Joanna Henderson
2 min readJan 22, 2024

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You’re the one who’s so mad you cannot stop coming back to the comment section. I have no one to impose revenge on as I’m the one who usually turn down men, not the other way around (not that it’s a good thing). And I would never date someone with a passport bro mentality, as those kind of men are waking red flags and should be avoided. There’s a reason they get turned down so much.

I enjoyed the joke about travelling about well-off though. You can be broke and travel overseas. I travel outside Canada & the US at least once or twice a year, and I wouldn’t call myself as being very well-off. Even a broke person can scramble together enough cash to travel, and even to buy a modest property in many Asian and European countries, apart from the mega-cities known for its unaffordability. I keep battling with the idea of buying a house in a place like Italy or Bangkok at least a few times a year; and again, I’m not particularly well-off. An average educated person with an okay career in the US possesses even more basic wealth than me as the American dollar gets you 30-35% further than the Canadian one (insert upset emoji here). So it’s cute if you think passport bros are well-off. There are plenty of folks who can move to cheap places, quickly pay off the local mortgage or pay dirt cheap rent, and live off savings or work part-time online as an admin. And in the countries they travel to, they will still look as successful foreigners, despite some/many of them being too broke to have a family back home.

But the point is, I wouldn’t even look at a boy with a passport bro mentality even if he looked like a God and was a millionaire.

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Joanna Henderson
Joanna Henderson

Written by Joanna Henderson

Canadian. Mental health activist. Banker and financier who drinks too much coffee. Pursuing happiness and sharing my thoughts with others.

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