Monday, October 1, 2012

Big Dream One: The RV Life



I’ve always been a big dreamer. I set my sights on goals that are almost unattainable like winning the lottery despite never actually playing the lotto. I dream of sailing around the world in my custom built 60 foot sailboat, The Hyperbole, despite the fact that I get seasick just looking at a boat. I dream of thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail despite my overwhelming fears of aliens, sasquatch, and alien sasquatch. I dream of opening a gaming shop with my husband even though we’d end up strangling each other after the first day or two. I dream of a bakery with Sara even though she isn’t nearby.

I dream Big Dreams.

Two of the most diametrically opposite Big Dreams have been at the forefront lately. One stems from my love of travel and sightseeing, the other from my growing desire to be self-sufficient. A third Big Dream is really the most realistic it's just a matter of pushing myself. 

Today I’m going to talk about Big Dream Number One.

Before I met Sara, home to me was a place. A single location where roots were set down and bonds formed in the community. Home was a tangible, unique space. Growing up, I moved around a lot. Maybe not more than a military family, but it seemed every few years we were up and going somewhere else. I hated it. I wanted a place that was ours and we’d never have to leave. Sara, however, taught me that home wasn’t a place and roots could be transplanted quite easily. Home is my family: Scott and the girls. If I’ve got them, then I’m good. It doesn’t matter where we live. I’m sure I would have figured this out eventually, but Sara, being awesome, helped speed the process up.

The longest I’ve ever stayed in one house was six years. It seems that maybe all that moving around in my youth stuck with me and I get itchy feet every three years or so. There’s a Tom Petty song I love, Time To Move On, and I am fairly certain he meant it to be my theme song because I always have this need to just go. 



Dream Number One would help to alleviate those feet. If I had any assets to liquidate, I would do so immediately, buy an RV (I really like this one and this one) and take to the road. I would love to travel the back roads with the girls and Scott exploring every nook and cranny this country has to offer. How cliché, right? But how very cool would it be to wake up in the morning and say, “Hey, let’s go check out Montana” and just go? How freeing is that? Today I feel like…New Mexico…Next week, how about Ohio?

If I RV’d my life I would certainly have to make some major changes. And maybe they’d be for the best. The appealing idea here is that not only would I get to travel the country, but I would have to, by the very nature of living in an RV, downsize my life. Go minimalist. I am the first to confess an attachment to my stuff: books, craft supplies, gaming supplies, bakeware, all my Christmas decorations! Gack! Just thinking about not putting my Santas out on display makes me squirm in my guts. But like wiping a blackboard clean, there is something very appealing about getting rid of everything. I’m not anywhere close to being a hoarder. I’ve seen true hoarding and trust me, it keeps me in check! And surely anything that I could not bring myself to part with would find a home in storage until I needed it again.

Maybe after a few years or so driving the road, I’d yearn to plant myself firmly in one spot.

8 comments:

  1. I follow 2 blogs that are all about RV living on the oad. They two couples have done exactly as you dream to do. Do you follow any RV blogs?

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    1. I follow Miss Britt @ In Pursuit of Happiness. Which ones do you follow?

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  2. That's one of my Mother's dreams too. Unfortunately, I think my father would rather gouge his own eyeballs out, so I don't think it's going to happen for them.

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    1. Yeah, I don't think my husband would appreciate life on the road as I would. Maybe it's a man thing? Although he has far less stuff than I do so the transition probably wouldn't freak him out as much as it would me! :)

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  3. Oh, I LOVE our trailer! Love, love, love... We spend every moment we can hitting the open road and exploring new places. Some day, if we ever get a chance to retire, we'd love to do it even more. You don't need a big RV to start the process. Perhaps a small trailer or even a tent and a few long, lovely summer weekends, would be enough to placate the Travelling Jones.

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    1. We have a tent and we adore camping but that's just for long weekends. I think it would be awesome to go full time!

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  4. My friend and his wife live the RV life. He's in his early 30's and it sounds like an amazing life. There are some things that don't seem amazing like spending the night in Walmart parking lots, but making new friends in different cities is pretty great. I bid you good luck in achieving your dream.

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    1. Maybe there is something of the nomad left in all of us - that longing for the road, the excitement of a new place...the parking lot at Wal-Mart??

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