Interview with Seasoned Hitchhiker Irv Thomas: Part 3 “Living & Travelling Subjectively”


Below is the last of a three part series in which I interviewed author and record-holding hitchhiker Irv Thomas. See part one of this interview if you haven’t read it yet.

In this final part of the interview, Irv and I discuss how life itself is moldable, and we touch on some subjective reality concepts and how they relate to travel. Irv also gives us straightforward, practical advice on how you too can drop out of the system, just as he did all those decades ago. We also talk about the true meaninglessness of age and why Irv is a “Boy Octogenarian”; and we wrap up this in-depth interview with a prediction from Irv about where the world might be headed and some encouraging trends he sees as we head into the future.

Irv Thomas Interview
Part 3: Living & Travelling Subjectively

64. Let’s start to wind it down. What advice would you give to people who want to exit the system or “drop out” as you did? I’m sure the way you could do that has changed a lot since 40 years ago.

That’s probably true. And you need to have people you can rely on as fallback. Today, I found my little travelling address book that I used back then. It’s just a little looseleaf wallet-sized binder; but it had everything, all the people I connected with, in every state. With this book in hand, I could go anywhere in the country and find people I knew. It’s a wonderful resource.

You essentially are relying on your connection to other people. And you have to be a good friend maker, and not press people. Don’t push yourself on people, which I did at times. And I found out only later that I was a little less than welcome in some places.

65. And you would have been in your 40s, right?

Well, more like my 50s or 60s by this time. This took a while to grow. I started out with a backlog of $500 that I didn’t want to get below or I’d go looking for a job, just to be on the safe side. And each year that was $100 less. And after 5 years, I was comfortable having no backlog at all!

66. Wow, an adjustment to your comfort zone, wasn’t it?

Yeah. So you just gradually get used to this way of living, and you’re learning all the time. And one of my key ideas was that if you can live as though something is true for 3 years… it becomes true. That was my time limit for something like that.

67. Do you think that’s how long it took for your belief to change then?

Well, that could be equated to creating your own reality. I was learning these things way back then. Why it ever surprises me now, I don’t know. I guess I fell out of it eventually just like eventually I fell back into it. You can create your own reality as insecurity, just as easily.

68. That’s true. You can create a situation where you’re miserable. You can create a situation where you don’t think you can create your own reality. You can use it against itself!

And I think that our world is changing.

69. Any other advice for people who want to exit the system? Support structure is huge. Changing your beliefs about money sounds like is another crucial aspect to it.

Yeah, that’s true. And just in general, realize that life is moldable. It’s not a stable, static thing.

70. No, and that’s one of the things that you write about in the newsletter that I really like. You often talk about how objective reality interacts with our minds, that there’s this complex relationship between ourselves, others, and the universe… Maybe that description is a bit too hippy, haha!

No, because I know enough people and try to interact as well as I can with all of the people I know, at least long enough so I can put myself across to them and understand who they are. It’s marvelous just to pay attention to the people you know and learn who they are as you’re showing them who you are. To accept them. To just live with the differences.

71. The core of empathy…

I think a lot of my incentive, which I figured out later, came from the fact that my world dried up of friendships in the time that I was married. They just got shallower and shallower, and I need people. I just need people to interact with, to validate each other’s reality.

72. We talked before about how one of your old girlfriends considered your subjective framework as an “unproductive” way to live, but that doesn’t seem logical to me. I mean, aren’t you still making stuff? From the consistent work you put into the newsletters and revising your books, you seem pretty productive from my side.

Yeah, but both of us, you and I, are still on the minor fraction of the country’s consciousness.

73. What do you think makes us different?

Well, I tend to think you’re more representative of your generation. I think that that’s a part of your capability of living in the world as it is. I’m not a part of your generation. I’m intruding on it… or I’m trying to borrow from it or learn from it, perhaps.

74. Well, you’re invited here.

Yeah, but I’ve gotten so far stretched from my own generation that it’s become pretty loose and filmy. I mean, my connection with your generation isn’t really strong enough for me to ride on.

75. Although when you first dropped out, you were out of synch with that generation, as well, weren’t you?

Yeah, there was but it was close enough that I could make the leap. And the one following that one… I’m not even sure if that’s even your generation yet.

