Born in Texas, raised in Argentina, I have lived in Spain, Moldova (for a brief PC stint), Italy, Slovenia, Serbia, France, Ireland, the UK and now Argentina again.
Miembro desde el 18 Diciembre 2008.
University.
Looking for stable work and a "life".
Friends and hot chocolate.
The winter.
Discovering the Balkans and loving every second of it.
I loved my experience: people, food, activities, nightlife...
There was nothing to not like.
"Study abroad" for my Master's
It's a hidden gem. I'm sure soon it will be "discovered" and exploited touristically. But it's beautiful, clean, not too expensive, people spoke several languages so I could always communicate, people are nice and helpful.
Hard to get to and get out of (not many international connections), not many job prospects for non-Slovenian speakers.
Grad School student, baby-sitter
The view, the fresh air, the mountains, nature, some people, the multi-lingual community, the architecture.
It was hard to get around to other parts of Italy and Europe (stuck in a mountain valley), some people were not very nice either.
I went there as a Peace Corps volunteer
The people, the different life... it was eye opener.
The US government.
I went to try something new and I ended up teaching English and starting my career as a freelance translator/interpreter. Life was fast-paced, but enjoyable. It's impossible to ever get bored, and there was always a wide range of free activities to chose from.
The lifestyle, people, the location within Europe (easy to go visit other cities and countries)
Wages, bureaucracy, some minor discrimination.
It's easy to do things, wide range of possibilities, "the land of opportunity"!
Lifestyle, people
I grew up here
My life was nice here while growing up. It was still safe, things were accessible, people wonderful, the food great, prices affordable...
How it changed over time. Now it seems a bit too geared towards tourists. Prices are rising, things are more expensive. The crime makes it unappealing too, and the job market is not very good.