When I first set foot in Costa Rica, I expected beaches, jungles and toucans. I found them, of course, but I also found something more, something that cannot be tucked into a postcard. Pride. Pride in a small country that has built a way of life worth noticing, not only for those of us who chose to move here, but for the rest of the world watching from afar.
It begins with how Costa Rica treats the land, but it does not end there. This little nation has earned its pride across many fronts:
For me, living in Costa Rica has been humbling. Pride here is not loud, it is lived out in choices that favour peace over war, forests over factories, and community over isolation. It is felt in the respect for nature, in the kindness of strangers, and in the quiet contentment that people carry with them. In a world that often measures success in the size of an economy or the strength of an army, Costa Rica offers another way.
At the heart of it all is that simple phrase, Pura Vida. It is more than a greeting, it is a philosophy. It speaks of gratitude, of joy, of appreciation for what is already here. To live here is to learn that true wealth lies not in what we collect, but in what we cherish. That is why those of us who call Costa Rica home feel such pride. This is a small country, yes, but one that carries a lesson far bigger than its borders. Life is not complicated here. It is, quite simply, pure life.
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