it looks to be such a beautiful place but, to the author's point, it is an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and any consumables people need to live had to come in by plane or boat. I pray this young man will continue to be able to make ends meet or, if he chooses, re-locate to the mainland if HI proves too costly in the future.
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Mahalo for the comment. It's getting more expensive, which is hard to imagine. I'm not sure what will happen to future generations who want to continue living here.
@lynnbogard35964 жыл бұрын
I lived in Hawaii for many years. The cost to live there was just too much and I moved. I try to go back every 1-2 yrs because it’s just so beautiful!!
@CrackberryMe4 жыл бұрын
The cost of housing issues are very real everywhere. I'm in MD and if I had to purchase my home again there is no way that I could afford it.. No Way.
@cinderellaasmr4 жыл бұрын
I moved to Hawaii from Maryland and I agree it’s expensive in MD as well. I’m from the Montgomery county area. But atleast in Maryland you can drive off to other states lol here you’re stuck
@malamawestside4 жыл бұрын
@@cinderellaasmr I wouldn't wanna be stuck anywhere else even with all the struggles, but HERE IN HAWAII, MY HOME FOREVER & EVER!!! Mahalo Ke Akua
@tabascokat2134 жыл бұрын
I moved from Annapolis to the Big Island and honestly MD was way more expensive than it is here.
@JenX4224 жыл бұрын
Same. Basically the Boomer generation was by in large the last generation to be allowed to afford property. Wages kept up with living costs in their earning years. Our currency is being devalued by Federal Reserve, especially since 2008 and will be really bad moving forward.
@braddahg4 жыл бұрын
Hawaii is a two class society, rich and poor. There's no middle. Covid will make it worse.
@jessicaparedes29004 жыл бұрын
G Major7 completely agree with you
@anthonygato4074 жыл бұрын
Rich, poor, and blue tarps.
@marvingoodhue97694 жыл бұрын
What the hell are you people talking about
@matthewkeating69704 жыл бұрын
Just buy land on big island.
@puensi6664 жыл бұрын
Most are middle Especially if Both couples work
@DangerousPYTee Жыл бұрын
I live in the Florida Keys. I could so relate to all of this with the exception of batteries, and we have a 2 lane road for 120 miles from Miami that spans the islands. Vacation rentals have made workers homeless and forces even the native Conchs to leave to find somewhere close to affordable.
@kailanicapelouto26864 жыл бұрын
You wake up at 5 am and sit in traffic for hours. You work for 8 hours and hit more traffic on the way home. Everyday!!!
@jamesstone76854 жыл бұрын
That could be because of terrible roads, one lane each way, poorly maintained!
@malamawestside4 жыл бұрын
Everyday Traffic sucks here that's for sure...👎🏽👎🏽
@cstokes36424 жыл бұрын
Try living in NYC it’s way way worse. So much more manageable to live in Hawai’i.
@armandotorres22834 жыл бұрын
Kailani Capelouto lol I don’t get it I used to commute from Haleiwa to Waikiki work at 4pm and be home at 10.. then from Kapolei to Waikiki it’ll take me like 30 mins for both areas Kapolei and Haleiwa.. don’t be afraid to be there it’s more nice.. people in mainland example I’m from the Bay Area people work in Bay Area and live in Tracy, Stockton takes 1:10 no traffic then with traffic like 2-3 hours and to make it worse there’s nothing to do there you need to go to Bay Area and find things to do.. that’s the same story to people that move from ca to Texas, Arizona and Las Vegas don’t get me wrong you better homes for cheaper
@kirag95094 жыл бұрын
Chris Stokilo but at least NYC has a semi good public transportation system. Hawaii only has the bus. Which also has to sit in hours and hours or gridlock traffic. Unlike NYC, theres no way to bypass traffic
@brucebaker35234 жыл бұрын
No matter where you go or who you are, Life is never easy!
@jonathanilabbeluong36034 жыл бұрын
Imma disagree with you on that
@chrischris6664 жыл бұрын
It's a lot harder in places like North Korea.
