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What I’ve Learned Over the Past 3 Years of RV Living

Three years ago, I thought RV living was about freedom. And yes — it is. But not in the way Instagram sells it. RV living has taught me far more about patience, presence, self-leadership, and simplicity than it ever taught me about campground hookups or storage hacks. Here’s what living on the road has actually taught me. 1. Less Space Creates More Clarity When you live in a small space, there’s nowhere to hide clutter — physically or emotionally. Every item has to earn its place. Every habit becomes visible. RV living taught me to ask: Do I really need this? Does this add value to my life? Is this supporting the version of me I’m becoming? Less space forced me into more intentional living — and I wouldn’t trade that clarity for anything. 2. Nature Regulates Everything Mountains, deserts, oceans, forests — they all teach different lessons. Some places ask you to slow down. Some stretch your nervous system. Some remind you how small — and supported — you really are. Being surrounded by nature daily has recalibrated my nervous system, my creativity, and my decision-making in ways no productivity hack ever could. Nature doesn’t rush. And neither do the best seasons of life. 3. Flexibility Is a Skill (Not a Personality Trait) Things break. Plans change. Weather shifts. Routes reroute. RV living taught me that flexibility isn’t about being “easygoing.” It’s about trusting yourself to adapt. The more flexible I became on the road, the more confident I became in life. Because when you know you can handle the unexpected — fear loses its grip. 4. Comfort Is a Choice, Not a Location There were nights I slept better in the middle of nowhere than I ever did in a house. There were also moments of discomfort, uncertainty, and fatigue. RV living showed me that comfort doesn’t come from square footage. It comes from rituals, routines, and inner safety. Morning coffee. Quiet walks. Music. Stillness. You carry comfort with you — or you don’t. 5. Freedom Requires Responsibility This might be the biggest lesson of all. Freedom isn’t the absence of responsibility. It’s choosing which responsibilities you’re willing to carry. RV living asked me to: Pay attention Maintain my space Plan ahead Stay present Take ownership when things went sideways True freedom is self-leadership. And that lesson has shaped every area of my life since. Final Reflection RV living didn’t just change where I live. It changed how I move through the world. More intentionally. More grounded. More awake. More trusting. And while I don’t know where the road will lead next — I do know this: I’ve learned how to feel at home anywhere.

Candice Renae

1/1/20251 min read

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