Category Archives: Philosophy

Tumbling Down the Rabbit Hole

Our upcoming move to la isla del encanto has been one heck of a journey, and we haven’t even moved yet! It has come to mean so many things to us that it really is difficult to explain to others without a lengthy conversation that challenges commonly held beliefs. For this reason we normally leave it to simple things that we all understand; nice weather (no snow), growing plants, playing in the ocean, and achieving a goal. When we first started down our path and looked at properties in Puerto Rico we were simply going to get a mortgage and move. That was the extent of our planning. No idea of how we were going to make money or what we would be doing.

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First Property We tried to Purchase

Through the process of discovery which unfolded in front of us on our path we found solutions to all the big ‘problems’. How are we going to buy food? How are we going to PAY OUR BILLS!? Do I need a corporate/cubicle job down there? I was obviously still thinking in the box.  A box I had forgot existed even though I am in it everyday.

I didn’t realize what actual freedom entails or that I was even in a system that doesn’t promote or teach it, which is odd because we live in the ‘land of the free’. I didn’t even realize I wasn’t free! I like to use the movie “Matrix” as an analogy to the realization of what we were actually up against.
http://youtu.be/te6qG4yn-Ps

The answers came over time.

One essential thing was to cut our bills to a manageable size (no mortgage, very little in the way of consumer goods and NO SUBSCRIPTIONS). It’s pretty easy in the U.S. and totally normal to spend $1000/mo or more on just a spot to sleep. And that seems…I dunno…Kind of ridiculous. When you are first starting out on your own, that consumes a lot of your money. That money that you traded your life’s energy for.  Then add on cable, phone, utilities and all the other modern conveniences of life I haven’t ever been without for long.

Why do I have to spend money simply to exist?
A> Because that is the way it was decided long before me.  It is that simple.

The meaning behind this became profound.  Debt is the basis of American lives and is what our economy is built upon.  We as a nation rarely if ever mention this and certainly the paid for advertising of our mainstream media isn’t going to let it be known.  It isn’t taught in public school, or discussed on the television.  The debt based consumer mindset opened my eyes to how the things I buy hold me down. Everything I purchase has associated costs.  The concept of less is more started to appeal to me and also gets me closer to our end goal.

This is a huge consideration in my life now. Want that shiny object?  Would you trade your life for it? Is it worth 2-10 years of my life to have a new Corvette Z06 that will continue to consume more of my life’s energy (in the form of money for gas, licensing, insurance, tickets, repairs and worry)? No. I have struggled with this as an American male.  I started to question it. Where does that consumerism seed get started? Is it just an exploitation of a hard-wired evolutionary biological mechanism?  Is it installed into me by society and advertising? I think it’s a mixture, but it is deeply rooted in our culture and taught to us as children.  Want.

justification-for-higher-education
This poster was in MANY of my classrooms

You see. This decision to walk a different path, even if just slightly,  from the standard has spawned an introspective thought process.  This is where true freedom begins, with our choices.  Not just the choices of what to buy, but the choice of how to think.  How to operate this human machinery.  It has allowed me to see more clearly and be more aware of my surroundings, motivations and beliefs.  All of this came from a simple goal to move to an island.

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Creating the lifestyle that we envisioned is now on our doorstep. We are both looking forward to a life without the rat race. No more waking up everyday at 6am to shower, eat, commute and work towards someone else’s dream and someone else’s freedom. We get to work at our dream and our freedom.  At the age of 34 I’d say that is one hell of an accomplishment and we are only getting started.

Today marks my last day of work and entrance into wonderland.

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I’m a Modern Man?

When Cassie and I were at the Midway airport in Chicago, we saw a couple that stuck out.  They didn’t ‘fit’ into the normal picture.  They appeared to be an older Mexican couple.  The man wore a cowboy hat and boots, the woman in a dress.

We were at the gate watching and the airline didn’t let them on the plane.  They closed the door and the couple looked very confused.  It was apparent that they did not speak English and were out of sorts.

Cassie went over to try and help the couple and the airline folks translate.  She found out that they were actually from Guatemala and not only didn’t speak much English but were hardly literate. They were scared and lost without anyone to help them. They were on their way to New York City to visit family and had somehow gotten standby tickets, but they did not know what that meant and had felt abandoned at the airport. As standby passengers, since the plane had filled up, they didn’t get on.