76. Probably not, haha. I’m part of Generation Y.

Okay, yeah. Well, the boomers are in their 60s. And the ones in their 40s, I can still manage. And the ones in their 20s, which is you… boy, I don’t have much connection with. But you’re one of my few guides to it.

77. Well… I’m honored.

Well, you dropped in. And I sometimes wonder why you did! What brought you here?

78. You mean when I visited Seattle almost 2 years ago?

Yeah, what brought you here?

79. Well, I told you. I saw your posts on Couchsurfing’s discussion boards, and you seemed like a fascinating person. I remember responding to some of your threads, too.

That’s been my only source of connection to your generation… Well, I actually took a class at the U in my department late last year. And I could connect with a couple people there, too; but only briefly. But it’s like they faded out just as fast as they faded in.

80. Yeah, my generation can have severe attention deficit disorder… which I try to write toward, haha!

How many people on your mailing list?

81. Oh, the newsletter is still relatively new, so not a ton yet. The thing I look at is how many people I’m affecting, how many visits I get; and that’s been growing consistently. As long as I continue to get better at what I’m doing and providing more value to more people, I’m happy.

And I did want to say one thing about my generation: while many of Generation Y do have attention deficit disorder, as easy as it may be to fall out of talking with them, I think you’ll find it’s just as easy to fall back into talking with them.

Okay. Well, I know people on the web in your generation, but certainly not in person much.

82. Anyway, during the West Coast trip, I wanted to visit Seattle and then I realized, “Hey, I know someone in Seattle!” And I sent you a Couchsurfing request.

That’s the magic of Couchsurfing. One day you could be reading someone’s thoughts on the discussion board and the next day you could be crashing on their couch. Perhaps you even realize things that you have in common that you didn’t think you had in common with anyone else. While you hosted me, we had conversations where I was thinking, “Is this guy really in his 80s?”

Yeah, I’ve always had a problem with “being my age.”

83. But is that anything more than just an expectation, a social construction?

Well, sure it is, but we all have them. We all have them personally, and we have them societally. And that’s the problem. Because you obviously have an image of somebody in their 80s since you’re making the contrast.

84. Sure, but you’re not the only person I’ve met in their 80s, either. So, I guess my surprise was your energy. And you’re much more open minded than most people in their 80s that I’ve met!

I kid myself about it. You remember when I signed myself “Irv Thomas, Boy Octogenarian”? Hahaha!

85. Haha, that’s catchy, like a superhero name.

The thing is, I’ve always been a kid in my head.

86. Maybe that’s not being a kid though, maybe that’s just the way we are, and we somehow lose that.

Well, that’s what I finally figured out. This was me when I was a kid, this was me when I was middle-aged, and this is me now… and it’s the same me.

87. Mmm hmm. Maybe that kid thing, maybe that playfulness, curiosity, and energy that we associate with childhood is really just… being human.

Well, it’s hard for me to realize that all these other people around me have grown old and died. And of course if I look in the mirror I can see that I’m among them, but if I stay away from the mirror I’m fine.

88. Stay away from the mirror, Irv!

Yeah, I should do away with mirrors in my house.

89. To start wrapping this up, I’m going to ask you a few “future vision” type of questions, because I think it’s fitting:

What do you see for the future, Irv? Do you think hitchhiking will go away? And also what do you see for the future generally? Feel free to elaborate… Just an easy question to finish on, of course.

Haha, yeah a simple question. I think things are definitely going to change, and it’s going to be caused by the realization that our society isn’t going anywhere. Maybe it’ll go bankrupt, I don’t know. In fact, I just got word today of an organization called October2011.org and they’re setting up an action for October 6th in Washington, DC. You should try and get to it if you can, because it has a lot of big names already signed on to it. And the reason they chose October 6th is because it’s the 10 year anniversary of the war, I think. And they’re going to say, in effect, this isn’t what we want. We want a different world.

