Category Archives: Rincon

So What Do You Do? Or How to Quit Your Job and Move to the Tropics

“So what do you do?”

Invariably when you meet someone for the first time, this question is bound to come up. It tells you a lot about that person and gives you a baseline for some of the interests and background of that person. In fact, I ask it a lot myself.

In Colorado we had pretty “normal” answers. Britton and I both worked full-time professional jobs, had a standard house and yard to maintain and had a few hobbies like our chickens, bicycling and gardening.

But now that we have moved here to Rincón, Puerto Rico, when we are asked that question, it is a little harder to say. We are not exactly retired, but we don’t exactly “work” either. I would say I work physically a lot harder than I ever did before, but I don’t get paid to do it. So is that work? Or do I just “hobby” around? It’s funny how our self identification seems more clear when we are paid to do something rather than when we choose to do it on our own time. Why is that? Why does money muddle who we are? Wouldn’t you think it would be the opposite? That what you do just because you do is actually closer to the real you? And what exactly is the difference between doing something professionally or as a hobby? Is it that you have an “official” title and job description or does it all boil down to the paycheck?

Painting the cabana
Meeting reminder: Paint, meet the trim of the cabana

Well we don’t work for a paycheck anymore. So what do we do if we don’t do that? And more importantly then who am I? How do we describe ourselves and “what we do”? Well, every day we do something! Sometimes it is painting a house. Sometimes it is tearing apart a deck. Sometimes it is clearing trees and vines. Sometimes it is planting new trees. Sometimes it is figuring out computer issues. Sometimes it is laying on the beach. Sometimes it is going on marathon shopping trips to Home Depot or garden nurseries that will mean even more work the next day. Sometimes we go out and meet up with people. Sometimes we just lay around the cabana and read and watch shows on the laptop and cook food. Essentially, what we do is…live!

Surrounded by plants
 A day at the office

But I think the question beneath the question of “what do you do” is really…”How do you make money?” And when you separate the daily what-you-do from the money question it makes it much harder to define. If what I do doesn’t directly earn me money is it then therefore still who I am? I think this question has plagued stay-at-home moms and dads for a long time. They could be working their butts off day and night but because there is no paycheck, it doesn’t seem as “real” to some (usually those who are still wage earners) as paid labor.

The “work hard” mentality is usually tied to earning money. And that is a hard game to play, especially for low-wage earners because the shortage ultimately will be – time! You can only work so many hours in a day. If you are a mid-range (and especially high) wage earner it will still be tough, but if you want to, you can stop playing the stressful rat race game. In reality, if you want to get off  the rat race treadmill you have to change your mentality toward working hard and climbing the ladder only to spend more and climb more. At least that was our wake up moment.

Everything boils down to how you envision your life. To us, we saw keeping expenses down as more important than earnings and so we were able to get out of the rat race. Just like it takes a lot more effort to run 10 miles than to just not eat the cookies, it takes a lot more effort to work your whole life than it does to just not buy into all the consumerism. There is some discipline and will-power in there somewhere too, but it is much simpler to just go without sometimes. Not always. Just sometimes. And that’s what we did to get here to this point where we could pretty much do whatever we want to do each day. Seemed like a good trade to us.

Hibiscus
My office view

The money game is really not that hard to figure out. You need to be able to save more than you spend. You should have as little debt and subscriptions (AKA ongoing expenses) as possible and you need to figure out some recurring income. We set a goal to save up enough money to live here with very little expenses and we have a small amount of investment income as well. We worked at our traditional jobs with that goal in mind and bought and worked on our investments and now we are here! We also intend in the future to possibly sell some agricultural products (fruits, plants, chicken eggs, etc), have a little cabana rental income eventually and always keep an eye out for what other opportunities might come up that speak to our spirit.