This couple had more or less left directly from their finca and this was their first flight or trip out of Guatemala ever. They needed to get a hold of their family in NY and let them know that they would be on another flight (once Cassie helped them get straightened out with a confirmed ticket).  I handed them my phone to use.  Cassie looked at me and said something like, “Um…I think you should probably dial it for them.”

Samsung_Galaxy - Copy

Modern Man Tool

Rethinking my action I agreed.  They would have never seen many cell phones, let alone the new touch screen smart phone.  I dialed the number, handed it to Miguel and he looked at it like it was an alien spaceship.  The phone is enough like an actual phone so he could hold it up to his ear and talk.  I think that puts him somewhere technology wise in the 1930s or 1950s. It was clear that this modern life was not comfortable in the least to this couple. 

Fast forward to Cassie and my daily life….

We have been watching a lot of Survivor type shows that take place in tropical locations.  The most recent we have been watching is Naked and Afraid.  We started to watch them simply because they took place in the Tropics.  Like most things, these shows have changed our worldview a bit in ways that we didn’t expect.

When you see people trying to survive without all the modern conveniences of society and try to live off food from the ocean, or the jungle you see that humans, for the most part are not able to live outside of society for very long.  We can’t drink water, we can’t find food, fire is hard to start without matches and being wet sucks.

In the Naked and Afraid show it is surprising how even survival specialists who teach classes on the subject, fail when it comes to actually surviving in the wild!

I have been contrasting this with the life that I live in a corporate world that consists of driving, sitting in front of a computer screen working with abstract ideas and concepts, eating pre-made pre-packaged food and taking walks for exercise.  I can’t help but notice that I have been completely removed from nature.  I, unlike the Guatemaltecos in the airport, have been raised in American schools in order to domesticate me to the society in which I was anticipated to exist.  I know how to form and stand in lines, how to type and to a lesser degree use hand writing (they have now stopped teaching cursive in a lot of schools). I understand all the various hoops one must jump through to do anything nowadays. I was trained to sit at a desk all day long and I know how to work within a diverse group to achieve a goal that has been given to me by a leader, teacher, manager or other figure of authority.

All of these modern skills are useful in my society.  They are what the corporation is looking for in their resources.  However these modern skills are almost useless in nature or on a finca.  I can’t start a fire without matches, I don’t know what things I can eat and making a sturdy shelter without a home depot would be a challenge.

Contrasting this with the Guatemalan couple, I would bet that they would do much better on the survival shows than even the so-called survival experts.  They aren’t as far removed from the natural world.  I am not exactly sure if one is better than the other, I just thought that the contrast was stark.

In our move to Puerto Rico, we are looking forward to a better balance between the two worlds.

This song helps to sum it up (snippet of lyrics below):

So I wait my turn, I’m a modern man
And the people behind me they can’t understand
Makes me feel like….
Something don’t feel right

They say we are the chosen few but we waste it
And that’s why we’re still waiting
On a number from the modern man
Maybe when you’re older you will understand why you don’t feel right
Why you can’t sleep at night no
In line for a number but you don’t understand like a modern man

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Advertisements are EVERYWHERE

Cassie and I have been discussing a lot of things (as you can imagine) in regards to our upcoming move.  We wanted to be sure this site would be up and running, and hopefully that it would pay for itself as one of our goals.

We have had, as some have noticed, a google adsense ad on the sidebar.  At first I put it on there just to see what would happen.  It doesn’t pay much, if hardly anything, but  over time it has paid for the webhost and the domain name registration for this site for the next 3 years.  Mission accomplished.

In the struggle to live a more authentic life,  we have decided that it was time to cut it off.  It doesn’t fit our site.  What we would much rather do is advertise local businesses or friends.  Or things that we ourselves have checked out or believe in.

The adsense ad was spitting out some things that threw us off, like a vacation resort when we are talking about how un-authentic and fake resorts are.  Or since Cassie had looked up some tobacco information, she was sent advertisements for Snuff.  Something that she is very against on many levels.  We have received feedback from a few of our visitors and agree with the perspective that it doesn’t…really…fit.

So anyhow, we now have an ad policy!  Weird.