90. We don’t want war…

Don’t want war…

91. How is that different from what happened in the 60s?

It seems like the current movement is what it seems like. It seems like this year’s 1960s. That’s the feeling that I get. Check the website out, and you’ll get a feeling for it. Other than that, even if it’s not done on a level of revolt, it’s being done at a level of community organization. We’ve got a good one going here, and it’s a replica of one that was started in England: the Transition Town Movement. And these are popping up all over.

92. What is that, exactly?

Neighborhood community organization getting back down to basics in interactive community in what they can do with and for eachother.

93. Sounds like a Twenty-First Century Tribe.

Yeah, composed of people older than the youngsters were then, floating on both sides of the boomers.

94. It takes all ages… Wow, there’s so much good stuff in this interview, Irv. I may have to break it up into two or three articles.

Well, I won’t fault you for that.

95. I’m looking forward to it! And that about wraps it up.

You know, it’s been good talking with you, and we should do it occasionally now that we’ve got this link.

96. Yeah, now that Skype is up and running. And thank you so much Irv for doing an interview with me today.

Well, thank you for bringing it up and making it happen. I appreciate that.

97. Yeah, I had this gut feeling that it needed to happen soon, so I made it happen. Thanks again, Irv!


A big thanks to Irv for agreeing to do this interview. If you missed the first or second parts of this interview be sure to check them out for valuable context.

More on Irv can be found at:



Interview with Seasoned Hitchhiker Irv Thomas: Part 2 “Derelict Days & Tips”


Below is part two of a three part series in which I interviewed author and record-holding hitchhiker Irv Thomas. See part one of this interview if you haven’t read it yet.

When we last left off, Irv was telling the story of how he was picked up by a man who he soon realized was a car thief. This man then asked Irv if they should try to bypass the California border patrol. Irv told him that he couldn’t give any suggestions, so the man buzzed past the California border with Irv still in the car. And as you probably can imagine, the cops came after them pretty quickly. After all, just a single diseased fruit could potentially bring down the entire agricultural industry of California, surely causing Californiageddon…

Or not. But running the border patrol is definitely not a good idea.

For part two, we get down to the fundamentals of how hitchhiking can forever change your perspective of how we live in this world, as well as some ideas on the surprising things you can be capable of when you assume full responsibility for your life. Many great resources are referenced and linked to, as well; and I encourage you to check them out and take advantage of them, such as Irv’s newsletter. Some of these links are indispensable resources, and some of them, like Couchsurfing.org, have had a truly profound effect on my life.

Irv Thomas Interview
Part 2: Derelict Days & Practical Hitchhiking Tips

25. So wait a minute. You guys just blew past the California border? And you’re sixteen. What are you going to say?

Well, I’m not going to participate in making up his mind, one way or the other.

26. What’s your main reason for not doing that?

Because I knew something was wrong. I knew that he had a problem. I didn’t know if he’d stole it or not, but I had no reason to think it was his car by that time.

27. You knew you couldn’t trust him.

Right, and I didn’t want to be a part of his choices and decisions. That was validated when the cops didn’t take my word for it, or didn’t take his word for it that he’d picked me up as a hitchhiker. So I had to go all the way back to Oregon to find the place where the last driver had left me off, because it had been in front of the driver’s house.

28. So they talked to that person at that house and…

He validated that he picked me up. It was a wonderful situation for a story, and of course that part I remember entirely well because it was the most significant adventure of the whole trip!

29. Isn’t it funny how the craziest thing at the time ends up being the most enjoyable to tell later on?

Oh yeah, I’ve told that story a million times, or a hundred anyway, and you know the time came years later when I tried to find that spot again where his house was. And I’ve never been able to locate it. Either they moved a road or they took down a hill or something. It’s not at all the way I remember it.

At any rate, do you have my hitchhiking book?

30. Yes, I have Derelict Days.

Well, that story is in it.

31. That book is chocked full of adventures! It chronicles tons of your hitchhiking journeys. For anyone curious, its full title is “Derelict Days: 60 Years on the Roadside Path to Enlightenment.” Highly recommended.

And I went back and got the book redone. I added a new chapter which includes the hitchhiking trip I did two years ago when I was 82. So instead of “60 years” it’s “66 years on the Roadside Path to Enlightenment.”

