The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘I Lived the #VanLife. It Wasn’t Pretty.’
Episode Date: May 15, 2022The Times journalist Caity Weaver was tasked by her editor to go on an adventure: With an old college friend she would spend a week in California, living out of a converted camper van, in pursuit of t...he aesthetic fantasy known as #VanLife.Given the discomfort that can arise even in the plushiest of vehicles, it’s a surprising trend that shows no sign of letting up. As Weaver explains, even the idea of living full time out of a vehicle has “become aspirational for a subset of millennials and Zoomers, despite the fact that, traditionally, residing in a car or van is usually an action taken as a last resort, from want of other options to protect oneself from the elements.”Unpacking the craze by testing it herself, Weaver offers a humorous account of the trials of not being adequately prepared, claustrophobia, long restaurant lines, the increase in traffic within the national parks, and the disappointment that occurs when an Instagram aesthetic bumps up against reality. Sometimes fantasies are too good to be true.This story was written by Caity Weaver and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Wow, where do I begin?
I'm going to need at least 65 minutes to explain.
It's all coming back to me now by Celine Dion.
I was on this road trip in California that I coerced my friend Michael into joining me on.
Here we go. We've been practicing a lot.
So on our drive, Michael and I spent hours upon hours upon hours upon hours
for no reason trying to learn all the words to the Celine Dion version of
It's All Coming Back to Me Now.
They were nice when the wind was so cold.
This is a song that Celine Dion recorded that is incredibly complicated.
song that Celine Dion recorded that is incredibly complicated. It has really subtle changes of lyrics that sort of repeat. So we would listen to the song a couple times and nod along with her
and try to say the lyrics at the same time. Then we would cut the music and Michael would pull up the lyrics on his phone and just
read them aloud as if he were reading an article or reciting a poem. And we would talk about the
song's interior logic, the way it progressed. We would try to come up with hints or mnemonic
devices to help us remember the order of the words. You just have to admit that it's all coming back to me.
The more we listened to this song and sort of recited the lyrics over and over like a prayer,
it just started to seem oddly reflective of our reality.
It opens with the line,
there were nights when the wind was so cold and we
would look at each other like, there really are nights when the wind is so cold. That is living
in the van. Celine is right. That's a great ending. Chills. I got chills. Okay, so we've
almost learned the whole song. My name is Katie Weaver, and I'm a writer for the New York Times Magazine.
This is not the first needlessly long and uncomfortable trip I've taken for the New York Times Magazine.
A couple years ago, I crossed the U.S. by train via Amtrak, which takes a very long time and is ungodly expensive.
For the latest travel issue, my friend Michael and I
attempted to live the hashtag van life. Van life is an idea that's basically about simplifying your
life, taking only what you need, and then loading it all into a van. From that point, you can go
anywhere you want. Van lifers, they're driving to the ocean and having dinner as the sun sets.
And then they're having breakfast in the mountains.
They're always seemingly kind of alone in these big, expansive, beautiful areas.
And I think people really like the idea of that because, number one, it photographs really beautifully on Instagram.
And it looks great in TikTok videos.
There are many problems with this idea.
Chief among them is that I really, really, really hate driving.
I will do almost anything not to drive somewhere.
The rental company that Michael and I hired our van from paints every van differently.
So some have abstract colors.
Some are different geometric patterns.
Some have scenes of wild horses galloping.
Michael and I both thought, oh, maybe we'll get that cool horse van. But then we got there and
they told us, you're in the chameleon. And we said, uh-oh, what's that going to be? It ended
up being this crazy psychedelic jungle scene that had a huge neon chameleon painted on each side.
We put our stuff in the back, and we took off.
So here's my article.
I lived the hashtag van life.
It wasn't pretty.
Read by January Lavoie.
This was recorded by Autumn.
To listen to more stories from The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, and other publications on your smartphone, download Autumn on the App Store or the Play Store.
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For the most part, I don't remember things.
For the most part, I don't remember things.
My memory is not so much vague as it is glitchy,
a generally blank screen that sometimes blinks to life and performs basic recall tasks.
