Episode 44 | She Chose Education – and Changed Her Life Forever with Daycia Harley

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Published: March 18, 2026

Some Nomad Summit Podcast episodes are about visas, remote work, and where to find the best Wi-Fi. This one goes somewhere deeper. In Episode 44 of the Nomad Summit Podcast, Palle Bo sits down with Daycia Harley, a digital nomad from Cincinnati whose story begins not with a dream lifestyle, but with a difficult upbringing, a love of learning, and a decision that changed everything.

Her path into nomad life did not start with a beach, a laptop, or a one-way ticket. It started in the library.

“I just had this gravitation towards education and knowledge”

Daycia grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio, in an environment that did not always feel safe or supportive. While some people rebel, shut down, or get pulled in unhealthy directions, she found something else to hold on to: books, knowledge, and the idea that education could become a way out.

“I just had this gravitation towards education and knowledge.”

That line says a lot about who she is. Curious. Focused. Driven. Even as a kid, she would spend hours in the library, especially in the travel section, reading about places far beyond her own world.

Not escapism for the sake of it

What makes this part of her story so compelling is that education was not just a goal. It was survival. It was direction. It was hope.

“I know that education will get me outta there.”

And it did.

Why Japan mattered so much

One of the most fascinating threads in the episode is Daycia’s early obsession with Japan. Long before she ever got on a plane, she was already mentally traveling there through books, language, music, and pure curiosity.

That curiosity eventually led her to study both neurobiology and Asian studies with a focus on Japanese in college. It is the kind of combination that makes you stop and smile. It also tells you something important: Daycia is not just a traveler. She is a learner.

Her first big leap came through a study abroad program in Nagoya, which opened up something much bigger than one country.

“I was like, oh, there’s more to this world.”

The travel bug did not come from Instagram

There is something refreshing about the way Daycia talks about travel. It does not sound performative. It does not sound curated. It sounds real.

She talks about wanting to understand people, cultures, languages, and histories. That hunger to know more took her from the United States to Japan, Canada, Guatemala, Sweden, England, Thailand, and South Korea.

And unlike the polished fantasy version of nomad life, her story is full of actual texture: exchange programs, teaching jobs, dorms, apartments, bus rides, and figuring things out as she went.

Guatemala, inequality, and seeing the world clearly

One of the most striking parts of the conversation is when she talks about spending time in Guatemala. It was not just another passport stamp. It was one of those experiences that changes how you see the world.
She describes staying with a host family outside Antigua, taking chicken buses, walking dirt roads, and witnessing stark inequality up close.

“One side of the street were the slums and the other street was just like these nice houses. And I was just like, wow. What a contrast.”

It is one of several moments in the episode where her curiosity and empathy come through very strongly. She is not chasing destinations for content. She genuinely wants to understand what shapes people’s lives.

From gamer to global nomad

Just when you think you have her story figured out, the episode takes another turn. Before fully stepping into nomad life, Daycia spent years in competitive gaming and live streaming. Yes, really.
That chapter funded her life for a while, but the bigger dream never went away.

“I wanna pursue my dream of travel.”

So in 2017, she did what many people fantasize about but never actually do.

“I sold everything.”

From there, she returned to Japan, moved through Taiwan and Thailand, and eventually spent years in South Korea, where she taught English and built a life that was both stable and eye-opening.

What she learned in South Korea

Her time in Seoul becomes one of the most enjoyable parts of the episode because it adds another dimension to her story. She was not just passing through. She stayed. She taught. She reflected. She paid attention.

She speaks warmly about teaching elementary school children and how much she learned from them in return. There is a nice moment where you can hear how much she values authenticity, presence, and small human interactions.
It is also where the episode quietly reminds you that nomad life does not have to mean rushing from country to country. Sometimes it means slowing down enough to really absorb a place.

Japan vs. Korea

There is also a fun section where she compares Japan and South Korea socially and culturally. It is one of those segments that makes the conversation feel personal and specific rather than generic.

Her take is clear: Japan is quieter and more reserved, while Korea feels more open and extroverted. If you have spent time in either country, you will probably find yourself nodding along.

How photography became part of the journey

Today, Daycia combines travel with her work as a photographer and social media marketer. Her approach to photography fits the rest of her story perfectly: she is drawn to real moments, not just polished ones.
Her description of photographing weddings is especially memorable because it reveals the same thing that runs through the entire episode: she notices the details other people miss.

Not just the big staged moment, but the small piece of life inside it. If you want to see more of her work, her site is here: Daycia Photography.

Then the episode takes a turn into astrocartography

And just when the conversation has covered family, education, travel, teaching, and photography, it takes a playful detour into astrocartography.

If that word is new to you, you are not alone. It is essentially astrology mapped onto the globe, suggesting that certain places may align with different parts of your personality or life path. Daycia says that when she checked hers, one place stood out above all others:

“Copenhagen was my number one.”

That naturally catches Palle’s attention, and the episode ends up weaving in a fun reflection on his own map as well, including why parts of Southeast Asia seem oddly aligned with where he keeps ending up.

If you want to try the same tool yourself, here is the one mentioned in the episode: Astrocartography.

Why this episode works so well

What makes this conversation stand out is not just the backstory. It is the combination of seriousness, curiosity, humour, and perspective.

Daycia is thoughtful without sounding rehearsed. Honest without sounding heavy-handed. And her story has real movement in it. You can hear how one choice led to another, and how education became the thread that tied everything together.

That is also why the title fits so well: she chose education – and it changed her life forever.

There is also a small behind-the-scenes twist

The episode opens in unusual fashion because Christoph Huebner is absent after a scooter accident in Chiang Mai. The good news, as Palle explains later in the episode, is that Christoph recovered and is already back on the move. That detail gives the conversation an unplanned, very human start that somehow fits the spirit of the podcast.

Why you should listen to the full episode

This is one of those conversations that works on multiple levels. If you are curious about digital nomad life, it is a reminder that the story often starts long before the travel begins. If you are interested in personal transformation, there is a lot here. And if you just enjoy hearing smart, reflective people talk honestly about how they built their lives, this episode delivers.

You will hear about family, ambition, Japan, Guatemala, South Korea, education, photography, astrocartography, and the long process of becoming yourself.

Listen to the full episode right here or in your favourite podcast app.

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