Author, No Overnight Parking
This week on “Ira’s Everything Bagel,” Ira sits down with Juergen Barbusca, author of “No Overnight Parking,” to unpack the remarkable leap that took him from corporate deadlines to life on the open road. After years of long hours draining the joy from his work, Juergen traded (with five years in the making) boardrooms for backroads, embarking on a yearlong, 32,000-mile adventure across the United States and Canada in a van he lovingly nicknamed “The Shoebox.”
Juergen shares how an ominous “check engine” light became a regular irritant, why he chronicled every twist and turn without realizing it would become a book, and how the rhythm of road life unexpectedly reflected the pressures of corporate culture. He talks about learning to slow down, savoring museums and small-town curiosities, traveling under the self-imposed countdown of a one-year limit, and how he ultimately discovered the title for his book (hint: Walmart policies played a role).
From the roar and mist of Niagara Falls - “a feast for all five senses” - to the serenity of wide-open highways, a surprising buffalo encounter, and an unforgettable meeting with a cross-country walking minister, Juergen’s story is a reminder that sometimes the road doesn’t just take you somewhere… it shows you who you are.
Juergen Barbusca was raised in Las Vegas and holds a bachelor’s in German and a master’s in public administration from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He’s an award-winning communications practitioner whose career has included roles as a freelancer and corporate translator, nonprofit executive, and communications manager.
In earlier years, he also took on a wide range of odd jobs—picking pineapples, washing dishes, sorting packages, hanging placards in subway cars, working as an airline ticket agent and restaurant waiter, selling beer from a hawker’s tray, and managing a concession stand at an arena.
After fourteen years in the tech world, when long hours slowly squeezed the joy from his work, he traded a computer screen for a camper van. When he’s not behind the wheel or chasing down the next story, he enjoys swimming, cycling, foreign languages, and bad coffee at roadside diners.