I've been a Nomad on and off but a Nomad in a more limited sense. My story is a bit different than most as my father & grandfather traveled in their work and I got to take many trips far and wide in the USA with them as a kid. But the traveling life was one of the best solution for them as we reside in the center of Appalachia and travel related work seems one of the best solutions for family men here. So many men here drive trucks, work for railroads, are river boat crewmen, or in other business travel occupations.
But by 10 years of age I was under the thumb of school and didn't get to travel much again until I had finally graduated and could again travel to find a position in my career field. ("My own story" in the Van Conversion Website in my signature line)
What I've realized is the absolute vastness of America and how different areas beyond where we grew up actually are than what I/we have come to believe the country is and is about. Travel has caused me to rethink the scheme of things I had developed in my school days. As a traveling person, such as a Nomad, experience has taught me to be reserved and bear up when confronted by those who would judge me by the license plate on my rig. I just tell myself that their loud mouths bespeak their empty heads. Small town LEO's have been some of the worst encountered. I just remember what grandad told me as he explained, "the best way to measure a man is to empower him with some authority and he'll measure himself for you".
As for what the Nomad life has taught me, being mobile is superior to always being tied to one place. Just having a rig where you can go on the road at will to get a new perspective on life is priceless. Long week end camping excursions or just day trips can achieve this for a person who is still in the sticks and bricks. When I get behind the wheel of my rig I feel a transformation taking place. It brings back so many memories of when I traveled in my first rig and refreshes them in my mind. Even though my native area seems to have a perpetual black cloud over it, I can move to much better areas of the country and prosper there where so many who live around me don't yet realize this for themselves. It is what gives me a more optimistic outlook than others where I live. I have learned to work from home, and by extension from my rig if I choose. This is now my authentic self that I've developed over time. I can work for myself in the digital age and that combined with the choice of living in the sticks & bricks or a Nomad's rig.......or both.