@brucebaker35234 жыл бұрын
@@chrischris666 Everything is relative
@brucebaker35234 жыл бұрын
@@jonathanilabbeluong3603 Everyone has problems, even if they're imagined
@Ffollies4 жыл бұрын
@@brucebaker3523 yes, everything is relative so by definition some lives would be considered "easy" and some "difficult"
@brotherbarbatos89813 жыл бұрын
This is very true, life in Hawaii is very hard especially for locals. I’m a native Hawaiian from the Big Island and me, my mom, and my brother were basically forced off the island because of the low job opportunities.
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear that you moved. Hope things are okay on the mainland.
@brotherbarbatos89813 жыл бұрын
@@HelloFromHawaii much love to you!
@sawilliams08034 жыл бұрын
When you talk about traffic time vs distance I was dying cause since I’ve moved here that’s exactly what I do, I don’t say oh that’s like a mile down the road I think uhhh 15 mins just to get 2 miles down the road. I don’t wanna leave I’ll do it tomorrow. And the food, you couldn’t be more on point, food spoils so much faster here than mainland
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Yeah, everything is measured in time, not distance.
@Aloha7453 жыл бұрын
When I was a teacher there, it was called the “paradise tax.”
@dontennis22604 жыл бұрын
No need for a nice car cause everything rusts.
@gregh74574 жыл бұрын
yea if its not in a garage and by the ocean. i've got a 40 year old datsun 280z and its pristine
@bryanbishop23774 жыл бұрын
Manufacturers have started making cars out of galvanized steel, or aluminum, as of the early 2000's. They don't suffer rust anywhere as bad as before...
@minipoopuu123404 жыл бұрын
Don Tennis not only that our roads here are shit it’s infested w potholes cracks n uneven seriously we pay high registration fees n roads here are a joke buy a tractor instead
@forestsprite59144 жыл бұрын
Not to mention the tiny parking spaces makes it hard to keep car nice. People don't care, they just smash their door into ur car.
@josephgiri23984 жыл бұрын
@@bryanbishop2377 that won't make much difference, you'll never understand till you've lived here a few years, everything decays much quicker.
@JM-gz1ej3 жыл бұрын
Stumbled in this channel, man, this is the best KZbin video I have ever watched in years. So insightful and genuine. Full of contents as well emotions and yet without those lame background "music". Thank you. Just subscribed.
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Mahalo. Glad you enjoyed the video.
@reneegentry43914 жыл бұрын
I still call Hawaii my Home even though I am a mainlander born and raised in Indiana! What he's speaking about is very true, he kno da hawaii kine cost! I spent 4 years on Oahu and Loved it! We were a Army family and mostly lived on Post which saved us alot of money! Rent was high when I lived there. What floored me was the cost of car insurance! Food in regular grocery stores like Safeway was incredibly high! We were fortunate to have a Commisary or Grocery Store on every military post on Oahu! They kept cost down tremendously! Hes so right about traffic! I spent alot of time idle on H1, H2, and the Likelike! Oh oops I forgot the Kam or Kamekameha Blvd! Gotta take the Kam to get to H1! But, what you miss when you leave is infinite and the negatives melt away. Like..... The afternoon I spent at Ala Moana Beach sitting in a rocky stream with my first borne! Or waking up in Pearl City and being 22 years old to this strange sounding hum learning later the hum was Buddhist chanting! Or, the pink sunsets I watched from the mountain view at Kolekole Pass. I sure miss that beautiful.....Rock!!! Aloha y'all from boring Indiana!
@bradd1884 жыл бұрын
HGTV's Hawaii life and house hunters Hawaii has mis led me 😧
@Lanaki8084 жыл бұрын
How so?
@hydrolix9534 жыл бұрын
They're one of the big reasons the housing market is out of reach for locals. Extremely disappointing when you think that they make the show for profit and don't think of the fallout from the show they produce.
@amstevens234 жыл бұрын
Lol forreal.
@ElementalAddict4 жыл бұрын
TV paints glamorous images. Whatever you see in TV, does not define real Hawaii lol
@Kawika9974 жыл бұрын
Yea they lied they are the ones that screwed all us locals!
