383 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
383 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 641
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Title: HPR0641: Urban Camping ep 7
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0641/hpr0641.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 00:18:00
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---
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Hi everyone, this is Class 2, and this is episode 7 of the How To Be an Urban Camper mini-series.
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This episode is going to be talking about daylight hours as an urban camper,
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which doesn't really seem like a topic, but it kind of is.
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So previously we were speaking about money, how to make it.
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And I mentioned in that episode that I kind of liked having a job while urban camping,
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because it gave me sort of something to do during the day,
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because I feel like I wear out my welcome pretty severely at most of the places that I go to.
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So again, the theory of rotation is not a bad idea for this kind of topic,
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and I guess it's something that I don't do all that well all the time.
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But I do try sometimes.
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And so, yeah, what do you do during the day when you're urban camping?
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You don't really sit around your apartment, for instance, so what do you do?
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Well, one of those things is a job.
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If you've got a job, that will eat up four to six hours of your day right there.
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Some place to sit and work on your own stuff while pretending to work on someone else's stuff.
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Perfect. What else might you do?
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Well, of course my favorite is cafe.
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Cafe is in theory great places, because you very frequently,
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and you have to kind of look around for the good ones.
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And sadly right now, I just recently moved out of the area that I used to look
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to the little neighborhood that I used to live in, and there was a great cafe there.
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It was fantastic cafe.
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And I've moved into a different neighborhood, and the local cafes are jokes.
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They're just not real cafes.
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You know, they're franchisey kinds of cafes, not the big evil one,
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but other lesser evil ones.
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And they're just not as good.
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But there is one kind of good place. It's not quite as close as it should be,
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so I don't go there as often as I might.
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My point being that a good cafe is one with free refills, obviously, right?
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So if you go to a cafe and they have free coffee refills after you just buy one cup,
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you're set for the whole day.
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And I've literally spent from, I mean, there was one cafe that I used to go to on weekends,
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and I would, I showed up at 6 a.m., and I stayed until 8 or 9 p.m. at night.
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And that was, I mean, it was a great place.
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It had a power outlet and free refills on coffee.
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There was literally nothing else I needed all day.
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Oh, I needed food.
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But they had food there, too.
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Not great food.
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But it was food enough to keep me going.
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So yeah, it was, that was really great.
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And so cafes can be wonderful for that.
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And again, rotating around so that you're not just camping out every day at the same cafe.
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They start to notice you after a while.
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If you're really friendly and amicable and outgoing and everything,
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they might not really mind it.
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I mean, you can become that regular customer who's a real pleasure to have around.
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Unfortunately, I wasn't really that all the time.
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Not at every cafe.
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Now, there was one cafe, the great one that I mentioned earlier.
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And one day their internet went down.
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And the first I just ignored it because I wasn't using their connection anyway.
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So I didn't really care.
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And I didn't want to be like that guy who, you know, knows everything and comes up and says,
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oh, you have to do this.
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I just didn't want to add to that noise.
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So finally, I kind of, they were really kind of concerned about it or whatever.
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And people were asking about it.
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So I just poked around on, got to their router, you know, looked around.
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It was the default password, of course.
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Kind of figured out what their problem was.
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And then I spent like, actually, like half an hour on the phone with their ISP trying to get them to reset their connection.
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Because their modem is like sort of gotten disconnected and it wouldn't get the IP from the ISP.
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Anymore, so finally that got fixed.
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And then after that, I was like, I was that guy.
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I was, hey, it's you.
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Thanks for that internet fix here.
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Have some more coffee.
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And that was really great.
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So I could stay there all day, every day, and they would never mind it.
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So little things like that really do help.
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Other cafes, I didn't do that.
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I wasn't friendly.
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I was more like on the creepy side of things, I think.
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And I would sit, huddled off in a corner, typing away, not looking up, drinking all the coffee I wanted,
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and ordering like one bagel all day.
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So I don't think they really cared for me all that much at those places.
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But you know what, I don't care.
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So cafes are good for that.
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And they tend to be really, really good when they get the free refills and when they have power.
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Those are two important things.
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Let's see what else can you do.
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Well, libraries, of course.
