Why Being a Digital Nomad Sucks (to Me)
Published on JunĀ 19, 2018 (updated MayĀ 18, 2024), filed under adventure, misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon orĀ Bluesky?)
For countless yearsādoes anyone know how many?āhas it been a thing to romanticize the lifestyle of digital and global nomads, of people who live and work remotely. Very remotely, ideally, in other countries and on other continents. Iāve lived that life in my one and a half years of travel around the world, and by some definitions I still live it given how much work I do in cafĆ©s (elbgold, of all Hamburg roasters) and on the road.
That last definition, however, of merely working from places other than oneās office or home, weāll discard here. Letās instead use the one of working in places other than oneās current city (which covers everyone who has no single one city). Thatās where I say, nomadism sucks.
Why? Letās first note that exceptions will prove the rule. If you know my writings then you know that I like to exaggerate for emphasis.
Now, why? Because nomadism means a hit to oneās relationships: It separates oneself from the people one cares about, and from the ones who care about oneself. Nomadism means deterioration of oneās connections. Contrary to common belief, nomadism hinders the option to build and grow new long-term relationships.
It gets worse when the nomad doesnāt seek to make exactly this experience, to test themselves and to perhaps try to create relationships elsewhere even without a good prospect of them being lasting. After all, the family will still welcome oneself back, friends may not entirely disappear, either, and any acquaintances made on the road, thatās all bonus. Maybe thatās okay. And we should not forget about simple unawareness, that the nomad may not even think about a possible strain to their relations with other people. But that leads me to this bitter taste that I perceive around nomadism these days.
It gets worse because I cannot help thinking that nomadism may be glorified escapism.
That nomadism may have become the highest, most socially accepted, most respected art form of the flight reflex.
That nomadism may be harmful.
A Personal Story
This is leaning much on the exaggeration side now; remember my note that I love exaggeration for emphasis. Maybe it helps when I add something from my own experience. When I set out to travel for a long time then it was for adventure. As I had lived in North America, wanted to return to Europe, and found myself between very different challenges, that āmade sense.ā
But thatās also the surface story. Personally, I had not glorified nomadism back thenābut I was completely fāed in my dealings with people. Stuck. I was miserable. I was free-wheeling between a need for high performance at Google, thousands of activities, and the unbelievable demands, as I had felt them, of life in Silicon Valley: Be great at what youāre doing, be successful, be active, be healthy, be fit, of course, look great, be social, be generous, be happy. (For some that genuinely worksābut I worry that for others, for many, this lifestyle constantly tears at the seams of their personality and their mental well-being.)
My relationships had turned shallow, and that had only been a continuation of a life of shallow relationships. Genuinely warm and compassionate on the surface, with a great pull to go deeper, but still shallow. Always on the defenseāyet our defenses, something to get back at elsewhere, are truly offenses. I had learned this early, in a childhood and adolescence I long deemed to have consisted only of emotional abuse, when I had felt left alone from earliest age, neglected so much that at some point I believed that physical abuse would have had imparted a greater value on me, and that having been an orphan would have been favorable, too, for it would have made clear (and not leave 19 yearsāat the age I moved outāof hope), that I had no oneāand it would not have created the illusion of a family that would be there for me. (I donāt think anymore that my upbringing had really been that traumatic.)
Relationships were shallow, then, and even though there had been people Iām confident I could have risked the depth of authentically close connections with (Julia, Merci, Vijay, most of all š) there was no thing and no one to hold me back, then. And so I set out, to become the blissful traveling working nomad, digital and global and whatnot.
What leads us back to the topic of nomadism is the suspicion that nomadism may also for other people not be a positive action (to actively seek something), but a negative one (something we do to avoid).
A Suspicion
First and foremost, now, I cannot conclude anything from my own experiences. Despite all skepticism that logic applied to everything, thatās too hasty a generalization even for my taste. But my own experience feeds a suspicion. Or the suspicion:
Nomadism can, in the words of Harry Sullivan, serve as a delicate, complicated defense operation. On the surface it may look like an adventurous, freedom-loving, self-made entrepreneur lifestyle. But behind it may well lurk feelings of insufficiency, lack of healthy intimate relationships, and despair.
(Elsewhere, people argue that nomads might also miss what gives life purposeāwhich seems to be work. Work as in doing things we enjoy and find meaningful and fulfilling.)
I hesitated for a moment whether to go into yet more detail or not;ābut I will want to be brief from here and say that that doesnāt have to be the case, and even if, that it doesnāt need to be ābad.ā I myself have been in an unfortunate situation with my own nomadism, not seeing it for what it was, and ultimately it was to my benefit. The same may hold true for others, or for all of us. Does that lead to a contradiction? Noālife experiences seem to have several sides to them. But it means that today, Iām skeptical about nomadism, and personally Iāve begun to cherish my relations so much that I wouldnāt want to jeopardize them. Not these days. Not anymore. And therefore being a nomad, in my eyes, at this time, sucks.
PS.
Incidentally, a friend of mine shared quite a different perspective. I find that one interesting, too.
Have a look at 100 Things I Learned as an Everyday Adventurer and Journey of J. for the lessons I learned while exploring activities and localities. It was not all for nothing.
(This is one of five ālostā articles that I only published in 2021.)
About Me
Iām Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iām a web developer, manager, and author. Iāve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youāve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iām an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OāReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)