In December聽2014, 29-year-old pro runner Stephan Shay started living out of Lolita, a 1966 Cortez camper he鈥檇 restored. 鈥淚 definitely did research. I had a plan,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 had a romantic idea of what it could be like and, for the most part, it鈥檚 come to fruition.鈥澛
Raised roaming the woods and fields of northern Michigan, Shay graduated from Brigham Young University in 2009 with a degree in kinesiology and a . In 2010, he ripped an impressive 1:02 half-marathon, and a few months later, a 28:41聽in the 10,000 meters鈥攇ood enough to land him a sponsorship. A 2:16 marathon in 2012 was followed by injury, surgery, and a frustrating two-year recovery. Out of necessity, he became a 9-to-5 guy, which made high-level racing difficult.
Then, starting in November 2014, he arrived at a crossroads: his girlfriend decamped to medical school on the East Coast; he was laid-off from his job; and his brother, with whom he鈥檇 been living with in Huntington Beach, moved to Pasadena. That's when聽he found Lolita.聽He bought the 18.5-foot vintage rig for $5,100, promptly tore out the聽damp shag carpeting, installed hardwood floors and an Edison lamp, then painted and sanded the body. He was living in the camper within a few weeks.聽
This guy came up to me and said, “Man, I saw that bus and I had to tell you, I鈥檓 so jealous. You have freedom.”聽The聽guy was driving a聽Maserati聽and telling me I was lucky!
鈥淚鈥檝e never been in debt, always lived pretty cheaply, and had money saved up from working and from Saucony, so this venture was virtually risk free,鈥 says Shay. 鈥淸A lot of people] thought, 鈥楬e鈥檚 just doing this to pursue his running goals. He鈥檚 not being responsible.鈥 But it鈥檚 the exact opposite. I was able to buy the van and put about $10,000 into restoration without using up my savings, and I鈥檝e banked the $1,000 per month I would have paid for a studio.聽I don鈥檛 want to give the impression that kids should give up their job and go live in a van for the romance of it. You need to be financially stable. If it doesn鈥檛 work out, you don鈥檛 want to be flat on your ass.鈥
Since January 2015, Shay has cobbled together a pretty satisfying life, with a solid work-life-training balance (two part-time jobs plus聽running 85 to 90 miles a week). And he constantly fields questions about Lolita. 鈥淭his guy came up to me and said, 鈥楳an, I saw that bus from down the street and I had to tell you,聽I鈥檓 so jealous. You have this freedom.鈥 This guy was driving a Maserati and telling me I was lucky!,鈥 he says.聽
While he聽doesn鈥檛 sugarcoat the details, Shay can鈥檛 hide his delight about waking up in El Moro Canyon with a panoramic view of the Pacific Ocean,聽or talking about the people he鈥檚 met during weekend excursions. The overwhelming interest he鈥檚 received in van life led him to start , a company that restores聽vintage RVs. 聽
He's also pressing every bit out of his body, putting in tough 20-milers before the February聽, in Los Angeles.
鈥淚鈥檓 able to save money, and the lifestyle may turn into a career for me. But I really like the adventure part of it,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what life鈥檚 about: seeing what comes your way and not being afraid of failure.鈥