With scarce exceptions, my recollections are so inaccessible to me that they are more like the memories of a person I have never met or spoken to.
Once, while re-watching one of my favorite films,
I found myself wondering what its lead actor might be like in real life.
Several scenes later, a revelation jolted me.
I once flew cross-country to have lunch with that man,
interviewed him about his life for two hours,
and had my 1,400-word summary of the experience published in a magazine.
Geo-tagged iPhone photos are often some of my only clues that I have been somewhere or done something.
I cherish them as proof that I, at one point, left my house.
In February, it was decided I would once again exit my house.
In February, it was decided I would once again exit my house.
This time, I would spend a week in California,
living out of a converted camper van in pursuit of the aesthetic fantasy known as hashtag van life.
Living full-time out of a vehicle has become aspirational
for a subset of millennials and zoomers,
despite the fact that, traditionally,
residing in a car or van is an action taken as a last resort,
from want of other options to protect oneself from the elements.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development characterizes vehicles as places
not designated for, or ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation,
and because of this, it counts people who live in them as members of the
unsheltered homeless population. But it is ordinary to use some specially designed vehicles,
RVs, say, as a regular sleeping accommodation, so HUD also advises that whether a vehicle dweller
counts as unsheltered is to some extent at the counter's discretion. I would be encouraged to see myself
as well-sheltered for this week. I had nearly embarked on a different odyssey, one better suited
to someone with a poor sense of direction who is terrified of driving, except I blew it for myself
by being too enthusiastic. Before the hashtag van life idea was settled on, my editor dangled a different concept in front of me.
I would go to a guitar-shaped hotel and write about it.
Love hotels, please send me on any assignment that is based around being in a hotel, I emailed back.
But justification for a writer's passage to the Guitar Hotel at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood,
Florida, in the mind of my editor, required some fashion of explicable premise, a field expedition
to ascertain, through observation and reporting, the precise nature of the guitar-shaped hotel's
symbolism, for example. His vision encompassed such concepts as American dynamism
and the decline of the guitar. It incorporated the word hegemony.
E.G., read my editor's email, veering occasionally into Latin, etc.
Can't a person just go to a hotel and have a great time and learn a very small amount for work?
I wrote back, ending all further discussion. I couldn't wait to get to this hotel and witness
firsthand its resemblance to a large guitar. Maybe the guitar hotel is not right for you,
my editor replied, adamant that all further discussion die by his hand alone.
Instead, it was determined, with no evidence, that what was right for me was to spend a week
driving around California in a van. To prepare for this regular-shaped mission,
I threw myself into the hashtag vanlife corners of TikTok and Instagram.
into the hashtag vanlife corners of TikTok and Instagram.
Accounts of popular vanlifers, as they are known,
are an infinite reservoir of gorgeous, unpeopled scenery previously encountered only in desktop backgrounds.
Sunrise canyons, sunset oceans,
high noon highways that stretch on carless forever.
Hashtag vanlife is largely honey-colored with soft blue elements,
or vice versa. Outdoors is presented like hung landscape paintings, enclosed in frames of flung
open van doors or oblong windows. Van lifers' eyes rarely peer back from their photos. Self-portraits
appear to catch them off guard, gazing in the direction of majestic snow-capped peaks,
or perhaps pointedly into a cereal bowl, majesty having become habitual for them.
The vans seem to share their owner's tendency toward reverie.
Exterior shots typically find them angled away from the camera, as if to watch the waves.
This photogenic strain of van living
does not come cheap.
Secondhand converted
Mercedes-Benz Sprinters,
a popular model
for custom camper vans
with features like
heated floors,
can easily sell for $300,000, if you can find one.
Interest in an itinerant, panoramic, luxuriously self-contained lifestyle exploded alongside COVID-19.
Customization companies warn of year-long waitlists.
Despite this scarcity, it is easier than ever to experience hashtag van life.
With a day's notice and $1,000, anyone can have the life of a whimsical wayfarer,
if they are willing to rent. My husband couldn't believe it when I revealed I had scored a camper
van for us to drive around and live in for a week. That sounds bad, he said.