@zainabamadahy99184 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this reality check. Paradise is not paradise anymore.
@Popcornbeetle3 жыл бұрын
It is if you can afford it, just like other crowded destinations like California
@JESUSISLORDFOREVERMORE8883 жыл бұрын
IT NEVER WAS “paradise”.
@eileenthompson5342 Жыл бұрын
I was only there for 2 nights after my husband passed away in Hawaii, the medical costs were horrendous and the food and hotel accommodation was quite expensive. Taking that aside you have a nation of very friendly, welcoming people who without their help and support I don’t know what I would have done. Times may be hard in your beautiful country but your hospitality is second to none don’t ever change 💕
@vienna08106 ай бұрын
Hawaii is not a country/ nation though it's part of the usa
@blueemu97254 жыл бұрын
I live in maui. Low income housing. And I make 70k a year. And barely scrape by. Work a lot, to be on vacation after work for an hour or two. Paradise for a few hours, hell for the rest lol
@brookelee97454 жыл бұрын
That is insane, i make less than you, working semi regular hours, have a really nice car, live in a 3 bed 3bath house in central Ohio. It’s deff the furthest thing from paradise tho.
@fergferguson73704 жыл бұрын
Blueemu n...nothing but the truth,I was there for couple years in 1971...way worse now..
@hothotheat30004 жыл бұрын
You need to leave. Life is too short.
@texasoilfields4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. I hope you are at least enjoying those hours? I earn less than you and live in a beautiful condo with an easy job and shitloads of disposable income. And yet, here I am watching a youtube video on moving to hawaii lol.
@WailuaMark4 жыл бұрын
Man, moving to the mainland was the best thing that I ever done! From using credit cards to supplement my living (needs) while in Hawaii, to now saving more than every other paycheck straight into savings, here in Florida. NOT bragging! Just stating facts. My income level hasn’t changed. I make slightly over 50k, in Hawaii and also here in Florida. I always live simply. I’m currently residing in Florida and it’s cheap here! I was born in California but, after high school, I spent 37 years of my life on Oahu and then on Kauai. I made the move to the mainland in late 2014 and so many of my local friends followed suit and are doing so much better, now. I do very much miss the beaches (Florida beaches suck in comparison), the food and the culture. But, I now sleep soundly NOT having to worry about having enough money to pay the rent and the electric bill. Food always came last. No kids so that worry wasn’t there. Traffic is bad here in Florida, but it was WAY worse on, both, Kauai and Oahu. In Florida you can take different routes, not so much on Oahu because all the routes were jammed. Kauai was a bit better, but not by much. Cool video. It brought me back in time. Makes me very thankful that I made the right decision to leave. Aloha
@cyrusjulian1872 жыл бұрын
How do the hurricanes compared in FL to HI? Are there certain cities/areas in both HI and FL where it’s safer from natural disasters? Mahalo in advance
@WailuaMark2 жыл бұрын
@@cyrusjulian187 I'm no longer in Florida. I moved house to East Tennessee about 15 months ago. Florida was WAY too crazy for me. They drive wicked on the roads and the car insurance is very expensive. It's much better in East Tennessee. But to answer your question, the middle of Florida is the safest from hurricanes - for example Gainesville and Orlando. Depending on the size and strength of the hurricane, you'll only get high winds but no ocean surge because obviously those areas are far from the ocean. In Hawaii, I experienced Ewa (82') and Iniki (92'). I was on Oahu (in Aiea Heights) for both hurricanes. Aiea was a very safe area during both hurricanes mentioned. I was in Florida from April of 2019 to March of 2021, then I moved house to Tennessee. When I moved house off Kauai, I resided in the state of Washington for about 4 years. Then to Florida and than Tennessee. I never experienced a hurricane while I was in Florida - just lots of cRaZy people. Boy do I miss Hawaii, but NOT the cost of living. It's really beautiful here in East Tennessee (Lots of rolling green hills and trees everywhere). And a very low chance of tornadoes due to the mountains surrounding my area - that's why I chose East Tennessee. Nice!! Tornadoes terrify me! Aloha
@cyrusjulian1872 жыл бұрын
@@WailuaMark Wow! Hawaii to WA, FL then Tennessee! You should start a KZbin channel haha. Be curious to hear your travel experiences. That's cool you also lived in Kauai. I actually was wanting to live there as I'd like to live in a farming community to homestead and heard they've got a lot over there but like you said, the prices are crazy. I'm originally from San Francisco and after I left, nope never again at current crazy prices. Have actually been considering the Big Island, NOT in the dangerous Lava Zones 1 or 2 but maybe nearby but have been reading mixed reviews on Puna/Big Island in general. On one hand, it seems very chill with no violent crime but then other reports say there's a big meth problem, lots of thefts and apparently even Hawaiian Mafia there? Anyways, happy you found a home in TN. I ended up in TX but am concerned about water droughts so looking either for a place near water to fish and also to drink. HI seems to have those two covered. Mahalo!
