Chloé Zhao’s Nomadland tells the fictionalized story of a woman taking to the road in the wake of her husband’s death and the economic recession. The Best Picture frontrunner at this year’s Oscars (off the heels of wins at the Producers Guild of America, Golden Globes, and Critics Choice Awards) is beautiful, and it has brought the outdoor transient lifestyle into popular consciousness. But in the process, Zhao has incorrectly painted the entire subculture as a group riddled with malaise and hopeless desperation. In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies

The characters in Nomadland are portrayed as a sad and helpless bunch, slowly rolling down western roads and waiting to languish away after being forced into a mobile lifestyle by a society that’s cast its elders aside. While these aging nomads do exist in the real world, they are not the only folks who have taken to life on four wheels in America’s wild places. There is a younger generation who has done so with glee. Let’s call them dirtbags. That’s the label they pick. But unlike the fading vagabonds of Nomadland, dirtbags are running after something, not away. Expert skiers, paddlers, climbers and bikers: They are craftsmen, skilled survivalists and masters of improvisation too. In 2017, I ditched an entertainment industry job in New York and an apartment with exposed brick walls to join them.

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I was desperate, but my move wasn’t brought on by financial struggle. Mainstream society hadn’t let me down. I chose to leave because I felt a suffocating lack of stimulation, and thought the West might offer a way of life that would set my soul on fire. And I was right. In dirtbags, I found America’s last bastion of counterculture: wildly unhinged human beings with red eyes and hard-thumping hearts, who had been intentionally living in tents and vehicles for years, in order to mainline euphoria-inducing experiences whenever possible.

Shutterstock Dirtbags have walked away from the mundanity and security of a standard, prescribed life, but their world didn’t have to be shattered first. After first experiencing a sense of peace, in the company of good folks on the slopes, the river, or at the local climbing crag, it’s hard to want to spend time doing anything else beside chasing that next fix of flow and fulfillment. They find it in a quickening of the pulse with paddles in hand or skis on the feet; in a shared adrenaline burst, an uncommon camaraderie, and giggles over budget beer round the fire. Dirtbags don’t resent the housing market or the financial system. They just want no part of it. They’ve stumbled upon something greater.

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Shutterstock In these outdoor adventures and this community, in frost-coated beards and waterlogged board shorts, these junkies find a form of meditation and sustained joy. No dirtbag is submitting themselves to servitude at a 9-to-5 desk, sorting warehouse items or picking up dirty undies at a crowded campground like Nomadland’s protagonist. Not that they are afraid of hard work to realize a lifestyle. They are doing whatever they can to make it work: digging out guns and running hoses on a snowmaking crew, or guiding tourists through Class V stretches of whitewater. Everything is done in pursuit of more time outside, with pure-hearted peers, overtaxed lungs, and sometimes, rotgut whiskey on the tongue. Dirtbags aren’t engaged in some last-ditch attempt at staying alive. Rather, those engaged in dirtbaggery have voluntarily forfeited material possessions and accepted questionable standards of hygiene in order to carve out a life worth looking back on. Maybe that conscious choice is a selfish pursuit or a short-sighted venture (especially when it comes to balancing finances). It’s certainly quite filthy at times. And yeah, there are some rough days. But for dirtbags, life along an empty road is not one defined by anxiety and grief, and without vigor or opportunity. It is precisely that hope—for that next moment of shared outdoor elation—that those existing within this particular branch of the American fringe know there’s always more of waiting around the next corner.

The author, living the mobile dirtbag dream. courtesy Adrian Fernandez  

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Chloé Zhao’s Nomadland tells the fictionalized story of a woman taking to the road in the wake of her husband’s death and the economic recession. The Best Picture frontrunner at this year’s Oscars (off the heels of wins at the Producers Guild of America, Golden Globes, and Critics Choice Awards) is beautiful, and it has brought the outdoor transient lifestyle into popular consciousness. But in the process, Zhao has incorrectly painted the entire subculture as a group riddled with malaise and hopeless desperation.

In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies

The characters in Nomadland are portrayed as a sad and helpless bunch, slowly rolling down western roads and waiting to languish away after being forced into a mobile lifestyle by a society that’s cast its elders aside. While these aging nomads do exist in the real world, they are not the only folks who have taken to life on four wheels in America’s wild places. There is a younger generation who has done so with glee. Let’s call them dirtbags. That’s the label they pick.

But unlike the fading vagabonds of Nomadland, dirtbags are running after something, not away. Expert skiers, paddlers, climbers and bikers: They are craftsmen, skilled survivalists and masters of improvisation too. In 2017, I ditched an entertainment industry job in New York and an apartment with exposed brick walls to join them.

What a Guy with a Missing Tooth and a Mullet Can Teach You About Living a Better…

Read article

I was desperate, but my move wasn’t brought on by financial struggle. Mainstream society hadn’t let me down. I chose to leave because I felt a suffocating lack of stimulation, and thought the West might offer a way of life that would set my soul on fire. And I was right.

What a Guy with a Missing Tooth and a Mullet Can Teach You About Living a Better…

Read article

What a Guy with a Missing Tooth and a Mullet Can Teach You About Living a Better…

In dirtbags, I found America’s last bastion of counterculture: wildly unhinged human beings with red eyes and hard-thumping hearts, who had been intentionally living in tents and vehicles for years, in order to mainline euphoria-inducing experiences whenever possible.

Dirtbags have walked away from the mundanity and security of a standard, prescribed life, but their world didn’t have to be shattered first. After first experiencing a sense of peace, in the company of good folks on the slopes, the river, or at the local climbing crag, it’s hard to want to spend time doing anything else beside chasing that next fix of flow and fulfillment.

They find it in a quickening of the pulse with paddles in hand or skis on the feet; in a shared adrenaline burst, an uncommon camaraderie, and giggles over budget beer round the fire. Dirtbags don’t resent the housing market or the financial system. They just want no part of it. They’ve stumbled upon something greater.

Gear That Will Take Your Roadlife Experience to the Next Level

Read article

In these outdoor adventures and this community, in frost-coated beards and waterlogged board shorts, these junkies find a form of meditation and sustained joy.

Gear That Will Take Your Roadlife Experience to the Next Level

Read article

Gear That Will Take Your Roadlife Experience to the Next Level

No dirtbag is submitting themselves to servitude at a 9-to-5 desk, sorting warehouse items or picking up dirty undies at a crowded campground like Nomadland’s protagonist. Not that they are afraid of hard work to realize a lifestyle. They are doing whatever they can to make it work: digging out guns and running hoses on a snowmaking crew, or guiding tourists through Class V stretches of whitewater. Everything is done in pursuit of more time outside, with pure-hearted peers, overtaxed lungs, and sometimes, rotgut whiskey on the tongue.

Dirtbags aren’t engaged in some last-ditch attempt at staying alive. Rather, those engaged in dirtbaggery have voluntarily forfeited material possessions and accepted questionable standards of hygiene in order to carve out a life worth looking back on. Maybe that conscious choice is a selfish pursuit or a short-sighted venture (especially when it comes to balancing finances). It’s certainly quite filthy at times. And yeah, there are some rough days. But for dirtbags, life along an empty road is not one defined by anxiety and grief, and without vigor or opportunity. It is precisely that hope—for that next moment of shared outdoor elation—that those existing within this particular branch of the American fringe know there’s always more of waiting around the next corner.

 

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Van Tours: The $900 Pan-American GMC Safari

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Van Tours: The $900 Pan-American GMC Safari

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