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The Struggle to Live an Authentic Life

 

Existentialism

I saw this passage written in the back blank pages of a book I was reading (La Casa de los Espiritus). In English it says: We human beings are always in a constant coming and going in the incessant search for happiness and at the end we realize it was just an illusion that hooked us all in order to survive, to pass the time while death arrives. I found it to be remarkably succinct in its existential revelation. And isn’t that ultimately how life is? So why do we try to pretend and cover and deny death?

I also recently read David Foster Wallace’s classic footnote ridden1essay A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again about his experience on one of the huge luxury cruise ships that sail the Caribbean. While it was very long and drawn out, I found that it captured some of what I have been trying to put into words about the “American Way of Life” that often bothers me, but that I just couldn’t quite pin down and describe.

But I think I have finally boiled it down. It is inauthenticity. It is this pretend world that we live in to deny that we are alive, living beings, and therefore will die. I would argue that for the modern person today, much of our life is inauthentic. In fact, I would go so far as to say it is straight up fake, fabricated, faux, phony. And it is sold to us in neat little packages with great commercial slogans and brands and logos. Our perceptions are marketed and we are told how we are supposed to feel, think and even respond. In the mainstream, we are given choices only in so much of this thing to buy, or that thing to buy.

I think this deep-seated sense of feeling like a number or just one of many “sheeple”, this inauthenticity, is what I feel, but didn’t have words for. This occurs in so many experiences of modern life. Like the time-share spiels where the whole purpose is the sale, and you are the prey. Or Las Vegas, the epitome of fake where a luxurious verdant oasis sprang up from a dead desert-land and where you are herded like cows from one casino to another in a drunken-money sucking haze. Or Disneyland. Or most recent McMansion subdivisions. Or Hollywood Blockbusters blow-em-ups/chick flicks with sneaky in-film product placements. Or how about current mass-produced made-in-China plastic molded toys. Or most pop songs made in a lab with focus groups. Or in mass-produced food-like products, things like Doritos Locos Tacos whose unholy alliance of two multi-billion dollar subsidized “food” companies only points out this unsaid, stifled chuckle of bamboozling the average “consumer” with their chemical crap. And of course, while I have never been on one, I am sure this feeling is most pervasive on most megalines cruise ships. Basically, what I am saying is that in modern American life, this is EVERYWHERE.

Because it is everywhere, it is all the way from the wealthy subculture, the middle class to the so-called “low-brow” and people in poverty. When it comes to selling us an inauthentic life, it is everywhere! And on the rare occasion in this American (or really most industrialized and industrializing countries) life when we do find a truly raw, genuine, authentic experience, it is often taken and wrapped up and resold in shiny, tight cellophane with a barcode and a price tag. Or at the very least, it comes with an advertisement. Cases in point: YouTube who started out raw and real with people just uploading their videos and is now a huge powerhouse of advertisements, the Doors’ unique “Light My Fire” song becoming a Buick ad and really anything of the “counterculture” now has became the mainstream culture. I think this is what we call “selling out”.

Of course, even in all of this fake, false plastic world of airbrushing and air-conditioned gyms there is something real, or authenic to be found. Underneath it all, there is the true story, the story that the sleek ads and fake smiles and shockingly sweet bubbly drinks hide with their chemical preservatives and coats of paint. There are the stories of the people that work in these fake wonderlands of Vegas and Disney and Carnival. There are the photoshop artists behind the ads. There’s the mad food scientist who can make a can of Coke stay shelf-stable for decades.

On my first trip out of the country, my mom took me to Cancun, Mexico to celebrate my graduation from high school and turning 18. We stayed at a resort called Solymar, where the words all run together,or the English equivilent of “Sunandsea”. Anyhow, it was beautiful. We were right on the white-sand beach. The sea gleamed a bright turquoise color, the sun shined its golden gild onto me and we enjoyed the relaxation that a week in the tropics always and forever whence would bring to me.

