It is with a broken heart—and a slightly raised eyebrow—that I must announce that on March 6th, 2026, NAVI, our beloved Garmin RV GPS, passed away unexpectedly. This was the newest GPS I’ve ever purchased, which somehow makes the loss sting even more. I have ten‑year‑old units still operating like crusty old Marines, but the young one? Gone too soon.
I’m saddened, yes. But if I’m being honest, I’m also annoyed. And disappointed. And maybe just a little betrayed.
I’ve owned Garmin units since the days when the screen looked like a tiny cathode‑ray tube television—the old StreetPilot series with a display roughly the size of a postage stamp. From there I graduated through the nüvi era, collecting them like Pokémon, each one promising to be “the one” that would finally get me from Point A to Point B without drama.
Anyone who ever owned an early Garmin will still twitch involuntarily at the memory of the dreaded voice intoning, “Recalculating…”
And then there were the loops. Oh, the loops. The endless, hopeless, maddening loops where it would try to recalculate, fail, try again, fail again, and eventually give up entirely—usually at the worst possible moment. The only solution was the classic Garmin reboot ritual: pull over, shut it off, turn it back on, and hope the satellites were feeling generous that day.
And yet, despite all the cursing, I kept buying the next one. New features. New promises. New hope. Garmin was the toxic relationship I just couldn’t quit.
Then, about eight years ago, when we started our RV lifestyle, Garmin introduced the RV‑specific units. Finally—something designed to keep us from wedging our home under a 12‑foot bridge or being routed down a goat path masquerading as a county road. We’ve had our share of “adventures,” but I can only imagine the chaos we would’ve endured without that extra layer of protection.
So yes, it has always been a love/hate relationship. But watching RVers on YouTube navigate the country using Apple Maps or Google Maps on their phones made our Garmin feel like the best thing since sliced bread. Our RV Garmin let me enter our height, length, and weight so it could steer us clear of low clearances and questionable bridges—things Google Maps doesn’t even pretend to care about.
Which brings us back to NAVI.
NAVI was supposed to be the chosen one. The upgrade. The reliable partner. The fresh‑out‑of‑the‑box prodigy destined to guide us safely across America.
Instead, NAVI has left us far too soon, leaving behind only a blank screen, a faint smell of disappointment, and a long list of routes that will now forever remain uncalculated.
A Mock Eulogy for NAVI
Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to mourn the loss of NAVI, who served bravely, if not always accurately, in the line of duty.
NAVI was born in a factory somewhere far away, shipped lovingly in a cardboard box, and adopted into our RV with high hopes and unrealistic expectations. NAVI promised to guide us, protect us, and keep us from becoming a YouTube cautionary tale titled “RVers Attempt Low Bridge—Instant Regret.”
NAVI tried. Truly.
But like a gifted child who peaked in kindergarten, NAVI struggled under the weight of its own potential.
It leaves behind:
- A power cable that still works
- A suction cup mount that never really did
- And two RVers who now must face the terrifying prospect of choosing a replacement
May NAVI’s circuits rest cool and its firmware finally find peace.
Amen.
The Moral of the Story: Technology Is a Frenemy
If there’s a lesson in all this, it’s that technology is both our greatest helper and our most unpredictable saboteur. It promises convenience, safety, and simplicity—right up until the moment it decides to give up, glitch out, or die quietly in the middle of a perfectly good travel day.
We rely on it. We curse at it. We replace it.
And then, inevitably, we trust the next shiny device all over again.
Because in the end, technology is like a mischievous travel companion:
You can’t live without it, but you probably shouldn’t trust it with your life.
Rest in peace, NAVI.
Your successor has big shoes to fill—and hopefully a longer lifespan.
Day 3079
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