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On the task list: Fog the mosquitos

And what is really cool about living here, especially in Rincón is that there are so many other like-minded people! Nearly half the “expat” community of people we have met have made a similar jump to the unknown and come down here with a hope and a dream (and sometimes a plan). They start doing what they love to do and soon they are even being paid to do it or they make a business out of it. People come here to play, and I don’t just mean in the ocean.  They, we! come to play the game, the life, of our choosing. When you get down to it, that’s what life is really all about.

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The board room

Sure you need to have your basic needs met. And like I said, for some people this is harder than for others. But if you are blessed with your basic needs met then beyond that, your dreams, your creativity, your preferences, your real true self underneath it all should mean something too. And if you feel that you are at your highest self working a traditional job, then by all means do that! But if you have an itch to go out and try something new, if you know deep down that you are ready for an adventure then work towards living the dream! And then go do it! It really IS all that it is cracked up to be. Believe me. It’s what I do for a living.

 

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Enormity of Freedom

I woke up the other day, poured some coffee and sat on the front stoop of the cabana.  I was staring blankly at the thick foliage of the green forest before I started my day of weed whacking, chopping and clearing away walking paths thru the thickness.  It was then that it hit me in a way it hadn’t really before.  We made it.  We have achieved our goal of moving to a tropical island.  All of the work, all of the planning and all of the saving has gotten us here.  I felt it as an emotion this time instead of a logical thought.
Green
Free as a bird in the jungle

Thinking about doing something can never actually replace the experience of actually doing it.  It is now that we are here, that we can have the experience.   A new plant requires the brain to look up in our vast memory and see if we have information about it.  New smells, new sights and new people all require the brain to do some work.  Since I have no information about much of anything here, it requires inspection and storage of the new info.  The constant processing of new information reminds us of what it was like to be children again.  With that comes learning, thinking and mistakes.

What is a truly awakening idea, is that everything that we do and think, we are in control of.  If we want to paint a wall, it is because we have the belief that the wall needs to be painted.  If we don’t like the way something is, it is because we have decided for whatever reason, that it shouldn’t be that way.  There are very few actual truths and we have the freedom to decide what to think about almost everything.

Work
Who has left the cage

Having grown up in a public school system that was and is designed to cultivate ‘productive members of society’, that think a certain way and behave in a particular manner and hold similar beliefs, it is a enormous realization that it is actually I that gets to decide most everything.  Now actually doing this is very difficult as most of my beliefs were installed and then that’s just the way it is.  Realizing that if I don’t like something it is simply because I have decided I don’t like it, is becoming a powerful tool.  Can’t I just as easily decide to like it?

Tell me what I said I’d never do
Tell me what I said I’d never say
Read me off a list of the things
I used to not like, but now I think are okay
-Ben Folds Five Lyric

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A tropical weed or simple beauty?

This head game became a challenge when thinking about weeds in my lawn back in Colorado.  Dandelions were growing!  Not taking the perspective that they are actually pretty flowers, which they are, but rather choosing to see them as invaders that were disrupting the uniformity of my green lawn.  It became a problem that had to be dealt with!  Even the radio ads were telling me that these weeds needed to be killed with chemical poisons that were available at my local hardware store.  I don’t want to be “that guy” the ad told me “that has all the weeds in his lawn”.

Once I changed my thinking life went a little more smoothly.  They aren’t weeds, they’re flowers.  And as Cassie has pointed out to me, they are actually medicine and food too.  I think this was the beginning of the realization of what actual freedom is.  Apparently advertisers understand this, so they try to get you to believe that you have these ‘problems’ that their product can fix.  It’s kind of a hijacking of ones thoughts. You can still choose to kill the dandelions or you can choose not to. But it is a CHOICE, not a given that they are bad things. They just exist. Whatever opinion of them is not the thing itself. It can be seen in many different ways, if you are open to that kind of freedom of thought.

I almost didn’t write about this subject because having total freedom of choice regarding what to think about, seems so obvious, yet in my day in and day out life I rarely if ever actually employed it.

