I CAME ACROSS SOME VIDEOS of lawn care guys doing free cleanups of horribly neglected and overgrown properties. In many cases the homeowner or tenant was elderly and too weak or poor to maintain their place.

It made me think about the question we older full-time vehicle dwellers often hear, usually from concerned folks living conventional lives: “What will you do when you get too old to live like that?” 

Well, what will those living in buildings do when they get too old to live like that? I think the answer is pretty much the same in both instances. We will transition to some other living situation. And few of us will be thrilled about it.

When I become unable to drive, camp, and take care of myself, moving into some type of building wouldn’t suddenly make me more able. It’s just the same problems in a different place. A more confining place. My life would become smaller, less varied, less interesting, less worth extending. 

There seems to be an assumption—or hope—that living in a building will somehow hold decrepitude at bay a little longer. I’m not buying that. My physical and mental health have greatly improved in the years since I sold the house and hit the road. I think the simple life, out in nature, having new experiences, doing without some of the lazy-making modern conveniences and crazy-making modern culture, is keeping me younger. It has made me want to live longer than I did as a fat, depressed homeowner.