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City libraries are fantastic places.
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Because once again, you can basically camp out there all day.
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Now, I don't tend to love them as much because they tend to be very strict.
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That you're not allowed to have food or drink there.
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And that kind of annoys me.
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And then you have to get up and leave to go get food.
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And you have to stay out.
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And then you have to go back.
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I just, I don't like that.
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I like to camp out.
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I like to sit down and be there all day.
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Or at least for a very long time.
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But maybe you're not that way.
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Maybe you like a change of scenery.
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So that might work perfectly fine for you.
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Libraries are also, they tend to be very distracting.
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I mean, there's a lot of cool stuff that your typical library.
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More books obviously than you can ever think to even begin to read.
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And of course, every time I go into a library,
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I end up bringing like 20 books back to my table.
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As if though I'm going to read them all in that one sitting.
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And it never happens.
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So I have mixed feelings about libraries.
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I mean, as places to work, I mean, they're great to work in.
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But they're also very sort of distracting and not very...
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They don't make many allowances for comfort at your typical library.
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But they can be great because they really don't bother you.
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They don't think twice if you go in there every day for half the day.
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I've done it.
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They're almost one of the places that you just don't even wear out your welcome somehow.
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They don't really ever mind it when people show up every day all day.
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That's really nice about them.
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So libraries are good.
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Their hours tend to be fairly poor.
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Cafes tend to have better hours.
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I have sounds.
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So libraries kind of, they're not open quite as often.
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Schools are usually very good too.
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Because schools, especially if you can kind of pass yourself off as a like you belong there,
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you can go to schools and just hang out.
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No one's going to notice everyone thinks you belong there.
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If you're on a computer, they don't care.
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I do that all the time.
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I'll go to, well, now I do it literally all the time because I work at a school.
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But before that, I used to do that all the time.
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I would just go to one of the local universities into the student lounge kind of area.
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And I would go from the student lounge downstairs to where they have the little student cafe
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with some patentedly bad coffee, with horrible coffee.
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And you can just sit, but they did have pretty good sandwiches like Hokies.
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But yeah, you can just sit there and work all day.
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And no one's going to bug you because as far as they can tell, you belong there.
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You're a student there.
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So those are really great resources.
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If you've got a university close by, this was like a city university.
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It was like right in the middle of the city, really easy to get to.
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You just walk in. It's a beautiful, beautiful thing.
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So I would do that a lot.
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I actually saw Richard Stallman at that university.
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That was the one that I saw Richard Stallman speaking of.
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Schools are good.
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And you know, their hours tend to be fairly good too.
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So if you're finding that your schedule is such that you need to be in a place
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and kind of start working on your own stuff early or late.
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And then you work during the day or something.
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The schools are not bad for that kind of scheduling.
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City parks are really great.
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I've spent a lot of time at city parks.
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They're beautiful.
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They've got a lot of green things around like grass and trees and leaves and stuff.
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They're really beautiful.
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During the summer and the spring, well not so much the summer, but you know,
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the spring before gets too hot.
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Sometimes there's just nothing nicer than just sitting in the city park
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and doing whatever you're going to do.
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Do a podcast, read your book, work on your laptop,
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as long as the battery holds out, anything like that.
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City parks are wonderful for that kind of thing.
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I find that they tend to take a little bit of a little bit more planning than cafes do.
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You know, if you go to a cafe, pretty much everything you need is right there.
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If you go to a city park, you're going to have to think,
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how long I'm moving to stay there.
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If I'm going to stay there like half the day,
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should I go stop by the grocery store first and get some, you know,
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picnicky kind of food, you know, food that you can eat like out.
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So you have to kind of do that.
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And then if you get thirsty,
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well you'd better have some juice or something.
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And then if you want coffee, you're kind of out of luck.
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So, I mean, city parks are great.
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They're fun. They are really, really nice.
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But in terms of some of those creature comforts,
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they may not be as convenient as the cafe.
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But at the same time, a cafe is a cafe.
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And the city park is the city park, you know,
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the city park, the skies above you, clouds.
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It can just be, it can be the most beautiful thing you can ever imagine.
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So yeah, city parks are really good.
