(Because there’s “living small”… and then there’s “you packed WHAT?”)
Minimalism sounds adorable on paper.
Tiny closets, tidy drawers, curated belongings — the whole Pinterest dream.
Then you start RVing with one pair of shoes, a single jacket, and a firm belief that “we don’t need all that stuff anymore.”
Fast-forward three days into the trip…
and someone is barefoot, cold, wet, muddy, blistered, or emotionally unwell because they didn’t pack properly.
Let’s break down the fantasy versus the reality.
👟 1. The One-Pair-of-Shoes Delusion
Before leaving:
“These hiking boots work for everything!”
Two days later:
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Feet on fire
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Socks damp
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Sand everywhere
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Zero traction on the shower floor
You start bargaining with the universe like,
“If I ever get home, I’m packing options.”
🩴 2. The Flip-Flop Betrayal
Everyone brings flip-flops.
Everyone regrets it.
They:
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snap at the worst time
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slide on wet grass
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melt near campfires
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invite every pebble within a five-mile radius
Minimalism says: “One pair is enough.”
Reality says: “Buy replacements in the campground store for £14.99.”
🧥 3. The Jacket Situation
Minimalist logic:
“I’ll just bring one hoodie.”
But then the weather decides to host a festival:
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morning frost
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midday heatwave
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evening wind
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surprise rain
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mysterious temperature drop at 2 a.m.
You end up wearing three layers and a blanket like a fashion disaster with regrets.
🧂 4. The ‘We Don’t Need That’ Curse
Every minimalist RVer has said these last words:
“We don’t need that, we’ll be fine.”
Items that fall under this curse include:
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extra socks
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camp shoes
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backups of… anything
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a second towel
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literally every comfort item you swore you wouldn’t need
Spoiler:
You did need them.
🎒 5. Storage Has PTSD
Minimalism claims:
“Less stuff, less stress.”
But in RV life, minimalism actually means:
“Let me dig through seven compartments for the one item we do own.”
You know it’s bad when you say:
“We only have one of these, why can’t I find it?”
🫠 6. The Emotional Fallout
Somewhere around day six, someone whispers:
“I miss having choices.”
Minimalism doesn’t prepare you for:
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wet shoes that won’t dry
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muddy shoes with nowhere to put them
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shoes that shrink
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shoes that smell like someone buried them in shame
Options aren’t clutter — they’re mental health.
💬 Final Thoughts
Minimalism is cute until the weather changes, the terrain changes, or your one pair of shoes decides to retire mid-hike.
RV life teaches you fast:
You don’t need everything…
but you absolutely need backup shoes.
🐟 Want to know whether your site is sandy, muddy, paved, grassy, or designed specifically to ruin footwear?
Use Campground Views to preview your site before you commit to a one-shoe lifestyle.
