I stay in Rocky Point because life here constantly reminds me that the world doesn’t have to run the way everyone was taught it should. It is a different lifestyle, and I see things differently here. The baseline is not the newest iPhone or iPad; it is the smile on their faces when they ask to wash your car for $5.
After more than seven years of $150 a month rent, it’s not just the low cost of living or the ocean views—though those help. It’s the lifestyle that the local people live. Things move a little slower as there is always tomorrow (mañana) as the workers say, when you need help. Locals interact more with the tourists. And every so often, something completely unexpected happens—like horses casually sharing the road with traffic—and you’re reminded that not everything needs to be optimized, scheduled, or stressed over, which is what I normally do.
I don’t stay here because it’s perfect. I stay because it works—for me, right now. And that’s the whole point of slow travel: choosing places that fit your life instead of forcing your life to fit one place forever.
Like the Grinch, the don’t-give-a-shit energy is strong here, which is exactly why Rocky Point works so well for me as a part-time home.
You see things around town that would absolutely short-circuit people elsewhere. Yesterday, I passed an SUV cruising down the road with no doors, no side windows, no windshield, and no back window—just vibes and optimism.
Other things happen right out in the open, too. Nothing dramatic, nothing hidden. Life just unfolds in broad daylight, casually, like someone stopping to buy bubble gum. It’s not chaos—it’s indifference. And oddly enough, that creates its own kind of calm knowing if you leave them alone, youre fine!
That’s what I’ve fallen in love with here. A slower pace. Fewer rules that matter. Less pretending. Rocky Point doesn’t try to impress you—it just is. And for me, that’s more than enough.
Having an amazing landlord that makes the best menudo and tamales does not hurt either. Tonight, we eat carne asada like Kings!
My favorite food and drink choices tend to change as I travel, but somehow, I always circle back to Mexican food.
It just wins—every time.
In Rocky Point, there are so many great local spots that it’s easy to fall into a routine without getting bored. I’ve got my go-to places for breakfast burritos, plus a rotating cast of other favorites that keep pulling me back.
Simple, cheap, fresh, and done right—the kind of food that quietly ruins you for everywhere else.
(Favorites below )
I will even coook at home on my Blackstone grill!
The best tortilla soup of my life. Hands down. No debate.
Deep flavor, perfect heat, crispy tortilla strips with the avocados, cheese and creme doing their thing— Muy bueno!! 🌶️🥣
There’s fresh… and then there’s straight off the press fresh..
Peak tortilla experience!
Pork in chile verde, commonly known as "Chile Verde, A favorite from a sestaurant down the street.
I always dreamed of moving to Mexico. For a long time, even the idea of having a part-time home here felt completely unfathomable.
And yet—somehow—I’m pulling it off.
This wasn’t a lottery win or some grand master plan. It was a series of choices, timing, and learning how to live differently. Slower. Smarter. On my own terms.
Now I get to live la vida loca, at least part of the year—and honestly, it still doesn’t feel real most days.