In 2001 I bought a VW bus for $100 and moved in. Not for the aesthetic. Because I'd just walked out of a corporate job during the dot-com crash and the rent wasn't happening.
Here's what I found: freedom and homelessness are the same experience described from different emotional states. On a good day, you're free. On a bad day, you're homeless. The external circumstances are often identical.
I kept notes. How to find work without an address. How to eat on nothing. How to stay clean and sane when everything you own fits in a bag. Those notes became Rough Living โ a field guide I published in 2003 and just updated for 2026.
Some things got harder. The systems are less tolerant. The cheap things got expensive. What didn't change: most people are more capable than they've been led to believe. The system benefits from you thinking otherwise.
The knowledge that you could survive outside the plan โ even if you never have to โ is its own kind of freedom. That's what the book is really about.
Rough Living: Tips and Tales of Vagobond โ indignified.com/books

