The RV Park & Pause Principle
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Because Sometimes Slowing Down Moves You Further
When we first hit the road, we thought we were living the dream. Endless adventures, new campgrounds every few days, sunsets that changed zip codes faster than our mail could catch up.
We were doing it. Full-time RV life. Our great adventure.
After seven years of road noise, constant travel days, searches for our next spot to park, and the growing stack of gas receipts, it hit us….We aren’t living the dream.
We’re chasing it.
That’s when we stumbled (okay, crashed) into what we now call The Park & Pause Principle. It’s the idea that slowing down isn’t falling behind. It’s the secret to enjoying the ride.
The Desk, Alpine, TX
How We Learned the Hard Way
Like most new RVers, we started out fast. We had places to go, things to see, and a national park checklist that we couldn’t check off fast enough.
But after a few years, we noticed something: everything started to blur together.
Was that sunset in Utah or Arizona?
Was our last Crew event in Colorado or Florida?
And why did we both look so tired in every photo?
One night, after a long travel day that did NOT go as planned, we just sat there completely exhausted. We finally realized we can’t keep doing this. Something has to change.
We were supposed to be free, yet we were still running on fumes. It’s like we were back in the rat race, but in an RV instead of our house.
So, we decided it was time to slow down. To park and pause.
Grand Tetons Dispersed Camping
What “Park & Pause” Really Means
At its core, The Park & Pause Principle isn’t just about staying longer in one place. It’s about reclaiming your peace on the road.
It means leaving enough white space in your travel calendar for life to happen.
It means enjoying your morning coffee without feeling like you’re already behind schedule.
It means trading “How many miles can we make today?” for “How can we make today meaningful?”
Slowing down is intentional.
What We Found When We Slowed Down
When we stopped racing, life on the road got good again. Really good.
We started seeing things we used to drive right past. The mom & pops with the best pie, locals who love to share stories about their hometown, and the quiet hikes that never make it in our videos.
And something else happened. We started to actually rest.
The days felt slower, the air felt lighter, and that sense of constant rush? Completely gone.
That’s when we realized:
The best way to see more is to move less.
Slowing Down Saves More Than Energy
Here’s the funny thing….. when we stopped trying to go everywhere at once, our wallet took a deep breath too.
Our fuel costs dropped. Campground stays got cheaper (monthly rates are excellent). We ate out less because we finally had time to cook again.
And let’s be honest, fewer travel days also mean fewer stressful moments backing into sites. Yup, we’ve all been there! 😉 And this video proves it.
We discovered that slowing down doesn’t just make RV life more enjoyable… it makes it sustainable.
What It Looks Like in Real Life
Slowing down will mean something different for everyone. In the first few years, we moved every 3-4 days. A week long stay was a rare event. So booking a campground for 7-10 days is an absolute luxury for us. One we are enjoying.
Our travels finally have breathing room. We may even sit in one spot for a month every now and then. We are learning to explore at a slower pace, our own pace, and give ourselves time to just be.
That’s the secret sauce right there. When you give yourself time, you start to feel at home wherever you are.
We might spend the afternoon chatting with neighbors instead of packing up. (And by we I really mean Phil, because that is totally his best days.) My kind of day is when we stumble on a hidden small town farmer’s market because we stayed just one more day.
And suddenly, it’s not just a trip. It’s really seeing what’s around us. It’s a life. And it’s AMAZING!
And here’s a perfect example of how this looks in our real life:
We recently canceled a two-week trip to Big Bend. Yup… the whole thing. Campgrounds cancelled and the trip deleted from RV Trip Wizard. We were supposed to pack up, move the RV, and drive all those miles. But the truth is? We were tired. Really tired.
So instead of pushing through “because we planned it,” we did something wild… we stayed put.
We extended our stay in San Antonio and spent the entire month focusing on things we’ve been neglecting, like exercise, cooking healthy meals at home, and just being still for a bit. And honestly? It was exactly the reset we needed.
Sometimes slowing down isn’t about missing out.
It’s about finally giving your body and your brain the break they’ve been begging for.
Lower Lee Vining Campground, CA
Why Slowing Down Helps You Grow
There’s something special about putting down mini roots, even in a place you’ll eventually leave.
When you stay longer, you start to notice the details, the rhythm of the town, the quiet beauty that hides behind the tourist spots.
You also get space to grow as a traveler and as a person.
You learn patience, gratitude, and how to be content without a new view every week.
RV life stops being a sprint, and it becomes something steadier. Something that fills you up instead of burns you out.
More of the Best Parts
One of the biggest surprises we’ve learned from slowing down? You don’t just add more days… you add more of the good stuff.
For us, that “good stuff” almost always means people.
San Antonio meetup 2025
When we were moving every 3–4 days, we didn’t have time to meet our neighbors. We would get in a wave but that was about it. We were to busy chasing the next campground, the next city, the next lovely view. But now that we are building in longer stays, something magical happens.
We get to linger.
No more rushing off at sunrise. We have time for long conversations with our neighbors.
And the biggest gift of all?
We get to spend real time with our Someday Crew.
This community has become one of our favorite parts of RV life. When we slow down, we actually get to enjoy them. We are scheduling more meetups, musters, and RV rallies. Those who will be passing through this town, texts with our crew turn into two-hour hangouts. We’ve watched strangers become friends, and friends become family. It’s the kind of connection you simply can’t create when you’re racing across the map.
These moments don’t show up on Google Maps, and they definitely don’t fit into a travel itinerary. They only happen when you give yourself something RV life rarely hands you on its own:
Time.
When you slow the pace, you create space for the best parts of this lifestyle to show up. And trust me, they’re worth every extra day you stay.
Jersey, Channel Islands
The Truth About Slow Travel
The biggest surprise?
When you slow down, you don’t actually miss anything.
You gain more of everything that matters: more sunsets, more discovery, more laughter, more connection, and more memories that stick. Just more…
We used to think we’d never see it all if we didn’t keep moving. Now we know: seeing it all was never the point.
It’s about being present enough to feel it all.
The funny thing is, it took us parking the RV and traveling to Europe to really understand how true this is. Our goal when we Linger Longer in a foreign country is to stay long enough to get to know the rhythm of the place. Learn the customs. To actually talk to the lady at the corner grocery store or the barista pouring our coffee at our favorite people watching spot. To actually learn their names and let them tell us about their piece of the world. It always ends up being the best part of our trip!
So wouldn’t we do that with our RV travels? Why are we missing out on the best parts of travel in the US?
Vortex Springs, Ponce de Leon, FL
The Takeaway
If you’re new to full-time RV life and feel the urge to go, go, go, we get it. We’ve been there.
But take it from two people who’ve chased miles and found exhaustion and burnout waiting at the finish line: the magic happens when you park and pause.
The Park & Pause Principle isn’t just a clever name. It’s the heart of what makes this lifestyle truly freeing. It’s about slowing down enough to enjoy the journey and finding joy in the still moments along the way.
Because sometimes, the best adventures don’t start with “Where to next?”
They start with, “Let’s just stay one more day.”
Meet Stacy! Stacy and her husband, Phil, are a wanderlust couple who have been roaming the great USA for an epic 7 years! They ditched the daily grind to embark on thrilling adventures and inspire fellow dreamers to chase their travel dreams. Curious about how they do it? Check out their awesome YouTube channel, Today is Someday, where they're spilling all the secrets to living a life on the move. Get ready to pack your bags and join them on this incredible journey.