(Because sometimes it’s not just the RV that’s coming apart.)

It starts small.
You notice a loose screw on a cabinet door. No big deal, right?
You grab a screwdriver. Tighten it. Move on.

Except it won’t tighten. It just spins.
And that’s when you spiral, too.

🔩 1. The Screw That Broke the Camel’s Back
One screw leads to another.
Suddenly, you’re fixing a hinge, discovering a crack, questioning your life choices, and wondering why you thought mobile housing was a good idea.

You stare at the screw.
The screw stares back.
And for a moment, you’re both unhinged.

🧠 2. The Philosophy of Minor Repairs
RV repairs are never just repairs—they’re metaphors.
That one screw? It’s a symbol.
Of entropy. Of impermanence. Of the delicate illusion that you’re in control.

You think, “If I can’t fix this cabinet, how can I possibly fix my life?”
Then you remember: duct tape exists.

🎢 3. The Emotional Rollercoaster
You go through stages:

  • Denial: “It’s fine. It’s supposed to rattle like that.”

  • Anger: “Who designs these things?”

  • Bargaining: “If this stays shut for the rest of the trip, I’ll reseal the roof.”

  • Depression: “Everything is falling apart—including me.”

  • Acceptance: “At least it’s symmetrical.”

🔧 4. The Triumph (Sort Of)
Eventually, you fix it—by over-tightening, stripping the hole, or gluing it into eternal submission.
You sit back, proud, knowing it’s only a matter of time before something else breaks.

But you also feel weirdly… peaceful.
Because RV life isn’t about everything working perfectly—it’s about making peace with the wobble.

💬 Final Thoughts
That one loose screw isn’t the end of the world.
It’s a reminder: everything’s temporary, fixable (ish), and funnier when you’re not crying about it.

So keep the screwdriver handy—and your sense of humour closer.

🐟 Want to find a smoother setup for your next “philosophical repair”? Use Campground Views to preview sites before you arrive—because sometimes, fewer bumps mean fewer breakdowns.

🔗 Follow us for more RV humour, life lessons disguised as repairs, and the ongoing search for that one screw that started it all.