A lot of people wouldn’t live how we are living.  We live in a small space.  Here on the island we have bugs, rats, and poverty.  We have chosen no A/C or phone (except Google Voice now) or cable TV and yet somehow I am the happiest I’ve been in a long time.  I think this is due to the fact that this is what I have chosen to do and I have the ability to see these things as benefits. This is the enormity of freedom.

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No stove, no problem. Grilling outside any time of year!

Some might see rats and bees as bad things, but that means there is food/fruit everywhere.  No A/C might be seen as too hot and uncomfortable, whereas I see it as one less thing to depend on for comfort that will one day break and require larger and larger bills to fuel.  Poverty to me is much easier to fit my life around because that means the cost of living is lower, there aren’t as many expectations to drive nice cars, to have perfect landscaping or to obtain that status job. A small indoor living quarters means a lot of life goes on outdoors instead of in. Perspective.

It has been said that you can change the way you look at things, and the things you look at will change.  I am finding this to be true and that is a big part of being free. And the things I look at every day here are just amazing!

Passion Sparkle

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Living Without a Phone and Internet

Can it be done? In this day and age can we live without a phone or internet? The question really is, can we live without a phone or internet bill?

We are attempting to answer that question here in Puerto Rico.

A lot of our challenges in living here are self-imposed. We could easily get a phone and internet plan, for instance, however, we want to see what our needs are versus our wants. And when you just replicate the life you left, you never actually get to find out that answer. Plus by going without we learn how to find work-arounds rather than just the easy, but expensive way.

And actually in Colorado, we both had phones paid for by our work, but we haven’t had a phone bill in a long time and we weren’t too excited to start paying a subscription of $50-100/month for that service. Same thing for internet.

For internet here, we have been using WiFi at various locations throughout town as well as the open WiFi signal that we can pick up on the roof of the cabana. That worked fine, except when it would rain. I tried to be out there in the rain once under a towel, but just got soaked!

Rainy Internet
Our rainy Internet café

But overall, we have been here for over a month and I would say that in general, yes we can definitely live without a phone or internet subscription. There is nothing so pressing that we have to be tethered to a phone or internet all day long.

But occasionally it is nice to be connected. Internet needs were met pretty well, but about two weeks after we arrived I wanted to call my mom. So we kept our eyes out for a pay phone and we found one at the Econo Grocery Store in Rincón!
pay phone
Public Payphone: A rare sighting nowadays

We were stoked to have a resource like this for other occasional calls we may need to make, like lining up bee removal, tile installation, labor, etc.

We made our first call to my mom using the credit card feature –against my gut feeling that we should just use change. I never like paying for something without actually knowing the bill amount. The call went fine.

A couple of days later, however my instincts turned out to be correct as we checked our bank account and saw a charge of $52 for telephonic services! Well geeze, if we were going to spend $52 on 10 minute phone call, we would just get a cell phone! We thought that must be a mistake because the rates on the payphone were like 50 cents for 5 minutes. Maybe it was a holding charge that would go away? We determined to find out, but we would need to call our bank in Colorado –using the very same pay phone! Thankfully, it was a toll free number and so we didn’t have to pay anything or give out any credit card numbers to call them.

The bank representative looked at the charge and said that it was a scam of some sort that a secondary party intercepted the credit card (debit card actually) number and charged that amount. She said they would reverse the charges in 5 business days and that we would need to get a new debit card since those numbers were compromised. What a pain! But it all worked out. The charges were reversed and a new card was sent out- to our forwarding address (Britton’s parent’s house in Greeley) since we still haven’t been able to set up mail service here (a LONG story that will hopefully be resolved soon).

The replacement card has arrived (thanks Barb for sending our mail to us general delivery), but we are supposed to activate it with our home phone -haha! Joke’s on us.  We will probably have to use that same pay phone and hope that it will work since it’s obviously not a home or cell number.

