Developing a Better You

Tag: digital nomad

The Unexpected Gift of Community

Big changes can bring unexpected gifts. 

That’s proven true for my wife Lisa and I as we’ve transitioned to living nomadically. Seven months ago, we sold our rental houses, primary residence, and most of our possessions. Now we live in hotels, AirBnbs, cruise ships, and with friends and family, working remotely as writers as we go.

There have been sacrifices—not having a place to call our own, not having our living space designed and furnished to our tastes, and travel hassles to name a few. But the benefits have far outweighed them—a sense of freedom and spontaneity, seeing the world, few maintenance and cleaning responsibilities, and a cheaper cost of living.

One benefit has surprised me. I thought our nomadic lifestyle would naturally lead to a loss of community, but the opposite has proved true. Now that we’re not tied to one place by a mortgage and maintenance, we’re spending more and better time with family and friends than we did before. Living with my father and Lisa’s sister for stretches at a time. Staying near our kids who live in different cities. Visiting friends across the country. 

We still enjoy spending quite a bit of time in Phoenix Arizona where we lived and worked for twenty years before becoming nomads. We have some family and a lot of friends there. A particularly delightful surprise during our Phoenix stays has been living with our closest couple friends, Bill and Chuck.

Bill and Chuck have a guest bedroom and bath tucked away at the back of their house. They invited us to stay for a few days multiple times as we were getting acclimated to nomadic life. We all had such a good time together that Lisa and I approached them with the idea of renting their space for longer stretches while we were in town. We proposed doing it on a trial basis with complete honesty on both sides about how it was going. Maintaining our friendship was the highest priority for all of us, and we agreed to live elsewhere the moment it felt like the cons were outweighing the pros.

They readily agreed, and to the surprise of all of us, it has been a delight. They are kind and generous hosts, and Lisa and I work hard to be sensitive and conscientious renters. We’ve been here for six weeks out of a planned eight before heading off for months of travel elsewhere. The sense of “housemates” community we’ve all felt has brought a richness and depth to our lives, and has been one of the greatest gifts of our nomad experiment thus far.

You don’t have to become a nomad to find community, but it often takes intentionality. My daughter found community with fellow dog owners in her morning trips to the dog park. My dad has dinner with his sisters every weekend. I have a standing Thursday lunch with my closest friend and a monthly poker night with old bandmates from my music days.

How’s your sense of community? Identify the life-giving people in your relational circle. Put recurring times of connection on the calendar. Be intentional. Automate the important. If you do, you’ll enjoy a richer, deeper life, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

Your Dream is Ahead (Some Leaping Required)

You cannot swim for new horizons until you have courage to lose sight of the shore.

William Faulkner

I was afraid.

While I loved travel, hated home maintenance, and had the freedom as a writer to live anywhere, I was intimidated by the idea of becoming a digital nomad (someone without a primary residence who lives and works in short-term rentals in various locations).

My wife and I had dreamed about becoming nomads for years. We’d reached the point where the only thing holding us back was my fear—fear of the unknown, of the unusual, of losing some creature comforts, of releasing our physical possessions.

Then about eight months ago, we listened to a podcast featuring Bill Perkins, the author of Die With Zero: Getting All You Can from Your Money and Your Life, who argued that when you lived your dreams was as important as what your dreams were. His reasons included:

1. Tomorrow is not guaranteed

How many people wait until retirement to pursue their dreams only for illness or tragedy to prevent those dreams from coming true?

2. Some dreams are better when experienced younger

Bill gave the example of traveling to Japan with his aged parents. While he and his wife had the energy to soak up a wide range of adventures, his parents’ lack of stamina limited their experience. Some dreams may not be physically possible past a certain point (ie a week-long rock climbing trip is typically more feasible when you’re in your 30s vs your 70s).

3. Living dreams sooner pays long-term dividends

Having more years to savor happy memories increases the overall benefit those experiences provide.

His points struck home. They gave Lisa and I the courage and motivation to make the leap. We sold both rental houses, the condo we lived in, and most of our possessions. For the past four months we’ve stayed in hotels, AirBnbs, and with friends and family in various parts of the US (doing a surprising amount of pet and house sitting—if you need those services, we come highly recommended!). While there have been challenges and frustrations, we love the freedom, lightness, adventure, and low cost of living that our nomadic life provides. 

We’re currently living internationally. After a stop in Paris, we’re now in Athens and leave tomorrow for a twenty-four night cruise throughout Europe, hitting twelve cities in seven countries before docking in Miami. A trip like this would not have been possible if we hadn’t faced our fears and stopped delaying our dream.

What are your dreams? For your career, your relationships, your hobbies, your passions? What practical steps would it take to make them a reality? What’s stopping you from taking those steps now? Dream big. Create a “make-it-happen” list. Start on #1 today. If you do, you’ll be on your way to living your dream, and you’ll take another giant step toward Becoming Yourself.

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