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What Happens When You Stop Running and Start Living: Slow Travel, Boundless Life, and Raising Kids in the World
Description
When was the last time you let yourself fantasize about a different kind of life?
Not a vacation. Not a long weekend. But a real, full-bodied reimagining of your days — one where your kids meet you. Where you meet yourself. Where the pace of life finally matches the pace of your heartbeat.
Elodie Ferchaud did more than fantasize. She built it.
Elodie is the Co-Founder and Chief Revenue Officer of Boundless Life — a global community that gives families the tools, the structure, and the community to live, work, and learn across some of the most beautiful destinations on earth. After 15 years building brands at L'Oréal and Procter & Gamble, living what looked like a successful international life, Elodie took a sabbatical that changed everything. What started as a deeply personal decision to slow down became a movement. Today, Boundless has welcomed more than 5,000 participants from over 50 countries across 8 destinations worldwide — Sintra, Portugal; Syros, Greece; Tuscany, Italy; Sanur, Bali; Kotor, Montenegro; Estepona, Spain; La Barra, Uruguay; and Kamakura, Japan.
What makes Elodie's story so resonant for ambitious mothers isn't the travel. It's the truth underneath it: that the model of success we've been handed often doesn't fit the life we actually want. And that the hardest part of changing isn't logistics — it's letting go of external validation long enough to trust your gut.
A French mother of four, raised by educators, Elodie co-founded Boundless Life alongside Mauro Repacci and Rekha Magon after first joining as a participating family herself. She knows this life from the inside out — the fear, the freedom, and everything in between.
Together we talk candidly about:
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What life looked like before Boundless — the commutes, the missed school concerts, the feeling of being in the wheel with no exit
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Why she took a sabbatical that terrified her, and what she discovered on the other side
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The Gallup data showing that roughly 40% of American women ages 15 to 44 want to leave the US permanently — nearly double the rate of all US adults
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What slow travel actually feels like on the ground: walkable cities, spontaneous mornings, bumping into neighbors you know in the middle of Greece
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The Boundless program structure — from 3-week summer programs to 3-month academic cohorts to full 9-month stays
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Why kids don't need more toys — they need community and unstructured space to discover the world
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The mother who, at the end of her Tuscany cohort, said for the first time: "My kids got to meet their mother"
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How sibling bonds deepen through shared adventure and shared hardship
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The internal and external resistance Elodie faced — including her own father, a lifelong educator, who still struggles to accept the path she chose
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What she would tell any woman who feels trapped by the pace of her life but can't see a clear exit
What you'll walk away with:
Permission. Not the kind anyone else can give you — the kind that comes from hearing a woman who built something real say: you can always come back. The grind will wait. The life you're dreaming of? It won't.
Lin