He immediately declined, citing several compelling reasons.
Perhaps, my editor proposed, I could do it alone,
even though I pointed out that I am the worst driver I know
and the worst parker known to anyone, anywhere.
That could be part of it, he suggested.
I ran a search for tips female van life solo.
The top result advised leaving men's shoes outside the van at night
and traveling with a gun or dog or both.
That didn't sound like an aesthetic fantasy.
I needed to find another human.
But what human in their right mind would be willing to travel well over 1,000 miles in a vehicle under my control, hopefully,
interrupting and endangering their life just to sleep marginally sheltered in the dead of winter in scenic places?
I called the most neurotic person I had ever met.
My friend Michael, who, since he and I last had dinner in New York City in late 2019,
had quit his job at a venture capital firm, set out on a backpacking trip across Asia,
cut short his backpacking trip because of the global pandemic, started a new life as a life
coach and meditation teacher, and gone blonde. I may have set expectations a little high.
I may have set expectations a little high.
Based on my pitch, Michael later told me,
he'd imagined us cruising California in something resembling a Beyoncé tour bus.
Instead, our 2013 Ford Econoline E150, with a psychedelic jungle-scene paint job,
resembled a rainforest cafe on wheels. Thanks to a
huge acid yellow and electric blue bug-eyed chameleon perched just behind
the driver's door, it looked like a vehicle a mobile vape company might use
to dispense free samples or something a person might drive to let onlookers know
here is someone willing and able to perform unlicensed aquarium repairs
for the right price.
The van was part of the mid-size fleet
offered by Escape Camper Vans,
a rental company I selected
because its website seemed tailored to dummies
with no experience driving camper vans,
offering extras like
a rentable kitchen kit,
$40,
and an ice scraper, $5, quote, yours to keep.
And because the site described the vans as premium, which I thought sounded upmarket.
I was surprised and alarmed when an employee filling out our paperwork at the Los Angeles rental depot casually described the company as a budget camper van service.
I made my face purposely non-reactive and hoped Michael hadn't heard. Budget? Michael gasped.
Our van had 238,646 miles on it and drove like a dream. A recurring dream I have in which I am driving a
car, but the brake and accelerator pedals are all confused so that sometimes I attempt to brake and
nothing happens, and other times the car zooms uncontrollably forward. In fairness to the van,
this was perhaps a result of operator error. Many of my driving difficulties are most likely attributable to a
lack of confidence. I am a bad driver because I am so preoccupied with driving safely that normal
drivers have trouble predicting my actions, which are also surprising to me, and because I have poor
spatial reasoning. Despite this, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania declared me legally able to drive
when I was in high school,
and since then, no other entity has called the bluff.
But my God, Michael couldn't know this.
He might pull out of the trip, or at least if he had any sense, demand to do the driving.
I would just have to hope Michael didn't realize that it took me 20 minutes to migrate to the leftmost lane of the freeway while keeping up with traffic, or that I was gripping the steering wheel at 10 and 2 so tightly
that calluses bloomed on my palms by the middle of the first afternoon. I would also have to pray
he'd immediately forget that I couldn't figure out how to release the parking brake in the van
rental lot or tell if it was on. Because of a concussion he received while abroad, Michael had
warned me, if we hit a pothole too hard and he bumped his head, he could die. No problem.
As we neared our first destination, a tiny resort called Mercy Hot Springs in northwest Fresno
County, all was pitch black, leading Michael to worry, somewhat improbably, that my
navigating down unlit rural back roads would somehow result in his being decapitated.
Our campsite included a picnic bench on which we heaped luggage, garbage bags of linens,
groceries, and frustrations as we tried to remember how the van rental employee had
reconfigured the gray cushions
and thick tabletop panels of the daytime seating area into a nighttime Tetris arrangement. The
30-minute task of readying the bed by starlight was one we instantly agreed we would not repeat.
We would spend the rest of the trip with a bed for a back seat. For the first of many times,
we were too cold and hungry to prepare dinner on
the teensy, propane-powered camping stove that folded into a compartment behind the van's back
door. I ate a jelly roll purchased earlier that day at a Mexican bakery and fistfuls of Cheez-Its.