@someperson95364 жыл бұрын
It is a great place for a vacation, but it is too expensive to live there.
@moncorp14 жыл бұрын
I don't even like visiting Hawaii. Takes 8 hours on a packed plane with the great unwashed. No thanks. I can get to the Caribbean in less than 3 hours.
@naomic60094 жыл бұрын
depends how you live...🤔
@marvingoodhue97694 жыл бұрын
@@moncorp1 were are that it takes 8 hours to reach Hawaii!
@fakawat72204 жыл бұрын
yup i alway tell people that
@8675-__4 жыл бұрын
Actually Fiji is much friendlier and safer than Hawaii. And the local Fijians are much more hospitable. Plus its cheaper and probably more beautiful. Quality of humanity is definitely better 💜
@omfgitzcamille3 жыл бұрын
I am so glad that there is someone like you talking about these things!! I talk about these factors that drew me out from staying back home. I miss it, I miss seeing my family so easily. Thank you for this video and shedding truth on our hardships.
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed the video. Times are tough here. Hope the next generation can make it.
@ikaikamaleko83703 жыл бұрын
Exactly, I was born and raised on Oahu, Mililani and UH Manoa grad. I miss it so much, but yea the realities he pointed out are brutal but true.
@lindafaber26934 жыл бұрын
Thank you for informing some people that decided to retire in the island, Way back, Hawaii was a dream to live, but I heard a lot of talks about homelessness😌very sad and I think we just have to wait if everything changes👍
@kenike0074 жыл бұрын
I was fortunate to spend the most beautiful 23 years in Hawaii from 1975 By the time I left in 1998 it was getting crazy crowded and dirty with my favorite quite remote places no longer so. I was very sad to watch it dissolve and are so much trash thrown along the oceanside. My friends still there have slowly become accustom to it all, but admit it has lost much of it's quietude and charm.
@rhondae82222 жыл бұрын
Don't Hold Your Breath
@christinaduenas87374 жыл бұрын
You are spot on about Hawaii. It's so sad
@adamwhite2023 жыл бұрын
I'm from California I am going ruined Hawaii by driving up housing prices lol jk
@calichen68944 жыл бұрын
The Jone’s Act makes shipping to Hawaii expensive. Vote in politicians that support abolishing it.
@alanwilson20734 жыл бұрын
The stores will simply pocket the savings for themselves and all these stores are mainland owned and operated. Prices will come down slightly but will not be a windfall as many people think. I've actually seen as high or even higher prices in big cities like Chicago, it wasn't necessarily "cheaper" to live there. One must shop wisely here in Hawaii.
@silvussol89664 жыл бұрын
Also, I’m not sure if I want our shipping to become dependent on China. Which is the likely outcome of repealing the Jones Act. China is already flexing what muscles it has here.
@alanwilson20734 жыл бұрын
@@silvussol8966 And the Jones Act mans the ships with U.S. Labor. I don't necessarily agree with or relish the notion of cheap foreign labor. With so much saber rattling going on around the world, would I trust the workers of an enemy country or even questionable or dubious liaison to handle the goods coming into our ports?!?!?! I wouldn't. Anyone here for sabotage?!?!?! I'm certainly not. No, I say we keep the Jones Act.
