Germany native Heidemarie Schwermer, when in her early 50s, wanted to see what it'd be like to leave her cushy job as a psychotherapist and live money-free. Sixteen years later, she hasn't looked back.
Her fascination with finding an alternative way of life goes back to her childhood. WWII refugees, Schwermer's family fled from Prussia to Germany in the 1940s. Her father had owned a successful coffee roastery and kept a nanny and full-time gardener on his payroll. Then they lost everything.
Her fascination with finding an alternative way of life goes back to her childhood. WWII refugees, Schwermer's family fled from Prussia to Germany in the 1940s. Her father had owned a successful coffee roastery and kept a nanny and full-time gardener on his payroll. Then they lost everything.

"We were well-off but ended up as riff-raff," she says. Once her father was able to start over with a tobacco company, cash started pouring in again. But she still found herself at odds with their lifestyle: "We became rich again and had to defend it. I've always had to justify myself, whether we were rich or poor."

In a documentary made about her life, "Living Without Money", she's seen foraging for leftover produce at fresh air markets and trading a shopkeeper a few hours of cleaning services in return for food. She often receives clothing from friends, donating what she doesn't have room for in the small suitcase she carts from home to home.

"I'm always thinking about how I could make things better for life in the world," she says. "I am something like a peace pilgrim. I go from house to house sharing my philosophy."
Part of that philosophy requires her to put a lot of faith in the unknown. Other than the small notebook she uses to keep track of her scheduled speaking engagements and housing arrangements, most of her plans are left to fate.
"I see a lot of miracles in my daily life. For example, in the beginning I found food. I thought about things and then I found them in the street or people came to bring them to me," she explains. "I think these miracles happen because of our thoughts."

The road wasn't always easy. With two adult children and three grandchildren, Schwermer admits her family wasn't exactly on board when she pitched the idea. She now sees them only a few times per year, but says they eventually warmed up to her come-and-go lifestyle.
"Now they're proud of what I'm doing. It's enough for us," she says.


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