In more prosperous times, increasingly unaffordable real estate pushed thousands of people worldwide to adopt simpler, nomadic lifestyles lived out of tricked-out vans. But in the age of coronavirus, according to CNN, not having roots in any one place is proving to be a big problem for these "van lifers," some of who are struggling to find places away from society to settle—even temporarily.

This is the premise: You buy a van and modify it enough so daily life, whatever that means to you, can happen within those walls. On one end of the spectrum, you have folks buy beat-up Ford vans and adapting them on a shoestring budget, while on the other end, you have folks dropping big money on diesel Mercedes-Benz Sprinters and then decking them out with top-shelf accessories. Now it seems, however, that regardless of your status in "van society," reality discriminates against no one.

"We have to be responsible for the betterment of society and make these decisions to stay put for a little while," said Matt Alexander, who is sheltering on Bureau of Land Management property in his Dodge Sprinter, to CNN. "You know, the freedom and flexibility to travel is amazing, but then you bring in health issues such as this and it changes everything."

BLM regulations permit "dispersed campers" to plop down in one location for up to two weeks, provided they remain isolated from other such campers. But in these locales, van-lifers typically have no access to electricity or running water, limiting options for cooking or hygiene such as the hand-washing that's crucial to slowing the spread of COVID-19. Van-dwellers can access these by booking into RV parks instead, but not all North American RV parks have vacancies and those that do carry the risk of close proximity with other people, some of whom may be carrying the virus that has brought the western world to a halt.

European van-lifers face even greater troubles, as documented by YouTube-vlogging van-dweller Nate Murphy. The British expat owns a plot of land in Spain, which he was reportedly sharing with the occupants of three other vans until police showed up and demanded that he shut down his "illegal campsite," and instructed those living on his land to "go back home."