03/16/2026
She’s says exactly how I feel about boat life.
When I first moved onto a sailboat, I had no idea how much it would change the way I looked at life.
Living on the water strips things down to the essentials. You become aware of every gallon of water, every amp of power, every shift in the wind. There’s no endless closet space, no extra room for things you don’t really need. At first that felt like giving something up. Over time, I realized it was actually giving something back. More clarity. More quiet. More space to think about what matters.
Some mornings I wake up and step outside into the cockpit with a cup of coffee, and the entire world feels still. The water is flat. The air smells like salt. Pelicans glide past without making a sound. In moments like that, it hits me that this little floating home has taken me farther than any traditional path ever could.
I didn’t choose this life because it was easy. Boats break. Weather changes plans. Sometimes you’re fixing things you didn’t even know existed yesterday. But the trade-off is a kind of freedom that’s hard to explain unless you’ve felt it yourself.
The longer I live this way, the more I believe that the best lives are often the ones that look a little unconventional from the outside. A small home. Fewer possessions. More sunsets. More wind. More time spent close to the natural world.
And honestly, I wouldn’t trade this life on the water for anything.