Our $70 per person overnight fee included use of the resort's spring-fed soaking tubs, which were open until 11 p.m.
We changed into swimsuits in the restrooms, clean, well-lit spaces, the pleasant memory of which would sustain us much as hallucinatory Christmas visions warmed Hans Christian Andersen's little match girl while she slowly froze to death.
Our lavatory situation would grow progressively dire over the coming days.
In the tubs, all was well. It is pleasant to become a hot soup on a chilly winter night,
an eavesdrop on the distant conversations of owls. But eventually, we had to return to the van.
To suggest that the worst part of vacationing in a van is sleeping in a van is not fair to the other aspects of the endeavor, which are also
all the worst part. But it is cramped, slovenly, and bad. It is impossible to make a bed while
already sprawled atop it. If you are sharing a vehicle that does not have rear doors on both sides, as ours didn't,
the port side sleeper will be effectively trapped on their half of the bed from the moment they enter it, as I was.
For some reason, it wasn't until going to bed our second night that Michael wondered preposterously
if closing the miniature curtains strung around the van
windows for privacy and warmth might make our sleeping area too claustrophobic. I dismissed
this idiotic notion as soon as he voiced it. We were obviously fine the night before,
so Michael was inventing problems. Two hours later, I woke up terrified, surrounded on all sides by closed, miniature curtains,
positive there was not enough oxygen in the van and that Michael and I were suffocating to death.
Michael, I whispered, and kept whispering.
Michael, Michael, until I heard him wake up.
Are you awake? I asked innocently.
It turned out he was. I explained that I needed to
open one of the van's doors, an action that would instantly flood our sleeping area with frigid air.
Are you okay? Michael asked. Oh yeah, I shrieked. I clambered over the driver's seat armrest and
hurled myself, sock-clad, onto the frozen dirt outside.
The following evening, as we prepared for bed, I wondered aloud, in a nonchalant tone that made it clear I wasn't asking for myself,
if there was definitely enough oxygen in the van.
Right?
Yes, Michael said.
Even when all the doors and windows are closed, I said. You know how you
can be inside your house with all the doors and windows closed and not suffocate, Michael said.
It's like that.
On the second day of the trip, our route to Yosemite National Park cut through what appeared to be an outdoor cotton processing facility frozen mid-explosion. We pulled over to examine
the acres of white blooming trees. Who knew, Michael said, when my plant identifier app declared the trees almonds.
I never imagined blossoms on an almond tree, he cooed.
Almonds are a reprehensible thing to grow, Michael announced,
because they require so much water.
He approached a thrumming wood box on the ground near a row of trees.
These are bee boxes, he said. His head whipped around.
Oh, to pollinate the trees. It's like the apocalypse has happened, I said, watching him
from the middle of the empty road. We're the only two people left in the world, and we have to make
sense of it. As we would learn when we reached Yosemite, the apocalypse had
unfortunately not happened. Yosemite covers an area of 1,187 square miles, and that Saturday,
there was nowhere to park in any of them. Michael and I spent hours in the lumbering van,
first, trying to find a parking spot near a hike we planned to take before observing
the sunset firefall, a reportedly dazzling phenomenon in which, for a few winter evenings,
one of the park's cliffside waterfalls can briefly glow like molten gold. Then revising our search
to a parking spot within walking distance of the firefall, then a spot within walking distance of the shuttles
for people who parked too far away from the firefall to walk to it,
then a spot anywhere, in any proximity, or not, to anything.
In Yosemite Valley,
the location of the park's most famous rock formations,
vehicles, including several fellow escape camper vans rentals,
snaked over every millimeter of pavement, including the un-scenic parking lot of the Awani Hotel,
where Michael and I became trapped for 40 minutes. By early afternoon, after hours observing the park
from the crawling van, it had become clear that John Muir was wrong
when he declared,
No temple made with hands can compare with Yosemite.
Every rock in its walls seems to glow with life.
Yosemite was actually bad.
You go to a national park.
