Christoph Fahle
2 min readMar 31, 2016

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Hey Fernando, thanks for asking some of the profound questions. I really think you are a good person to stress this topic because you have got quite some experience! I mean you of course look like you are still 35 on the other hand. ;-)

When I talk about digital nomadism and coliving this topic comes up all the time. For me it is a weird situation because I think I have an answer but I don’t have to proof it is working, cause I don’t have kids yet.

Regarding our camp the answer is easy. People can bring their kids and some participants probably will. It’s like a holiday in a big family I guess. Now if you look at the big picture and how digital nomadism and colivin deals with traditional family structures I am not sure how exactly this will work out in detail but I somehow think it is not so unnatural for the human kind to change places once in a while. It is a cultural question of course but cultures evolve and change all the time.

On my travels I ran into a bunch of super interesting couples that seem to have no problem roaming around the world in a slower more childfriendly frequency, changing place every 4–7 years in sync with school cycles. I feel a little too unexperienced to really have an elaborated opinion on that but I can at least say I kind of liked what I saw and it felt good when hanging out with them. But of course there are questions like what about the grandparents, friends of the kids, jobs of the parents and os on and so forth.

Well I am pretty sure we will figure all that out in the near future!

Um A

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Christoph Fahle
Christoph Fahle

Written by Christoph Fahle

Started @betahaus, became a digital nomad. Now working on something new called @onecoworking

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