Indefinite Backpack Travel
The YouTube algorithm recently suggested me this short, from an extremely minimalist guy who has lived out of a small backpack for the last 10 years. He — Jeremy Maluf — travels the world, staying in different places for a month or two at a time, eating every meal out, then moves on. He has no other possessions, though he keeps a home base in NYC because it’s relatively cheap compared to staying in Airbnbs there — but he says he never spends any time there except for sleeping. (Also, it’s hilarious to me that as minimal as he is, he still carries both a MacBook Air and an iPad Pro.)
This video kind of lit a fire inside of me. It’s been about a decade since I started to become a bit of a minimalist myself — though never to the level of this guy — but I have found myself intentionally loosening the reins in recent years (mostly to good effect, I think). Maybe it’s time to start going the other way again.
What the video, and his accompanying blog posts, made me realise were that there is so much freedom and possibility in how one can spend their life. As the tagline on his YouTube channel reads, “Live a life no one has lived before”. I find his lifestyle quite inspiring, and although I’m not about to start doing the same thing myself, I do like the idea of incorporating some aspects of it into my own life, albeit on a lesser scale. I’m not quite sure what that looks like yet, but I feel that hearing about him has opened my mind to new opportunities. Doing longer stretches of travel with only a backpack, for one. (I’ve been doing weekends away with only a 28L backpack for a few years now and it’s great.)
Here he is back in 2017 — poetically his website is as minimal as his lifestyle, and he doesn’t even keep old blog posts on there, instead giving you links to the Internet Archive versions of his website from back then:
Some perks of carrying everything you own in your backpack include always having everything you need with you, not being able to waste money shopping, and being able to travel at any given moment (literally if you feel like visiting another country all you need to do is call an uber to the airport).
Now that’s freedom.
He’s also extremely active, averaging about 30,000 steps per day, and once even walked 100,000 steps in a day, just for the challenge. As he points out in the video, for context there are only 86,400 seconds in a day, so walking 100,000 steps is kind of mind-blowing to me.
A lifestyle centred around travel and exploring, being physically active and not tied down in any way, with a minimal-yet-sufficient set of quality possessions that you always have with you. That’s quite something.
I’m not sure where I’m going with this post. It’s just been a while since I heard about someone living in such an unusual way, where it’s kind of woken me up to all the possibilities that are lying there outside my field of view. It feels good to reconsider how I’m living my life, and put some serious thought into how I could make better use of all the freedom I currently have.