@129jaystreet4 жыл бұрын
@@silvussol8966 Trump.2020!
@situated44 жыл бұрын
Silvus Sol China is the worst. Especially the China Virus that it deliberately and systematically unleashed on the world in 2019-2020.
@rubyparra91123 жыл бұрын
Hawaiis expensive because its so beautiful! I feel rich living here . I could never go back to the mainland. Im doing amazing here and im very fortunate and thankful 🥲
@LevisH213 жыл бұрын
well, I live in Florida and life here is the same as in Hawaii but the quality is far better. we are are red state. not run by some woke leftists just like California or for God's sake, Oregon.
@neilmenon89433 жыл бұрын
Florida is ghetto conpared to Hawaii.
@John-vz1ck3 жыл бұрын
You don’t have to be a bitch and rub it in people faces. That can’t live like that
@theresaakins23173 жыл бұрын
Ruby,May I ask what you do for a living in order to survive in Hawaii? I'm just curious which jobs can support a life in your state.
@comment8767 Жыл бұрын
Same here in Sioux Falls. Wherever you are, please don't come here.
@docchocobo4 жыл бұрын
The grass is always greener on the other side.... .....till you get there and find out that it's AstroTurf. My wife has made life a living hell until we move there. I think she has a rude awakening coming. Hard knocks being the only teacher and all that good stuff :) Thank God I own extra land that is non-community.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
It's definitely a challenge. If you do make the move, I would be interested in your experience after a few months of the novelty wearing off. It's not all beaches and sunshine. :)
@matthewkeating69704 жыл бұрын
My brother rents his oc cali house pays his mortgage in Hawaii big island.
@mosquitom.d.83894 жыл бұрын
@@matthewkeating6970 @matthew keating yeah, see.. WAY more expensive in southern California. I bet his house in OC isn't even close to the beach huh. My great grandparents used to tell me when I was young, how it was in orange county when they were young.. just desert and beach. Huntington Beach was just marshes when they first moved there from Los Angeles.
@michaeltheresa78954 жыл бұрын
Eh, Brah. Thanks fo da video. Das da reason, I had to leave Hawaii. It wuz gettin' so hard to survive. I could never afford a home there. There just wasn't the kind of job opportunities that I was seeking. My Haole' wife wants to move back. I did some calculations. All we have to do is to do without minor stuff, like food, clothing, shelter. Mahalo nui. 🤙
@salahuddinmuhammad32513 жыл бұрын
So in other words, it's still a beautiful place for successful entrepreneurs.
@JohnSmith-ox3gy3 жыл бұрын
But Hawaii is so uncompetitive that starting an enterprise in Hawaii is alot harder.
@GoodBookART2 жыл бұрын
Hawaii is the most beautiful place in the world for me. I had the privilege to live on your Big Island for 2 years, love Hawaiian culture and the people there. So sad you have to pay so much for an Americanized lifestyle that has been forced upon you. Great video content, Mahalo!
@aaron___6014 Жыл бұрын
Have you been to the states with the Rockies? Or California?
@David53D Жыл бұрын
Hawaiians were totally complicit throughout the process and have benefitted tremendously especially since they were just immigrants from other Pacific Islands.
@Dapper_Dean4 жыл бұрын
That's why so many family members live under the same roof sometimes. To collectively help each other to pay for the necessities or high cost of living there.
@ZenDeividdo4 жыл бұрын
THIS. Most of my Ohana on Big Island and Oahu has lived like this ever since immigrating from the Philippines in the early 20th century... often there's 3-4 generations living under one roof in a small 2-3 bedroom house/condo. If not (or even still) they gotta subsistence hunt/fish to survive.
@stepclosertosuccess9964 жыл бұрын
Love living in Hawaii. I was blessed to be able to purchase a home in my 20s. Preparing to purchase a bigger place now.
@HelloFromHawaii4 жыл бұрын
That is awesome!
@alexmar13824 жыл бұрын
@@HelloFromHawaii sounds like you're bragging while other's there barely scraping it.
@agustinmatutino45634 жыл бұрын
@@alexmar1382 Why all the negativity?
