Roshida Dowe has always been a hard worker. From her early days as a receptionist to her decision to go to law school and spend years as a consumer automotive finance lawyer in Silicon Valley, she is well-accustomed to the grind.
But in 2018 at age 39, everything changed when she was laid off and decided to capitalize on her newfound joblessness by taking a year to travel the world. During her travels, she realized that she loved having the freedom to do whatever she wanted, whenever she wanted, and decided to turn her sabbatical into a full-time lifestyle.
Dowe has since left her life in the United States behind. She now lives in Mexico City where she is enjoying what she calls an “accidental retirement,” working as a life coach and running her own YouTube channel. Now 42, Dowe’s investment portfolio is worth more than $1 million, and she isn’t planning on leaving “retirement” anytime soon.
Though she grew up in a middle class family, Dowe’s parents didn’t talk to her about their finances very often, she says.
“There were times when I knew we had [money] and there were times when I knew we didn’t,” Dowe tells CNBC Make It. “But it wasn’t really the topic of conversation a lot. My parents kept me out of their money conversations.”
Early in her career, while working as a receptionist after graduating from college, Dowe wasn’t very financially savvy. Part of what led her to law school at the University of Virginia was the realization “that I couldn’t afford myself” on her receptionist salary.
The law degree allowed Dowe to command a much higher salary, but also left her with more than $200,000 in student loan debt, including some leftover from her undergrad years. She tackled the debt by diligently cutting down her expenses and putting money toward her loans before spending on other things.
After paying off her debts while working as a corporate counsel, Dowe kept the habits she had built and put any extra money toward savings and investments.
“I got in the habit of putting that same amount of money away every month,” she says. “As my income grew, I pushed a larger amount of money aside.”
Losing her job, but finding herself
In 2018, the company she worked for was shut down by its parent company, and she ended up getting laid off and losing her six-figure salary, which at that point was about $200,000. Instead of looking for a new job right away, Dowe decided to take a year to travel.
During her year abroad, Dowe visited 44 cities in 23 countries, but Mexico City was the only place she visited more than once.
“I really loved how I felt when I was here,” she says. “I loved the energy of the city.”
That’s why, despite her original plan to return to the U.S. after her career break and find a new job, Dowe decided to stay in Mexico.
“Traveling and seeing that the way we work ourselves to death in America is not common around the world made me realize I could have a different life if I made the choice to have a different life,” she says.
With more than half a million in her investments at the time and about $150,000 in stock from her old company, Dowe calculated that she had more than enough money to live in Mexico City for at least “a while.”
“I had paid off all my debt, I saved money,” she says. “And when I realized I didn’t want to work again, I did the math.”
She is currently on a 1-year residency visa and in four years will be eligible to apply for a permanent visa.
While Mexico City isn’t as affordable a place to live as some other parts of the country, Dowe says that the $1,200 rent for her high-rise apartment is still less than she had been paying in the U.S. Overall, her expenses clock in at about $2,300 per month.