A WOMAN has revealed that she experienced hate for her van life but she’s "never looked back". Nine years ago, Kathy Adamson, also known as Gypsy Kath, thought “there’s got to be more to life than working my butt off, paying bills and then dying.” Her response was to buy a van online that she’d never seen before, "pack up [her] house," and sell or donate all her belongings.
But during the pandemic her van life was far from smooth sailing. Kathy, who's Australian, had rocks thrown at her van in one town in New South Wales. In another town she was isolated and forced to live under a lamp post where cows were kept.
She was approached by an “unbelievably rude” person and thinks “everybody just went off the charts.” Kathy says this hatred was far from logical since nomads like her barely encounter other people on their travels. Despite outsider dislike of her lifestyle, Kathy claims the shift to van life was the “best gift [she] could have ever given [herself].
” Before living in a van, Kathy had a “very, very good income” but she was working 12-16 hours a day, 5-7 days a week, finding this regular routine monotonous and “mundane.” She was in a “spiral.” Although she lived in a beautiful home with “everything that [she] could possibly have needed”, Kathy was far “lonelier and more isolated” than she is now.
While we might assume high incomes gives us freedom, she says it actually takes freedom away because you're locked in working long hour.