So, there have been some inconveniences especially when people ask for our phone number. It is just assumed you would have a phone. But if people really want to talk with us they just come to our house, like Rafael who sold us the blue guagua, or Dave who will be helping us with the remodeling of the wood house. We have no doorbell either, so a honk of the horn alerts us to visitors! Or people can connect with us via email or Facebook.

Every now and then Britton will have phantom cell phone vibrations from his traumatic experience with having to carry a cell phone at every moment including when he was on-call and had to sleep with it by his side. I never carried my cell phone with me since it was strictly for work purposes, so I think it has been a little easier for me to adjust to the no-phone lifestyle. We are not sure if we ever will get a phone, but for now it is working out. It is actually a really freeing feeling.

And as for phone calls to my mom in the future, we just had our first Facebook Skype session. Hey, even better than a phone call because we can see and hear each other and it’s free (thanks Laura for helping out)!

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Trying to show up on Skype with my mom in the dark -the flash of the camera

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An Update: Clearing the Jungle, Rincón Farmer’s Market and More

We have been staying pretty busy. Every day is another new adventure for us. Sometimes we get a little overwhelmed with everything we need to do so we decide to just hang out in the cabana or on the property all day long.

Cabana Bridge
We spend a lot of time on the cabana and this is the bridge that connects to the top

Then we remember that whatever we “need” to do is only because we think we do and we get re-energized. So really anything we need to do is actually just a want. The property has sat empty for over a decade, so there is no rush except in our heads.

I think we have a good balance of going out and staying in. We have started to meet more people which is nice and they have offered a lot of helpful advice. We love hearing all the stories of how people ended up here.

We continue to make progress on the property painting a bit more and making it more comfortable. Britton has been clearing out more and more of the jungle. He took down this big weed termite attracting tree but it took about 2 mornings and a lot of elbow grease since he just used the bow saw to take it down.

1st going Going Gone
Going, going, gone…opened up the view to a nice royal palm in the gully

We finally tried the Thai restaurant Ode to the Elephants and really liked it! And we went to the opening night of the pizza place Mi Familias that moved to the old Rum Shack spot of the Lazy Parrot. We also went to the Rincón Farmer’s Market and it has really grown since we had been there before and is now a weekly event! We drank some fresh coconut water, some freshly squeezed cane juice and ate some red bananas.

Coco y guineo
Guineos y coco fresco -with a papaya stem straw
Sipping coco
Yum!

Fresh coconut water doesn’t taste anything like a piña colada but it is really refreshing. It is slightly sweet and slightly salty too. Sugarcane juice on the other hand is very sweet. I got to taste a small amount after I asked to take a video of the juicing process.

Rincon

BK in plaza
Britton at the Farmer’s Market with our goods

We talked with a few people at the market and it sounds like it is pretty easy to get a table and sell stuff there. We are thinking of starting with chicken eggs and going from there when we are all set up. One of the venders even invited us to check out their finca in Moca which we thought was pretty cool.

We are slowly getting more and more comfortable at home, but we still don’t have a stove or burners, so we have been eating most of our food from the rice cooker and heating tortillas on the coffee pot -lol. It actually works remarkably well.

Rice and beans
Rice and beans have become a staple for us!
Food for chili
Some food from the grocery store

tortillas on coffee pot
Quesadillas/tortillas on the coffee pot!

We have been able to find just about everything we need at the local grocery store, Edward’s Family Coop. They will even special order stuff. It is a bit more expensive, though, like $7.50 for a container of Breyer’s ice cream. Hence the rice and beans which are cheap and relatively healthy too. We also have tried “sofrito” which is like Puerto Rican salsa and VERY garlicky. So we just use a little to season our rice and beans.

Our other favorite thing is finding all the beautiful beaches. Like Dome’s Beach that looks like a set on a science fiction movie because of the shut-down nuclear reactor that overlooks the beach. It is also where they had the surfing event in the 60’s that put Rincón on the surf-scene map.

Domes Beach
Domes Beach

Overall, we are having a blast. There is a lot going on so hopefully this update catches us up a bit.

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