You think you're going to really commune with the earth,
Michael said.
And yet here you are, trapped in exactly the same situation you are when you're driving to work in bumper-to-bumper traffic, he said.
Not that either of us works in an office.
Michael sits before his computer's built-in camera and leads group meditation classes online.
I flop between my bed and my couch, typing up inane thoughts all day with my
laptop on my stomach. We were millennials pursuing the manifest destiny of our generation,
chic, rootless wandering, who had become mired in a boomer-esque rush hour. We needed to leave.
We couldn't figure out how. While maneuvering the van down random roads in search of a gps signal
requests for maps in multiple convenience stores and gas stations turned up only activity books
for teaching children to read maps we stumbled upon a parking spot well not technically but at
least an area large enough to accommodate a pulled-over vehicle.
Let's just stay here for a while, I suggested,
desperate for a reprieve from steering the blockish van through traffic.
We popped open the clamshell tent that unfolded on the van's roof and scrambled inside, where, having already watched last night's RuPaul's Drag Race on Michael's phone first thing that morning,
we fell asleep. Hours later, after walking for two miles down the paved road from where we had
parked, we squinted up at the eastern edge of El Capitan, in the direction where several hundred
people standing shoulder to shoulder were looking. Earlier, we'd overheard a young woman tell a man to train his gaze,
at the firefall hour, on the part of the cliff that resembled a chicken cutlet.
No part resembled a chicken cutlet. We could see a patch of unremarkable medium orange,
the sort of shade you might expect granite to turn at sunset, which is what was happening.
you might expect granite to turn at sunset,
which is what was happening.
Did we miss it? I asked.
Phalanxes of photographers with enormous professional cameras
crouched behind tripods.
I think that might be it, Michael said.
Having briefly regarded the orange splotch,
we trudged back to the van.
The trek along the road's shoulder
was the only hiking we did in Yosemite.
While leaving,
a wrong turn out of the park in the dark
meant that we ended up an hour's drive
from where we wanted to be.
The emotion of this moment is difficult to articulate.
It was miserable to have prolonged our journey,
but all we were going to do
when we finally managed to leave the park
was still be in the van,
a foot behind where we were sitting.
By opting for lodging we could take anywhere,
we had inadvertently saddled ourselves
with accommodations that were inescapable.
With nowhere to go back to,
being aggrieved over the delay seemed pointless.
We didn't even bother to feel upset.
Michael and I were looking forward to the fifth and sixth days of our trip
in Joshua Tree National Park, not because we were uniquely excited to wander among its
melted-looking rock formations and namesake outstretched yuccas, but because Joshua Tree was our final
stop, after which we could exit the van forever. We had only managed to bathe once since leaving
the hot springs, a semi-public undertaking at an RV park near Yosemite. Thus far, any pleasant
weather had been experienced as a visual phenomenon while traveling between locations.
We tended to arrive at places just as our first, sometimes only, allotted day there was ending.
Unfortunately, after checking into our $25 campsite,
we were informed that the good weather in Joshua Tree was yesterday.
Frigid winds were incoming, with gusts up to 50 miles per hour.
Because the gusts meant campfires were discouraged,
I suggested we treat ourselves to dinner at a nice restaurant I'd heard about.
The wait for a table at the nice restaurant I'd heard about was two hours.
I suggested we treat ourselves to dinner at wherever was closest with no line,
which turned out to be a sushi restaurant in the desert.
Despite having been presented with hundreds of reasonable opportunities to do so over the previous days,
Michael had issued no complaints, a grace that astonished me.
The friend I made in college was an incorrigible fuss budget
who tended to be either discouraged or panicked by everything around him,
in, by and large, a funny way.
He was not the kind of person who took spontaneous trips.
Michael credited his newfound peace and stamina for uncomfortable situations
to the Vipassana meditation he began practicing
after he left his job to backpack
through Asia. Its central teaching, he said, is that everything is impermanent.
Suddenly I recalled a detail from the incident when curtains in the van had nearly caused us
to suffocate to death. After the cold forced me back inside, Michael lay beside me issuing gentle directions.