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As I think I mentioned in episode two or so,
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staying in the city park like too long or too late can be a real issue.
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I don't know about other city parks,
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but the city park, well certainly the city parks in big cities that I've been in,
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have been constantly patrolled by traffic and not traffic cops.
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But like meter cops, you know, like the parking meter people,
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because some of the city parks had only parking on the perimeter of the park,
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so they were patrolled constantly by cops.
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Definitely after sundown, you're a criminal.
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So you need to get out.
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They will harass you.
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They will be suspicious of you.
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They will watch you.
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And if it's too late, as I found,
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they will make all kinds of threats and insult you.
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And threaten to take it you and to take you into the station
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and everything you can imagine.
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Really, really dangerous place if you're concerned about cops.
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So city parks are good and also bad if it's too late.
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So be sure to check into the times that they close officially and stuff like that.
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And don't rely on signage.
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Sometimes they'll have no indication that they ever close.
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But trust me, if it's sundown, it's probably closing.
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There might be some ball games or tennis games or something within the city park
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if there are like, if there's a soccer field or something like that or a tennis court or something.
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Keep your eyes out for whenever you and else kind of starts to clear out of the park.
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And that's probably a good sign for you to clear out of the park as well.
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Of course, there are friends places.
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If you've got friends, you can hang out with them.
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That kind of breaks up the repetition of cafe library city park, cafe library city park.
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You can go to friends places.
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I mean, it's really weird.
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I've had friends who will have you over all the time all day long.
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And then you say you have to go and they'll still not be ready to get rid of you.
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They'll still want you to hang out.
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It's great.
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I love people like that.
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They're wonderful, beautiful human beings.
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I guess the negative side of that could be that they want to have you around too much
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and then you start feeling like you have to get away from them.
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But honestly, I rarely feel like that.
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It's really cool to find people who want to hang out.
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For whatever reason, whether it's the industries that I work in or whether this is just the way real life is.
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I don't really know, but a lot of times people seem to be too busy to hang out at a certain point.
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It can be a weird thing trying to find people who have just that right mix of,
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hey, let's hang out and be friends and then let's also kind of just work on our own projects.
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But you can stay in the apartment and work on your projects while I work on mine.
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It's a very weird balance and you just have to feel that out.
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And also it's going to probably go into phases, you know.
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And then last but not least is the question of streets.
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What are the streets like?
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Streets aren't really the greatest place to just kind of hang around.
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They tend to be, well, not comfortable.
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And they tend to be places where you can attract a lot of attention that you may not want.
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And again, we're talking about people either in that neighborhood who might start to notice that you're always around
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and start to kind of become suspicious of why you're always out on the street all the time.
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What are you doing? Who are you?
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Why are you here?
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That kind of thing, as well as police.
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You know, I mean, loitering is apparently a very real offence.
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And if you're in one area for too long and they decide that they don't like the way that you look,
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then they may very well start to harass you and tell you that you need to kind of move on or whatever.
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So the streets aren't quite as open as you think they might be, at least in my experience.
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Maybe your town is different. Maybe you've got a different setup where you are.
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In that case, hang out on the streets all day, knock yourself out.
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I tend to not really do that because I prefer to have electricity for my little technical things that I do,
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and coffee, and food, and stuff like that.
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So I don't tend to be real street dweller.
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I tend to use the streets for conveyance and not really as a living room.
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And I said last but not least, the streets.
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And really, I meant second to last but not least.
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So last but not least, our community, or not even community, just establishments.
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And I guess I'm thinking of things that are like jobs, but not quite like jobs.
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And by this I mean places that you can volunteer and thereby have social experiences,
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as well as maybe work on your own things in your spare time.
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So the things that I'm thinking of would be if you're into this sort of thing.
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Info shops, which of course are the anarchist bookstores without being bookstores.
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So you can volunteer at those. Those are typically sort of co-ops.
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So you would volunteer there and work there for no money, but you would help manage the place.
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You can volunteer at Christian science reading rooms.
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If you're into that, Christian science reading rooms are a really miniature libraries
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that are run by the Church of Christ scientist.
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And they typically have not only religious texts there, but also just kind of philosophical.
