🏕 Community Doesn’t Always Look Like What You Expect
This week, I joined the HOWA Mentoring Camp—a gathering for new nomads learning to live simply, safely, and together in the desert. I thought I’d learn about van systems and solar setups, but what I really learned was how preparedness can bring peace.
During one of our evening circles, a mentor mentioned something I’d never thought much about: the In Case of Emergency (ICE) card. It’s a small note you tape somewhere visible in your van that lists your emergency contact, medications, and diagnoses.
For someone like me, living with chronic health conditions, that hit home. I realized that if anything ever happened on the road and I couldn’t speak for myself, that card could make all the difference.
But even more than that, it shifted how I think about freedom.
Preparedness, I realized, isn’t about fear—it’s about kindness.
It’s giving your future self a sense of safety, so your present self can truly enjoy the moment.
I came to camp hoping to learn how to be more self-reliant.
I left understanding that self-reliance also means allowing others to help you—by sharing knowledge, offering advice, or simply sitting beside you around a fire.
Community doesn’t always look like friendship bracelets or daily check-ins. Sometimes it looks like strangers in the desert teaching you how to stay safe, so you can keep chasing sunsets another day.
That night, as I taped my new ICE card inside the van, Sharpie already asleep on the rug, I felt calmer than I had in weeks. The stars were out, the desert was quiet, and for the first time in a while, I wasn’t thinking about what could go wrong.
Because being prepared, I’ve learned, is just another way of saying: I plan to keep going.
— Michelle 🌿
Author of The Soul Thief’s Bargain
Follow my travels and reflections at Miles to Myself on YouTube
During one of our evening circles, a mentor mentioned something I’d never thought much about: the In Case of Emergency (ICE) card. It’s a small note you tape somewhere visible in your van that lists your emergency contact, medications, and diagnoses.
For someone like me, living with chronic health conditions, that hit home. I realized that if anything ever happened on the road and I couldn’t speak for myself, that card could make all the difference.
But even more than that, it shifted how I think about freedom.
Preparedness, I realized, isn’t about fear—it’s about kindness.
It’s giving your future self a sense of safety, so your present self can truly enjoy the moment.
I came to camp hoping to learn how to be more self-reliant.
I left understanding that self-reliance also means allowing others to help you—by sharing knowledge, offering advice, or simply sitting beside you around a fire.
Community doesn’t always look like friendship bracelets or daily check-ins. Sometimes it looks like strangers in the desert teaching you how to stay safe, so you can keep chasing sunsets another day.
That night, as I taped my new ICE card inside the van, Sharpie already asleep on the rug, I felt calmer than I had in weeks. The stars were out, the desert was quiet, and for the first time in a while, I wasn’t thinking about what could go wrong.
Because being prepared, I’ve learned, is just another way of saying: I plan to keep going.
— Michelle 🌿
Author of The Soul Thief’s Bargain
Follow my travels and reflections at Miles to Myself on YouTube
Published on November 02, 2025 19:31
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Tags:
chronic-illness-awareness, community, courage-and-change, freedom, healing-journey, mindful-living, minimalism, nomad-life, personal-essay, preparedness, resilience, solo-travel, vanlife-reflections
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