I should observe the feeling of cool air entering my nostrils, the weight of fabric on my toes.
As I grappled for composure, I warned Michael that the suffocation panic seemed moments away from resurging.
But that would be okay, he said, because feeling scared was temporary.
If it happened, I could simply wait for the feeling to pass.
A short while later, I heard the quiet clink of plastic on enamel.
Michael had removed his retainer to speak to me soothingly, I realized.
The sleep that followed was deep and sound.
That experience, I said in the restaurant, was the first time in 12 years of friendship
I had ever found Michael relaxing. He accepted the compliment and told me that meditation has
all sorts of benefits. It has also made him nicer on the phone with customer service representatives.
The day before, Michael and I had arrived at Red Rock Canyon State Park, where we discovered a
Bible-length binder in the visitor's center that cataloged instances in which the park's
weathered rock formations had been captured on film or video for commercial purposes.
rock formations had been captured on film or video for commercial purposes. It was briefly diverting to learn that we stood on the hallowed ground depicted in Aerosmith's amazing music video,
a commercial for Arby's, Mazda, Kia, and Peugeot advertisements, Too Fast, Too Furious,
and the beginning of Jurassic Park. But most of the trip's pleasures were ones
I experienced only later, as false memories. After flipping through the historic car commercial
binder, Michael and I took a short hike up a nearby ridge, because that was all we had time
to do before nightfall. I know from photos that the sheets of slate blue clouds overhead were so thin in places
that a peachy sunset could be seen beyond them like light passing through stained glass
on the ridgetop we spotted a solitary lenticular cloud hovering darkly over the distant foothills
of the Sierra Nevadas and I took a picture of Michael from behind, his arms
and hands outstretched as if controlling its movements. At no point was our van configured
to accommodate the flung-open-door, stunning vista shots that are hallmarks of hashtag van life.
It was, at all times, piled doors to ceiling with luggage, groceries, bedding, kitchenware, and the heavy
metal ladder for accessing the rooftop tent, which we tended to throw haphazardly over the whole heap.
Maddeningly, you wouldn't know it from the photos on our phones, which depict scenes from a much
better vacation. In the photos I irritably snapped from the driver's seat in gridlocked Yosemite,
the sun shines silver on nearby rock faces.
Distant granite peaks appear through a warm blue haze,
and a tremendous waterfall thunders off a cliff.
Pictures taken to document the dispiriting havoc of our sleeping arrangement
show the van steeped in a warm morning light that was not present.
They look like promotional images for a California tourism campaign.
I awoke in Red Rock Canyon to Michael meditating in front of sandstone cliffs beneath a sky of
pristine Windows desktop blue. For only the second time in five days, we bothered to set up the propane stove
to prepare a lavish breakfast of eggs and sides. Except, we discovered, all our sides had been
ruined by the van's tiny refrigerator, which gradually froze everything it was charged with
protecting. The avocado that Michael had been looking forward to for days tasted
like the sea,
he observed,
frowning after his only bite.
After breakfast,
I frantically scrubbed pans
with icy,
hand-pumped water
while violent winds
sent clean bowls
skittering across the sand.
In pictures,
breakfast is gorgeous. On the last day of our adventure,
in the rental return lot, I received an unforgettable souvenir, excruciating pain
that ripped through my back the second my foot touched the asphalt. While the agony left me
unable to walk for weeks, it afforded me the extraordinary experience of sobbing in a wheelchair on the tarmac at LAX
and clutching the hand of a kind-hearted Delta employee
as she prayed aloud that my life would improve.
I later learned that sitting tensely for several hours a day in a huge, rattling vehicle
can sometimes be bad for your back.
Laid up in bed, I clicked through other van lifers' pictures
of the places Michael and I had gone,
intending to scrutinize their splendor
with newfound knowledge about the deceptive beauty of iPhone photos.
So I was unnerved that,
rather than spotting seams in the pristine hashtag van life tapestries,
I found myself longing to procure a nice van and replicate these trips. These trips exactly
like the one I had just gone on. Michael was right. Everything was impermanent.
I had forgotten how much I hadn't enjoyed it.