lingamish
Always joking. Always serious.
Are you one of the new nomads?
Categories: Family

“Nomadism increases productivity—you get more done. With it comes an addictive behaviour that also occurs in gambling. There is a random pattern of awards, you never know when it pays out, so you keep going.”

Source: Author interview with Andreas Kluth

I am so there! What is interesting to me about the “new” trend is that personnel in my mission have been pretty much living this way for the last decade. Many of us move multiple times per year. We attend conferences and workshops where we are uprooted from “home” for weeks and sometimes months on end. I once asked my kids where home was. Their unanimous response: The Land Rover.

Everybody I know on the field is a workaholic. We love what we do and the trick is learning how to shut the door and turn out the light. This past year as I have been exploring mobile technology I have experienced all the symptoms of addiction. In fact, this week I’m checking in to a rehab clinic for five days with no computer, no cell phone, just nothing. Actually, it’s not a clinic just a resort on the beach of Lake Malawi where our family is getting away from it all for a few days.

If you are a fellow homeless professional, you might enjoy checking out the series of articles online at the Economist: The new nomadism.

People who read this also read:

Our nomadic future
HT: Fernando Fermino The Economist this month has a series of posts on the future (and present) of the...
Postly paucity
I was just getting ready to make fun of John Hobbins for posting so many items in a single day. Then...
The Ongoing Adventures of ASBO Jesus
Caption: Walking hand in hand with faith and doubt. One of the brightest of the rising stars of the...
Making jokes about Mugabe
I want to recommend to you an excellent article on Mobile Active on the way cell phones are being used...

2 Comments to “Are you one of the new nomads?”

  1. eclexia says:

    I’m thinking the increased productivity benefit of nomadism may be highly personality dependent. Everything about that first paragraph runs against the fiber of my being as an ISFJ. Each phrase left me feeling a little like gasping for breath.

    That emotional response I had also helped me understand why I have never seemed to fit well into that kind of lifestyle and working style that charges up other people, increasing their productivity and sharpness and acuity, and leaves me looking and feeling increasingly less competent and functional.

    I hope you all enjoy your time away :)

  2. [...] it for the endorphin rush in exchange. (This new information I heard makes sense in connection with Lingamish’s post on the new nomads and how nomadism can increase productivity and also become a type of [...]

Leave a Reply