W.F. Stubbs
  • Home
  • About
  • Buy
  • Poetry
  • Blog
  • Music
    • Selections & Links
    • Opus List
    • Proposed Albums
    • Songs Without Music >
      • 1993
      • The Hunter's Knife (Lyric)
    • Music Reviews

Newsroom Article: Author lives in car

3/9/2024

3 Comments

 
Recently I was asked to write a 1000 word article about living in my car as an author. For publication, the article was edited down to 868 words, cutting out one of the best sections of the original piece for two basic sentences:
  • 'Oh and I gew a beard. I began to look like someone who lived in their car.' [sic]

Regardless, thank you to the editor for accepting and publishing - the article generated much interest and I received online booksales as a result. Truly grateful.

You can read the published version in the link below.
Link to article

Here is the full piece as I submitted with editing help from my publicist acting as a pre-submission editor:

This Wasn’t a Lifestyle Choice

Earlier this year I attended a music gig at the Ruby Bay Theatre in Mapua and struck up a conversation with someone during the intermission. When I told them that I live in my car because I can’t afford rent or power costs, their candid response took me a little by surprise: “You don’t look like someone who lives in their car.”
       What is someone who lives in their car supposed to look like?
       Perhaps a born-again hippy with retro ‘60s bell-bottoms and groovy peace signs all over their denim jacket, or maybe of a ragged-clothed homeless person.
       For me, deciding to live in my car was not a lifestyle choice. It was born out of necessity. I had two options: Take a room that was more expensive than my current income could afford and hope my job hours would increase, or move into my car and dispense with the struggle to pay rent completely. The year was 2018 and I was at a point in my life where the renting treadmill was beginning to creak very loudly. I no longer wanted to repeat the experience of the last 20 years: moving from house to house, getting frustrated with flatmates, getting kicked out of my paid residence because the owner didn’t want me on the property during the daytime. None of these flats, rooms, or sleep-outs, ever felt like a home.
       I made a snap decision. “I’m going to start living in my car.”
       There are people who choose this lifestyle because it represents a throwback to a simpler life; others who have been made homeless out of rising rental costs that outstrip their wages; some through retirement dreams of travelling. Others, like me, who just find it cost-effective and are finally able to save money.
       I made my new home on the side of The Motueka River, 10km out of town, where the initial struggles to stay warm during winter were overcome with many layers of blankets and clothing (there were mornings I actually woke up sweating). I did not have a house-bus, a motorhome, or a van: I had a Nissan Cefiro 4-door sedan. Initially, I could only put the passenger seat partway down to sleep on because my belongings took up so much space in the back seat.
       One of my first goals was to get valuable items like my stereo, computer, and PlayStation out of the car – anything that would tempt thieves to break in. I managed to palm these off to friends. Once that was achieved, I began organising the car (honestly, like any kind of housework, something that never ends) and got a basic setup in the back seats and boot worked out with an op-shop fry pan (still going strong), cooking equipment, and clothing tucked into their own space.
       I didn’t know camping gas-cookers even existed, so was forced into doing something I had never done before: build a campfire (if only to get me started with a morning coffee). It took experimentation and lots of failures to get something capable of frying up potatoes, broccoli, and kumara over a fire.
       For the next six months, I walked and walked, wrote and wrote, talked to locals who came down to the river, bought food from foodstalls at the end of driveways – experienced life like I had never imagined I would. This was something completely different and unexpected, and proved just how capable I could be when plans are thrown out the window.

Having said all that, once I was on the riverside without a job to maintain a respectable appearance for, I did make one other snap decision: With a click of the fingers and a determined swing of a balled up fist, I said out loud to the swallows and fantails “I’m gonna grow me a beard!”
       And I did! A big bushy, unkempt bed that managed to attract only the most true-hearted of women. And thus, the adventures of W.F. Stubbs and Miss Sherlock began...
       So, at least for a while there, maybe I did look like someone who lived in their car.

Since 2018, I have upgraded to a stationwagon and can lie down in the back with my legs stretched out. I have a reading-light above me with two or three books at my side to choose as nightly reading, or a laptop for watching films on. I have enough storage space sectioned off alongside my bedding for two plastic clothes boxes, and at the end of these are the fry pans and cooking equipment. I cook over a hand-built campfire made from river rocks, and if it is wet or raining and I have shelter, I cook from the back of my car with a gas-cooker. If there is no shelter, then I will happily book a room in a motel or hostel (and do look for house-sitting options as well).
       Every night when I snuggle into my duvet and blankets with layers of soft bedding beneath me, I feel pleasantly satisfied and filled with emotional warmth that I have finally created a home that is my own. It may not be a house with room to stand or roam around in, but that is what outside is for. This is what I love the most about my living arrangement: that when I need to stand up, I am outside. And I have never spent so much time outside in the beauty of the natural world since I was a child growing up on farms.

Has this style of living, after six years of committing to it, finally become a lifestyle choice? Would I choose a house if I could? I have wrestled with these questions, and I can honestly say that yes, when those months of cold weather arrive each year, I would choose a house. But once Spring and Summer return to the lands, I welcome this life of living in a car I have created.


    • 07th August, 2024; Richmond


* * *

At the bottom of the published article there are some supportive reader replies.

There is also a question asking about where I toilet, since the car is obviously not self-contained. The answer should be obvious, but since it's not for some people, I will make a list:
  • Campground toilets
  • Longdrops
  • Recreational Park toilets
  • Service/petrol station toilets
  • Mall toilets
  • Jobsite toilets
  • Friend's toilets
  • Library toilets
  • Supermarket toilets
  • Free-standing public toilets

Basically, all the same places you would use if you needed to go to the toilet when you are away from home. Remember, my car is my home. I can drive anywhere I need to. The only difference, is that I make sure I have done my necessary toileting in any of the above places during opening/available hours. The idea that I would be shitting behind trees (which many like to propagate about freedom campers) is ridiculous with all the available options listed above in, around, and between every city, town, and village in New Zealand.

If there were ever a time that I was 'caught out' and had to go behind a tree, it would be the exact same reason you would be caught out and had to go behind a tree!


3 Comments
Sosyal Medya Uzmaı link
3/2/2025 02:39:29 am

This is a very good article. It is very difficult to come across articles like this these days. Congratulations.

Reply
iç giyim ürünleri link
4/4/2025 01:11:48 am

thank you

Reply
sultanbeyli evden eve nakliyat link
4/4/2025 01:12:31 am

thank you nie post article

Reply

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    January 2025
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    April 2024
    November 2023
    July 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    July 2022
    April 2022
    November 2021
    August 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    October 2020
    December 2019
    June 2019
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    May 2015
    March 2015
    July 2013

    Categories

    All
    A Scene
    Assault
    Bandcamp
    Beethoven
    Books
    Classical
    Crime
    Culture
    Dim Day
    Egoism
    Fiction
    Folk
    Guitar
    Health
    Home
    Housing
    Iinterview
    Journal
    Justice
    Literature
    Mental Health
    Miscarriage Of Justice
    Mozart
    MuseScore
    Music
    Music Reviews
    Musings
    Novel
    Orchestral
    Peace
    Poem
    Poetry
    Publishing
    Rock
    Rugby
    Science Fiction
    Social
    Society
    Sound
    The Tasman Journey
    Victims
    Work
    Writing
    YouTube

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • About
  • Buy
  • Poetry
  • Blog
  • Music
    • Selections & Links
    • Opus List
    • Proposed Albums
    • Songs Without Music >
      • 1993
      • The Hunter's Knife (Lyric)
    • Music Reviews