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When Travel Stops Being Just Travel
There was a time when traveling from the United States carried a kind of lightness. You could say, I’m going abroad for a few weeks, and...

Jillian Aurora
Oct 13, 20253 min read


Oktoberfest in Romania: Bavarian Spirit in Carpathian Lands
In the shadow of medieval churches and fortified towers, one might least expect Bavarian-style beer tents, oompah bands, and lederhosen—but in Romania, especially in Transylvania, Oktoberfest has found a new home. What began as a festive export has become part of how German heritage communities, cities, and event planners articulate cultural identity, hospitality, and connection to Europe. From Munich to Everywhere: The Original Oktoberfest The first Oktoberfest was held on O

Jillian Aurora
Oct 12, 20253 min read


When You Feel Stuck: Leaving with Little
For many people, the idea of leaving their country feels impossible. They may dream of building new lives in Europe and think, that’s not possible for me. Maybe they’re living paycheck to paycheck, maybe they’ve lost everything, maybe they’re simply too exhausted to imagine another version of life. But here’s the truth: you don’t have to be wealthy to begin again. You have to be willing, and curious, and dedicated. The Myth of the “Rich Expat” When people imagine moving abroa

Jillian Aurora
Oct 11, 20254 min read


The Folklore of Sighișoara: Where Shadows and Stories Endure
Perched above the Târnava Mare River, the citadel of Sighișoara has never been only a Saxon fortress. Its towers, stairways, and houses carry stories that linger as strongly as the scent of woodsmoke in winter. Beyond the pastel facades and watchtowers, folklore has shaped the way this medieval town is remembered. Vlad Dracul and the Birthplace of Vlad Țepeș One of the most enduring legends is tied to the yellow house on Citadel Square, known as the Vlad Dracul House. Traditi

Jillian Aurora
Oct 10, 20253 min read


Trusting the Unknown: When Everything Falls Away
For those who have lost almost everything and are still daring to begin again. When you choose to move—truly move, not as a tourist or an adventurer, but as someone rebuilding from the ashes—you step into a life that demands trust. Not the easy kind of trust that comes with clear plans and safety nets, but the raw, trembling kind that asks you to keep walking even when the ground disappears beneath your feet. For some of us, relocation was not a luxury. It was a necessity. We

Jillian Aurora
Oct 9, 20253 min read


The Privilege and the Purpose of Travel
There’s a certain arrogance that sometimes shows up in conversations about travel—the quiet assumption that those who haven’t seen the world are somehow smaller for it. That's always bothered me. It feels like a kind of blindness, a forgetting of what it costs just to survive, let alone explore. For many people, travel isn’t about lack of curiosity. It’s about rent. About groceries. About a car payment or medical care. When you’re living month to month, even a short trip can

Jillian Aurora
Oct 7, 20253 min read


The Legends of Bran: Between Fortress and Fantasy
Perched on a rocky outcrop at the edge of the Carpathians, Bran Castle looks as though it was built for legend. Its towers and courtyards rise out of the cliffs, watching over the mountain pass between Transylvania and Wallachia. For centuries, it stood as a sentinel of trade and defense — but today, it is most famous for the shadows it carries, the stories of vampires, queens, and secrets carved into stone. The Shadow of Dracula No legend clings more tightly to Bran than tha

Jillian Aurora
Oct 5, 20254 min read


Guarding Your Hearth: Emotional Boundaries in Times of Change
Relocating to a new country brings obvious challenges, but one of the most overlooked challenges is emotional. You will hear many voices along the way, and not all of them will strengthen you. Some will encourage, others will criticize, and a few may even sabotage. Learning to set boundaries is not just wise—it is survival. Moving is more than a purge of things. It is a fire. It burns away the superficial and leaves only what is sturdy enough to endure. Relationships are ofte

Jillian Aurora
Oct 3, 20253 min read


Getting Oriented When You First Arrive in Eastern Europe
Landing in a new country isn’t just about stepping off the plane. It’s about finding your bearings—learning where to buy groceries, how to greet your neighbors, which bus to catch, and which stories have shaped the streets you’re walking down. At first, it can feel dizzying. Signs are in a different alphabet, shops close at unfamiliar hours, and the little routines you once took for granted suddenly require new learning. Disorientation is part of the process. Over time, thoug

Jillian Aurora
Oct 1, 20253 min read


The Things I Miss About Fall in the U.S.
Autumn in Transylvania is breathtaking — golden forests draped across the Carpathians, mist curling through medieval towers, markets spilling over with apples, chestnuts, and mushrooms. It is the kind of beauty that feels ancient, rooted, and solemn. And yet, as the air cools and the leaves begin to fall, I find myself aching for another kind of autumn — the one lingering on the streets of New Castle, Pennsylvania, US. I miss the small rituals of my American fall. The way gro

Jillian Aurora
Sep 30, 20252 min read


Making the Medical Transition Abroad: Health, Medication, and Care in Eastern Europe
When you relocate, you don’t just pack boxes. You carry your body, your routines, and the steady rituals of care that keep you grounded. Medicines and therapy sessions may not seem as visible as furniture or heirlooms, but they are part of your hearth — the daily warmth that makes a place livable. Moving to Eastern Europe can raise questions: Will I find my medication there? What if I get sick before I’m registered in the system? Will therapy still be an option? These worrie

Jillian Aurora
Sep 29, 20253 min read


The Legends of Sighișoara: Where Time Stands Still
Sighișoara rises from the Târnava Mare valley like something pulled from a medieval manuscript — pastel houses pressed close, cobbled streets spiraling upward, towers with sharp tiled roofs watching from above. A UNESCO World Heritage site, it is one of the last still-inhabited citadels in Europe. Life hums inside its walls even now: laundry flutters from windows, children chase each other up steep alleys, bells echo from the hilltop church. But beneath the daily rhythm, the

Jillian Aurora
Sep 29, 20254 min read


The Legends of Brașov: Whispers Beneath the Carpathians
Every city carries its stories, but in Brașov, legends feel as present as the cobblestones beneath your feet. Nestled in the Carpathians, this medieval city has long been a crossroads of culture — and with it, a crossroads of myths. To wander Brașov is not only to see towers, gates, and churches, but to hear the whispers of centuries. The Crown of the Carpathians One of the oldest legends says that the mountains above Brașov once shimmered with a radiant crown of light. No on

Jillian Aurora
Sep 28, 20254 min read


Brașov: A City of Crossroads, Legends, and Resilience
Brașov sits at the foot of the Carpathian Mountains, surrounded by forests so lush they seem to breathe. Today it is one of Romania’s most beloved cities, but its history runs deeper than cobblestone streets and colorful facades. Brașov has always been a crossroads: of trade, of cultures, of conflict, and of survival. Founded in the 13th century by the Saxons, Brașov was built as a fortress city, its thick stone walls and watchtowers protecting merchants and guilds who travel

Jillian Aurora
Sep 23, 20252 min read


Where Residency Is Most Accessible in Eastern Europe
If you have a strong itch to leave for Eastern Europe, what matters most isn’t where you can land for a 90 day short stay — it’s where...

Jillian Aurora
Sep 20, 20253 min read


Finding Your Way to Residency in Eastern Europe
Imagining a move abroad can feel overwhelming in so many ways. A long distance move is already stressful without considering if a country will even let you stay - that's daunting. But in Eastern Europe especially, there are multiple ways to build legal residency. Unlike Western Europe's high income requirements, skilled job requirements, or other deterring factors, Eastern Europe's requirements are often more reasonable and realistic for the average American.

Jillian Aurora
Sep 19, 20253 min read
Where memory, meaning, and magic simmer
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