For Nat Cedillo, the jet-sting of a city of access point to another every week is not a cheap emotion.
It is a necessary evil of its expensive and super commercial punishment.
“I travel from Mexico City to New York City to be able to attend my law school classes,” said Cedillo, 30, an aspiring intellectual property lawyer, to The Post. “It’s exhausting, but it’s worth it.”
The newly married millennial and her husband, Santiago, Formly or Brooklyn, left the Big Apple at the end of last year to give a bite of Mexico for its tropical attraction and its cost of economic living.
Since January, Cedillo has spent upwards or $ 2,000 in air tickets, accommodation and food.
Through the 13 -week semester, it is tasks of more than 4,000 miles of round trip, which should be Monday morning flights to JFK airport and ends in Mexico City by Tesday Night to complete the last period in a higher institution in New York.
It is a high price to pay.
But the growing community of super travelers from Cedillo-Along Gotham does so for the reward that the daily routine entails in one of the best places on Earth.
It is between the number of 9 to 5ers, students and applicants to Broadway stars that regularly make a great walk from their small cities of origin to the city through airplanes, trains and/or shared cars.
It is a long-term work trend that was collected from the COVID-19 outbreak, according to a study by Stanford University.
The researchers discovered an increase after the 32% pandemic in American travelers who often travel around 75 miles for school or office. More surprisingly, researchers reported an 89% increase in Super Commut in New York in recent years.
Kaitlin Jay, a Upper West Side hairdresser, previously told The Post: “It’s cheaper than renting my own apartment in the UWS.”
As a Super Commuter, the 30 and so many routinely fly to 600 miles from Manhattan, where he makes an elegant and elegant duck bank, back to his new home in North Carolina.
“I suppose the best of both worlds,” he booted from Kaitlin.
Kyle Rice, a software developer and married the father, of Delaware, agreed.
“I don’t have to worry about the high cost of living in New York,” he said. “The average of a room in Manhattan is $ 4,443, three times my mortgage of $ 1,400”.
For a six-digit salary, the helmets do it in four-states, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and in the times of New York-Severals a week.
“I live in a suburban area with all the benefits of urban salary,” Rice said.
And Cedillo, who spends days of non -drawn soaking the sun and the splendor of Mexico City with Santiago, echoed similar feelings.
“I love New York, but [before we moved] My husband and I did not live in the most luxurious neighborhood, and everything was so expectation, ”said those who will soon be lawyers, who will take the New York State Bar Association this summer.
“In Mexico City, we can enjoy a better quality of life,” added Cedillo. “The days I don’t travel are the best.”