Housing costs, remote work, and GPS killed the fixed address. Meet the Americans who traded mortgages for miles — and why it makes total sense.
The American Dream used to mean a house, a yard, and a zip code you’d keep for decades. But what happens when median home prices outpace wages by 200%, rent consumes half your income, and your job can be done from anywhere with wifi?
For a growing number of Americans, the answer is simple: put the house on wheels.
In this episode, we explore the world of the Post-Modern Gypsy — a term coined by Jordan H. Poole in his book Defining the Post-Modern Gypsy: The Full-Time RVer’s Guide to Living Unconventionally Tethered in 21st Century America. This isn’t romanticized wanderlust. It’s a pragmatic, tech-enabled response to broken housing markets, vanishing pensions, and a gig economy that rewards geographic flexibility.
We dig into the real economics of nomadic living, the five markers of post-modern nomadism, the legal minefield of RV parking laws (Dallas’s outright ban is genuinely shocking), the collapse of the Walmart overnight parking myth, and why Dollar General might be the unsung backbone of the American nomadic movement.
If you’ve ever done the math on your rent and wondered if there’s another way — this episode is for you.
Topics Covered
- The housing crisis and retirement squeeze driving RV adoption
- How GPS and the smartphone made nomadic living viable
- The four socioeconomic strata of modern nomads
- Municipal RV parking laws and how to navigate them legally
- The truth about Walmart overnight parking
- Emergency food security and mobile pantry strategy
- Geographic arbitrage as a legitimate financial strategy