But most of it was fake. Cancun was not built under normal conditions. It was not a city built by and for its people. It sole purpose was/is a tourist playground. The small sleepy fisherman village had transformed in just a few years into a mega high-rise, MTV-spring-break party town leaving the few remaining locals feeling voiceless and pushed out by the influx of foreign Europeans and North American tourists and corporate money.  The fishermen could no longer fish. The locals could no longer even visit their own beaches without the plastic neon bracelets that denoted “tourist”. Only in furtive glances out the hotel bedrooms while cleaning guest rooms or skimming the skum from the pools did the locals-turned-hotel-staff remember that this used to be their quiet beach hideaway.

Cancun
My new friend in Cancun

I learned most of this talking to a “towel boy” at the pool. He was about my age at the time, or around 18. At that time, my Spanish wasn’t very good and his English wasn’t either, but we managed to communicate, because communication is mainly about the desire to be understood. He invited me out to see a movie, but I wanted to learn more about him and his life, not just see some canned American-movie when I was in Mexico for the first time ever.

Together we walked around the less-touristy part of the city and he introduced me to his brother, his sister-in-law and their baby. The four of them lived in an unpainted cement square box or what we could call euphemistically a “studio apartment” about 15×15 feet in size. It was in a clump of about four other similar boxes and the four box-rooms all shared one single toilet and shower. Inside the “studio” there was one double-sized bed and a small kitchenette. I asked where everyone slept. He said the brother and his wife and baby slept in the bed and he hooked up a hammock and slept in that. Though they had very little, they generously shared a meal with me and told me the story of Cancun and their contract to work at the resort and the little measly amount of money (about $10/week and the room) they were paid to work there. It made me feel even better that we hadn’t seen a movie as that would have cost them nearly a week’s pay just for two hours of entertainment.

I still often think of that family struggling to make it in the hot Yucatan tourist trap of Cancun. It made an impact on me because it was under the surface. It was the deeper, hidden part of the shiny brochures inviting the spoiled tourist to “relax, and feel pampered…because you deserve it”. It was the authentic hidden beneath the fake. It was this juxaposition and interplay of the struggle of this small family and the smug, rich, mostly oblivious tourist industry. I had inadvertently peeled off the filmy, flimsy layer of pretty fakeness that covers the sometimes ugly truth. And I loved it. I felt alive and not sold to. I knew, I still know! deep down that I wanted to live an authentic life, choosing and creating as I went along.

And so what do I do with this knowledge of my desire to live an authentic life, a life as close to the real thing as possible (even as Coca Cola tries to steal that from us in its ironic slogan)? I think this undercurrent pull of authenticity is what drives a large part of my life. I love to garden and eat straight from the source, whether that is one of my chicken’s eggs or a peach from my tree in the front yard. I love this authentic feeling of eating straight from the true source so much that we now have four acres of tropical jungle in Puerto Rico to do this very thing! I love meeting and really knowing and helping people, speaking languages and learning about new cultures. I love to listen to raw from-the-heart music. I love to watch indie movies. I love locally-owned small businesses and hand-made products. I read books. I love to be financially independent and not “owned” by someone else.

And in those unavoidable instances of “fauxness” I try and uncover the rawness, the realness that is still there, but obscured by labels and marketing gimmicks, by enhancements and additives. And I try to see through the fads that start out as real and turn fake like organic grains turned BHT-packaged cereal sold in Wal-Mart or indie artists turned corporate brands.

Britton with machete2
This is authentic!

It is hard to see through all the fakeness. Sometimes it seems so real as to be convincing. But usually deep down, I can feel a tug that says this just doesn’t feel like the genuine article. Someone is trying too hard. This isn’t a “real” party or get-together, this is someone trying to sell me something or convince me, or convert me. This isn’t a “real” movie, this is an advertisement disguised as a movie. This isn’t a “real” song, it’s a product jingle. And at the same time, I try and see the good, the real, the humanity and vulnerability underneath even these suspiciously fake moments. I try to enjoy the whole experience of life even if it looks on the surface very artificial. I will try nearly anything once, and usually I can find something that I like about it.

Because after living very long in this fake world, we have probably all been fake at some point. We have tried to be someone we aren’t. We have tried to sell someone on something we really didn’t believe in. We have acted out of character. We have tried to ignore the fakeness or even sort of enjoy it. But underneath it all, we are authenic. We are genuine. We are real. The struggle is staying true to who you really are, deep down in a world that says that fake, pretend-land is better than the real, real thing.

1No, seriously they are some very long and involved footnotes.

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