
We couldn’t find the kind of worldschooling community we needed in Brazil… so we’re building one!
 Hello worldschoolers,
About a year ago, I came into this space looking for something simple:
connection.
My daughter and I were entering another chapter of traveling and learning together, and I was hoping to find families, hubs, or places where we could feel a sense of belonging within this lifestyle.
What I found instead was something many of you probably relate to:
There are a lot of us out there…
but we’re scattered.
Over time, I started noticing a pattern in my own experience.
I love the freedom of worldschooling—
the movement, the real-life learning, the way the world becomes the classroom.
But there’s a part that feels harder than I expected:
Constantly rebuilding community.
Watching my daughter form deep connections… and then having to leave them.
Trying to balance flexibility with her need, to be honest, our need for consistency and belonging.
For a while, I thought maybe this was just part of the deal.
But something in me kept questioning that.
Because Brazil is one of the places we call home—we spend about half the year here—and even here, I couldn’t find a space that truly supported this lifestyle in a consistent, intentional way.
At the same time, we found a rhythm that does work for us in another layer of our life:
My daughter attends an online school (@thebinaschool), that allows her to stay connected to a global community, strengthen her SEL, and excel academically while we move.
And here in Brazil, she’s able to stay deeply connected to her own culture, language, and roots.
That combination—global education + cultural immersion—has been incredibly powerful for us.
But the missing piece is still community on the ground.
So instead of continuing to search for something that didn’t quite exist (at least not here)…
we decided to build it.
Together, in collaboration, with Amélie at Infini Coliving, we’re creating our first Infini Worldschooling Hub here in Brazil.
The vision is still evolving, but at its core, it’s this:
A temporary home for worldschooling families
where kids can build real friendships,
parents can feel supported,
and learning continues to happen through both global connection and local immersion.
Not a school.
Not a rigid program.
More like a shared experiment in living and learning differently.
We don’t have all the answers.
We’re building as we go.
But it feels like a response to something real—
a gap that many of us are quietly navigating.
So I’m sharing this here not as a promotion,
but as an open conversation:
• Does this resonate with your experience?
• Have you found something like this that actually works?
• What would make a space like this truly valuable for your family?
I’d genuinely love to hear your thoughts—whether you’re excited about the idea or skeptical.
Love and light,
Lorena