32. Well, there you go. Now the circle is complete. And anyone who is the least bit curious about hitchhiking (or even travel adventures in general) should definitely check that book out.

The thing that I like to stress about the book is that hitchhiking was my best teacher as far as showing me how life takes care of you and that things happen as they should. I came to learn all of that from hitchhiking.

33. Kind of gave you faith in the way the universe works and probably informed the way you think about the spiritual aspect of life, as well, didn’t it?

Yes, it introduces you to other elements of life besides what society, with its deliberate intent, tries to teach you. It tells you that life is different from what you were taught.

34. And that people are a little bit less scary than what the television tells us. I know that’s definitely been true for me.

Yeah, and you did your own hitchhiking.

35. Yes, I got up to Seattle via hitchhiking. I talked about that experience in an article, actually.

And it’s almost like there’s a concerted effort to discourage people in this country from hitchhiking. And did you know that Couchsurfing.org has a hitchhiking contingent? They have a section devoted to hitchhikers.

36. Oh yes! On their discussion boards. There are a bunch of interesting discussion sections on Couchsurfing: rideshare, nomadic discussions, places to find travel partners, and definitely hitchhiking discussions… I love CS’s discussion boards.

And it’s very popular in Europe now, yet it’s totally discouraged in this country, even though there is a good website for hitchhiking in the USA, as well.

37. So was there a moment, perhaps on that first trip, where you thought, “This is it. This is in my blood.”?

I just saw it as a good way to travel when you don’t have a car. It was a free way to travel; there were occasions where I could earn some income along the way; and generally it was just an adventurous way to go. This was really important to me as a kid.

38. What kinds of things would you do get extra income? What opportunities would present themselves?

In later trips I stopped off to pick hops in a hop farm in Oregon. In the evening, I could go into a bowling alley and set pins for several hours. They didn’t have automated machinery, so they hired local kids. And I remember doing that one evening, working myself up to a big sweat, in fact. And I think I made $3 that night, and that was big money.

39. How much of a time investment?

For 3 hours of work, but you weren’t paid by the hour, you were paid by the line you took care of. I don’t remember what the rate was, but it wasn’t all that much. They didn’t charge all that much for anything in those days.

40. So what year do you think that would have been?

My early adventures were all in the 1940s. And then I didn’t hitch at all until I had dropped out, which was around 20 years later. Then I had to get used to it all over again, and I felt kind of silly at that age.

41. And you would have been in your 40s. What was it like getting used to that again?

It took a while, but it was a different situation. I was doing it because there was no other way for me to travel. I didn’t have a car. But I also didn’t have the funds to travel “legitimately”; but since I had hitchhiked as a kid and knew all about it, I thought, “Why not?” In fact, recently I’ve even had occasion to grab a ride in the area here. And it’s happened! I’ve been picked up.

42. You mean in the middle of Seattle?

Yes, right!

43. You mean, in the middle of the city… you stick out your thumb?

The funny part was I wrote an article about it because I got stuck in the winter when I was freezing, and I missed a bus. I thought, “Why not?”, and a bus returning to the bus barn picked me up, even though he wasn’t taking passengers. And I guess he took pity on me, because he drove me down the hill where I ordinarily get off. And there’s a friend of mine who’s in her late 60s who doesn’t have a car, and she visited me once and got a ride from here to the boat going back up to Victoria!

44. How did she find a ride?

I told her to catch a bus on the corner, and what I didn’t know was that the bus no longer stops on that corner. And she didn’t know where the bus stops, so she stuck her thumb out. It was around 6:30AM…

45. Wow… now those are the kind of senior citizens that I want to hear about! That’s so awesome. She must have been quite a confident person to do that, because most people wouldn’t even dream of doing that.

I know that, but she’d been living without a car for so long that she knew her way around in that world.

46. It changes you in a really positive way, doesn’t it?

Yes, I think so.

47. So were you hooked from the start, hitching, when you were a kid?

Well, I think so. I always enjoyed it. The first time, I went north to the Canadian border. The second time, I went to New Mexico to visit a pal of mine who was in service there. And the third time, I just wanted to get to southern California where I settled for a few months. And then I remember going from San Francisco to Sacramento. I think I did that with the woman I married.

