Let’s admit it: decamping to the middle of nowhere with only a laptop and a phone is a certain kind of eccentricity – but who’s judging? Call it the snow-globe fantasy of remote work: low-budget, high-aesthetic, the hush of fresh powder outside the window and the cursor blinking like a metronome in a room that smells faintly of pine.
Many remote workers settle for the local café – familiar froth, reliable Wi‑Fi – to make the day feel lighter. But if the office no longer insists on your presence, why should your couch? One of the quiet miracles of post-pandemic life is how mobility, even modest mobility, can recalibrate everything: our routines, our neighborhoods, our microeconomies, our sense of what “home” contains.
Sometimes the necessary distance is just a bus ride, a local train, a short drive (or flight) over a ridge. On the other side: lower costs, slower clocks, and the small thrill of a Zoom background that isn’t a bookshelf but a mountain, a stone-paved square, or the cool, dappled shade of an ancient plane tree. Which is why we’re headed to four lesser-known Greek villages, some reached only by a road that asks a little more of you. They’re places that promise to reorder your mood, loosen your grip on the to-do list, and nudge the work itself toward something new.
Read more at Travel.gr/en
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