Saturday, January 31, 2009
What is wealth? what is happyness?
iii.
I am back on North America time. It has been a few days since the laconic travels through the jungle and the cultures that are so different from my world. So far the foreign sense of time stays with me. It is not that I am moving at the slow pace of a tourist traveling through the country side on my way to see the volcano. I am not unaware of the time and date. The changed world makes the entire of North America seems claustrophobic.
I do not mean the absurdity that the Rockies, the Smokies, the Ozarks and the White Mountains together are not enough space for me to feel like the walls are not closing in. Denver, Dallas, Boston, and Birmingham together are enough interaction for anyone, no matter what experience they seek or how starved for it they are. It is more that I feel that we, as a society, missed an important turn off on the road we travel. Are we on a good road and just gone too far?
It seems to me that we have been saying the ends justify the means for so long that we have become those means. My foreign travels showed me people who would love to have big flat screens, four dollar lattes’ and the newest coolest shoes. In the jungle, the markets, and the Capital they all worked long days and long weeks. The make crap money and cram into tiny houses with their relatives. But in a way that seems to elude most of us North Americans they are living their lives in real time; they are happy in the now. When did building our secure future become so constantly and obsessively redefined that we lost the ability to enjoy in the now?
I realize that the ways that we work have made us wealthy as a culture and inflated our bank accounts. Our western fetish with total quality management and maximized time over resource curves has made us great and achieved in scale beyond measure. But what have we lost?
I am sitting here on my jet plane in my business casual attire, missing my pretty friend. I am seeking a way to bring the timelessness of my foreign travel and the enjoyment of now to the unbridled efficiency and power of the great North American machine. If I can manage this trick I can truly change the world.
I am back on North America time. It has been a few days since the laconic travels through the jungle and the cultures that are so different from my world. So far the foreign sense of time stays with me. It is not that I am moving at the slow pace of a tourist traveling through the country side on my way to see the volcano. I am not unaware of the time and date. The changed world makes the entire of North America seems claustrophobic.
I do not mean the absurdity that the Rockies, the Smokies, the Ozarks and the White Mountains together are not enough space for me to feel like the walls are not closing in. Denver, Dallas, Boston, and Birmingham together are enough interaction for anyone, no matter what experience they seek or how starved for it they are. It is more that I feel that we, as a society, missed an important turn off on the road we travel. Are we on a good road and just gone too far?
It seems to me that we have been saying the ends justify the means for so long that we have become those means. My foreign travels showed me people who would love to have big flat screens, four dollar lattes’ and the newest coolest shoes. In the jungle, the markets, and the Capital they all worked long days and long weeks. The make crap money and cram into tiny houses with their relatives. But in a way that seems to elude most of us North Americans they are living their lives in real time; they are happy in the now. When did building our secure future become so constantly and obsessively redefined that we lost the ability to enjoy in the now?
I realize that the ways that we work have made us wealthy as a culture and inflated our bank accounts. Our western fetish with total quality management and maximized time over resource curves has made us great and achieved in scale beyond measure. But what have we lost?
I am sitting here on my jet plane in my business casual attire, missing my pretty friend. I am seeking a way to bring the timelessness of my foreign travel and the enjoyment of now to the unbridled efficiency and power of the great North American machine. If I can manage this trick I can truly change the world.
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