@kevinhsu81844 жыл бұрын
Aloha! 🤙🏽🤙🏽🤙🏽 Coming from SF, Oahu prices is the same so I don't feel it's more expensive than anything I seen... well, except prices in Target is 30% more! lol. I've been to all the main islands of Hawaii (and done the Polynesian triangle) and I just absolutely love love love Hawaiian culture. I hope to retire in Oahu someday. A friend of mine moved from LA to Honolulu few years ago and he absolutely loves it. I was just there last December for an overnight transit to Japan and stayed at the Pink Lady. Sigh. I can almost hear sound of ocean, feel warmness of the water, and taste delicious poke right now! I miss Hawaii so much. Can't wait for the pandemic to be over soon so I can visit.
@nueat64 жыл бұрын
Well you could just move out of SF and it changes. Not in Hawaii.
@Waingro8084 жыл бұрын
It's not just about the costs. Hawaii salaries are ~50% lower than SF.
@tohokugirl81444 жыл бұрын
You know it brah!
@theanabolicviking3 жыл бұрын
Good real talk video! My son (active duty Navy) and daughter-in-law, have lived there for the past 3 years, and yes, they made the best of it and had some enjoyment, but overall they hated it and they're so excited to be moving back to the mainland in a couple weeks.
@HelloFromHawaii3 жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear they didn't have a good experience here. It's not for everyone. Most people end up leaving within 5 years. You can only do so much on an island and it gets expensive.
@j808p84 жыл бұрын
Sweet. Good points mentioned that I enjoyed hearing as well as relate too. Bought a home thanks to my military service, and the reality is as well as the fact that majority that do buy homes here on our home islands had government jobs or like you mentioned generational homes. Everyone asked how we survive living in Hawaii, my only answer is that we make it work literally, and want to stay in our home Island state. 🤙🏼 getting by, that’s how. Traffic, it’s true but everyone knows Oahu is over populated. Yes we do put up with a lot, and agree it’s worth it all to stay in Hawaii. Aloha!
@tohokugirl81444 жыл бұрын
I worked in Waakiki area, but shopped and ate out in Aiea and Miliani. Back then we maybe could have afforded a house in Mililani Town, but we got sent to NorCal. I missed the ocean and culture bad. I lived in Japan a long time and Hawaii is an awesome blend of Polynesian, Chinese, Japanese and Portuguese. At least in Norway the grocery stores sold Asian food and there were Asian and Polynesian restaurants.
@Bettyboop9912 жыл бұрын
Are you able to shop the commissary and military exchanges? That made all the difference when we were stationed there
@j808p82 жыл бұрын
@@Bettyboop991 yes I am and so true, shopping at the commissary or the exchange surely does make a difference with Hawaii’s high cost of living. 🤙🏼
@jennyojerio22624 жыл бұрын
That’s so true, my parents even at their highest earning period couldn’t buy our house! Ughhh
@SunnyIlha3 жыл бұрын
The home mortgage loans are, and have been, faked. It has been revealed the cost of a small 50-30 year old 2/3-bedroom single-family dwelling structure since 1989 is SEVEN TIMES a 90,000.00 annual income.
@alymshep4 жыл бұрын
Same as mainland. I have recently lived both, be grateful you live in Hawaii.
@meathook24482 жыл бұрын
This is such a great video, and it’s really pleasant to listen to you telling your story. You seem like a nice quiet guy that would be fun to sit around and chat with. I made my first visit to Hawaii about 8 years ago and have been back 5 times already. It’s easy to fall in love with the beauty of the islands, and the people. But as a tourist that only experiences Hawaii from a tourist’s perspective, I appreciate you sharing what it’s like for the folks that live their day by day. Thanks for sharing!
@HelloFromHawaii2 жыл бұрын
Mahalo for the comment.
@beebis1996 Жыл бұрын
So true. After visiting both Kauai & the Big Island, my girlfriend & I can’t stop thinking of selling both of our houses to move to Kauai. Unbelievable beauty.
@Shorebirdee4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the reality check on whether living in Hawaii is for them. Your thoughts were illuminating :)