Articles in the Living in Mexico Category
Posted in Living in Mexico, Oaxaca on 22 September 2008
Give one example of an oxymoron. You guessed it. But just when you think you’re comfortable driving in Oaxaca, Mexico, with no hard-fast or enforced regulations, there you are, transito (a traffic cop) waving you over, giving you a ticket, removing your license plate, or towing your vehicle. Watching and learning from local drivers provides [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico, Mexico Real Estate 101, Oaxaca, Retirement on 18 September 2008
Transporting your worldly possessions into Mexico is both an art and a science, even more so if you intend to do so on your own … truck and all. The task then also becomes a challenge and an adventure. No matter what the Canadian or American Consul in your Mexican destination advises, and regardless of [...]
Posted in Cabo San Lucas, Headline, Interviews, Living in Mexico, Mazatlan, Tourism on 17 September 2008
Nancy Dardarian and her husband Paul Pattee moved to Mazatlán, Mexico in September 2007. Paul retired in August of 2007 but Nancy would still need to work if they stayed in the US. Only having been married for 10 years, they wanted a lifestyle that would allow them to spend more time together. Nancy also [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico, Oaxaca, Retirement, Tourism, health care on 15 September 2008
One often assumes that the years added to your life by leading a much more stress-free existence in Mexico, will be lost by the inferior health care system to which you will be exposed, subjected and restricted. This, then, is an assessment of the extent to which such presuppositions are accurate, together with information and [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico on 12 September 2008
Mexican business on a national level relies on a perversion of an old adage, that becomes: “Two is a duopoly, three just ain’t happening.” The broadcast media sector is no exception, and, even though the youngest of the bitter public rivalries played out on the commercial patio of Mexican everyday life, probably the most well-known. [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico on 10 September 2008
Mexico, having not withstood an industrial revolution or Modern era, is an environment of unregulated marketing and mass media and popular cultures created by being catapulted into a stage of postmodernity (or ‘late capitalism’) due to its geographical location as the poor nearest neighbor to a world superpower.
Walking the streets of any Mexican settlement, from [...]
Posted in Headline, Living in Mexico on 8 September 2008
It has been well documented that Mexico’s violent war on drugs that has claimed thousands of lives. According to the Houston Chronicle, there have been 5,000 gang related deaths in Mexico in the past 21 months since President Calderon started his “crackdown” on drug gangs. Some of the stories of the police battling the drug [...]
Posted in Headline, Living in Mexico on 3 September 2008
If you are like millions of Americans who already drink bottled water exclusively, than adapting to the inconsistency of quality of water in Mexico shouldn’t be very difficult. In many places in Mexico it is highly recommended not to drink water from tap, while in other places it is perfectly safe. Often hotels and restaurants [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico, Uncategorized on 27 August 2008
Moving to Mexico can be a scary proposition if you know little about what is like. Often the best way to predict how happy you will be in a different situation is to ask others who have already made the journey. Thanks to the invention of the blog, you have access to hundreds if not [...]
Posted in Living in Mexico, Tourism on 22 August 2008
There is a strong upward trend in the number of Americans traveling abroad to places like Mexico for healthcare. According to Modern Healthcare, there were 750,000 Americans who traveled abroad for healthcare in 2007 and this number is predicted to increase 700% to 6 million by 2010. There are many underlying causes to this increase [...]

