The Campground Effect: Where Disgruntled People Disappear
Quick Summary
- Explores the idea that genuinely disgruntled people are rarely found in campgrounds
- Draws from real-life experiences at RV events and campgrounds across the country
- Suggests the RV lifestyle naturally attracts adaptable, optimistic, and solution-oriented people
- Highlights a shared “campground mindset” where inconveniences are treated as part of the adventure
- Emphasizes community, friendliness, and mutual respect among campers
- Concludes that happiness in campground life is often a conscious choice, reinforced by simplicity and connection
Disgruntled people? Last week in Nashville, I met a full-timer named Mike who was camped next to us. Over a couple of days, we fell into that easy rhythm that happens in campgrounds. I borrowed his RV cleaning supplies to get some of the Michigan rod and salt gunk off our fifth wheel, we shared stories, visited back and forth the way neighbors used to do before suburban privacy fences went up.
Then Mike said something about the RV Lifestyle that's been rattling around in my head ever since.
“I've never met disgruntled people in a campground.”
I stood there holding his cleaning solution, letting that sink in. Never?
I've certainly encountered my share of negative people in the world. The perpetually unhappy, the contrarians who argue just to argue, the folks who wonder why they have no friends while simultaneously pushing everyone away.
But Mike was right. I haven't encountered them in campgrounds.
Not once in our 15 years of RV living.
The Tampa Test
Right now, we're camped at the Florida RV SuperShow in Tampa, and if there was ever a place designed to test this theory, it's here. This campground is far from ideal. They've squeezed us in so tight you can stand between your rig and your neighbor's and touch both slide-outs with your arms extended. It's the RV equivalent of airline economy seating.

In the photo above, that's our unit on the right here in Tampa. Just a bit tight. 🙂
Last night, it dropped to a chilly 47 degrees. Not exactly a Florida winter shorts and T-Shirt night. And yet.
It was almost 10:30 before folks stopped visiting. Total strangers who, five minutes after meeting, were bonded as friends. Smiling, happy people wandering from site to site, sharing stories and laughter in the cold.

In the photo above, you can see it's all good. Making a place to socialize even when it's crowded. It's like that all over this Tampa campground on the Fairgrounds.
No one complained about the tight quarters. People just smiled, shrugged, and made the best of it. Resilient. Optimistic. Choosing to see the packed-in proximity as an opportunity rather than an inconvenience.
Surely, statistically speaking, there must be some disgruntled campers here. The law of averages says so. But we haven't seen them.
The Great Disappearing Act
So where do all the negative people go?
Maybe they're home, scrolling through social media, finding things to be outraged about. Maybe they're writing angry reviews of hotels where the pillow wasn't fluffy enough. Maybe they've convinced themselves that travel is too hard, people are too difficult, and it's just easier to stay put and stay miserable.
Meanwhile, the rest of us are out here in campgrounds, packed in like sardines, freezing our tails off, and having the time of our lives.
There's something about the RV lifestyle that seems to filter for a particular mindset. It's not that RVers don't have problems. We deal with mechanical breakdowns, weather delays, reservation snafus, and all the small indignities that come with dragging your house down the highway. But somewhere along the way, we've chosen to see these things as adventures rather than catastrophes, as stories rather than complaints.
The Choice We Make Every Morning
I pity anyone who can be negative when so much is to be gained by considering everything an opportunity.
Think about what they're missing. The borrowed cleaning supplies that become the opening line of a friendship. The too-tight campground that forces you to actually meet your neighbors instead of hiding behind your slides. The cold night that gives everyone an excuse to gather around somebody's campfire.
Every inconvenience is an invitation. Every problem is a story waiting to happen. Every stranger is a friend you just haven't met yet.
The disgruntled people aren't banned from campgrounds. They're welcome here anytime. But I suspect they don't come because being disgruntled requires a very particular environment: one where you can control everything, avoid everyone, and maintain a carefully curated list of grievances.
Campgrounds don't allow for that. Weather happens. Things break. Neighbors exist. Plans change. And you can either rage against all of it, or you can laugh, adapt, and discover that the detour was better than the original plan anyway.
The Campground Covenant
There's an unspoken agreement in every campground, a silent covenant among people who've chosen this life. We've all decided, independently but unanimously, that happiness is a choice we're going to make every single day.
Not toxic positivity that ignores real problems. Not fake cheerfulness that papers over legitimate concerns. Just a fundamental decision that when faced with two ways to interpret a situation, we're going to choose the one that doesn't make us miserable.
Is your neighbor too close? Great, easier to borrow tools. Weather's not cooperating? Perfect excuse to stay inside and read. Campground's not as nice as you hoped? Doesn't matter, you bought your own house, and you'll be moving soon.
My Nashville camping neighbor Mike was right. We really don't see disgruntled people in campgrounds.
Maybe they're out there somewhere, but they're missing one heck of a party.
And honestly? That's their loss, not ours.
We'll be here, packed in tight, freezing or sweltering, breaking down or breaking through, making friends out of strangers and stories out of setbacks.
Because that's what we do. That's who we are. We're RVers. And I wouldn't have it any other way.
Life’s Best Chapter Starts Here
in the RV Community

You’ve raised the kids. Done the 9-to-5. Now it’s your time.
Join a private, ad-free community built just for RVers who crave connection, adventure, and meaningful conversation.
- In-person meetups & rallies
- Twice a week member only livestreams and Virtual Campfires that are pure fun
- Exclusive courses on mastering the RV lifestyle
- Real people. No drama. No ads.
- Special interest spaces for more than two dozen RV subjects
Because the open road is better with friends. Check it out here https://RVCommunity.com
Missed a few of our recent posts? No worries – here you go.
- RV Reality Week: The Real Reason So Many RV Trips Go Bad, and It Has Nothing to Do With Breakdowns
- RV Reality Week: The RV Lifestyle Looks Simple on YouTube. Here’s What No One Tells You Before You Start
- The Florida RV SuperShow: Insider’s Guide to Not Getting Ripped Off
- Why January is the Secret Best Month to Buy an RV (And the One Thing RV Dealers Don’t Want You to Know)

Good story Mike. Friendly bunch of folks we meet in the campgrounds. 99.99% are there for relaxation and to experience the awe of God’s blessings bestowed upon each and every one of us. For the older generation, it’s a way to exchange experiences, trials and tribulations we all experience throughout our brief stay on planet earth. Keep up the good work and blessings to you and the Mrs.
Thanks! I needed to read something this positive today!