48. You hitchhiked with her?

Yeah, just for the experience.

49. But she wasn’t much of a fan of travelling that way, was she?

No… well, she was still young. And I think we may not have been in college yet. But when people are younger, they have more life in them. That’s the worst part about getting into social convention is that you lose the sense of life as a kid. Well, “kid” as a youngster, as a college kid. College kids will do a lot that they won’t do 5 years later.

50. That’s true. Why do you think that happens?

Socialization and conventionalization.

51. What if you want to break out of that? What kind of advice would you give to people who want to hitchhike in the US today? I know that advice will be different than for Europe.

I suppose I’d advise them to go with a friend, just to get over the uneasiness. Rides aren’t as easy to get for two people as they are for one, but there is always someone who will pick you up because people are amazingly different from one another.

52. Do you think it’s that difference that makes hitchhiking possible, on some level? Or is it just human generosity or the faith humans have in each other?

It’s probably ragged today. I mean, people are standing around panhandling. And what I’m amazed at is the way other people just breeze past them as though it’s a nuisance. I do it myself sometimes. I’ve lately tried to pace myself on it. I like to give dollars to people out there panhandling.

53. And you have a lot more time than you otherwise would have to work with, don’t you?

Well, I’ve had all my time for whatever I want to use it for… for years now. The last time I earned any stable income was when I first moved to Seattle.

54. I agree that people will benefit from hitchhiking with a friend, especially the first time. I know it was hard for me the first time because I was still understanding the social dynamic for how it works.

Is there anything else that you would suggest for people doing it for the first time?

Yes. Do it outside of a big city. It’s horrible trying to hitch in a city, from any place. Like from here, I prefer to take a bus down to Olympia and hitch from there.

55. Yeah, it’s better if you can actually find the onramp which is the onramp everybody has to use to get to the direction you want to go.

But also there are areas, probably anywhere I think, that are not burdened by a freeway, where you’re exposed to the traffic going out of town, all of it.

56. You mean like county roads and state roads that aren’t super clovers?

They haven’t got a million cars, but you get all of the traffic out of town.

57. What about in Europe? You’ve hitchhiked in Europe, right?

That’s a mixed bag. You sort of have to know the territory. Places have different attitudes towards hitchhiking and hitchhikers. And to some extent there will even be different ways of holding out your arm or hands for a ride; so unless you have some local guidance, it’s not always the easiest thing in the world. I remember trying it in France and being very confused as to the customs there. I did it in various countries and had varying degrees of success with it. England was great. I always thought Britain was one of the best hitchhiking places I even went to.

58. And they probably do it the same way we do, I’d imagine. Thumbs up.

Yep.

59. Let’s talk a bit about safety. The way I’ve always done it is when someone pulls over, I immediately listen to what my gut instinct tells me about this person. And I think that the more you travel and meet people, the more you learn to trust your instincts about that. And I’ve never had a negative experience.

And also there are different kinds of negative experiences, too.

60. That’s a very good point.

And my worst have been with the driving and the traffic as far as anything I’d consider a negative experience. One day it occurred to me that most of my difficult or troublesome rides were with two people in the front seat and me in back. I don’t really trust that combination.

61. Why is that?

I don’t know. I guess I shouldn’t say that it’s always a correlation, but the only times I’ve had any problem has always been with two people in the front seats. And it’s occurred in different situations, too. On my last hitchhike, I had a very funny one where the guy finally threw me out of the car!

62. The guy threw you out of the car? What happened!?

Well, that’s in the story too. One of my previous scrapbooks, I’ll forward it to you, so you have the story.

63. That’s actually a really good point. People can subscribe to your scrapbook newsletter.

Yes, they can email me a request. (Editing Note: You can also use this the online form.) It doesn’t have an website, though. But this one story is really funny. I actually made this guy angry, and he threw me out of his car! Haha!


Coming up in Part Three:

  • Practical advice on how you too can “drop out”
  • How live simpler and realize that life is moldable
  • And a prediction about the changes coming very soon to our planet

So you can see why I’m looking forward to sharing with you the third (and final) installment of this rare interview.

See the exciting conclusion to the interview →


List of Resources in Part 2