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And all kinds of texts, really.
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It's dedicated to, as the name suggests, reading, learning, things like that.
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So they very often could use volunteer help or you can just go there to hang out.
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They're really great places. I love those places to hang out at.
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So if there's a Christian science reading room near you, you can go check that out.
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They might be a little bit.
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Their hours don't tend to be all that great.
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But again, if you volunteer, you know, if you get known there and you kind of integrate yourself
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and then you volunteer, you might be that person to make the map better hours Monday, Wednesday, and Friday or whatever you choose.
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So those are always good.
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And other community, I keep saying community, but I guess they're not, well, they are community.
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They're for anyone, really.
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So things like, I don't know, out-flog lodges or lion's clubs or whatever.
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You know, just places that are kind of open to the community and are run in some fashion by the community.
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You know, like hacker public radio, except in real life.
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Those are great places to hang out.
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And I think they're fantastic because you're not only getting to hang out there
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and use the existing infrastructure that is there, you know, their power.
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You get their climate control.
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You get maybe they're, you know, they probably have a coffee maker there.
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You can eat there, usually.
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You know, it's a good place to be.
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But you're also there for a good reason, probably.
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You know, because you're probably helping out with something, whether it's folding clothes that a thrift store
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or explaining anarchist or Christian science ideals to people who are coming in.
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Whatever you're doing, you're doing something that you might think is productive
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or that you might feel productive and is good.
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And you might also have some interesting social interactions,
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because those are kinds of nice ways to meet people that you might not have met otherwise.
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And that's always fun, I think.
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So, and it's good, I think, for geeks.
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Because there is that kind of stigma and cliche that geeks don't socialize.
|
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|
|
That they don't go out of their mother's basement.
|
||
|
|
Oh, speaking of that, mother's basement.
|
||
|
|
That would be, that would be a place you could hang out as well if you're urban camping.
|
||
|
|
But I guess then you're not really urban camping.
|
||
|
|
You're just living in your mom's basement.
|
||
|
|
But anyway, that's it.
|
||
|
|
That's what you do with your daylight hours when you're urban camping.
|
||
|
|
I hope you can think of even more things to do during the daylight hours.
|
||
|
|
But those are, those are some of the things that you might find yourself doing
|
||
|
|
or look into doing if you find yourself urban camping.
|
||
|
|
Have fun with that.
|
||
|
|
And in the next episode, I believe we're going to be talking about other activities
|
||
|
|
that you can do while urban camping in general.
|
||
|
|
Other general activities.
|
||
|
|
Okay, hacking.
|
||
|
|
We'll be talking about that next episode.
|
||
|
|
So, stay tuned.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She wanted the wrong, so she left the old home.
|
||
|
|
She went to the heart of the city.
|
||
|
|
I think I'll restrain yourself.
|
||
|
|
But nobody's there.
|
||
|
|
You are being misled.
|
||
|
|
For what is the strain you're there?
|
||
|
|
In the home of the city, that has no heart.
|
||
|
|
That's where they meet.
|
||
|
|
And that's where they find.
|
||
|
|
That's where the fire is at.
|
||
|
|
So strong.
|
||
|
|
So strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
So many care is misled.
|
||
|
|
All died.
|
||
|
|
So many times.
|
||
|
|
That's the cry.
|
||
|
|
It's just a love, it's just a love.
|
||
|
|
So many times.
|
||
|
|
In the home of the city,
|
||
|
|
where there's no meaning.
|
||
|
|
In the city,
|
||
|
|
that has no heart.
|
||
|
|
In the home of the city,
|
||
|
|
that has no heart.
|
||
|
|
That's where they meet.
|
||
|
|
And that's where they find.
|
||
|
|
So strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
So strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
So many care is misled.
|
||
|
|
All died.
|
||
|
|
So many times.
|
||
|
|
That's the cry.
|
||
|
|
It's just a love, it's just a love.
|
||
|
|
So many times.
|
||
|
|
Is there in the city,
|
||
|
|
where there's no meaning.
|
||
|
|
In the city,
|
||
|
|
that has no heart.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|
||
|
|
And so strong.
|