Wow, this dude's got cojones grandes!
As it states in the article below, not many people at all would have either the conviction or the courage to give up everything our technological and consumption-based society has given us, as we've known nothing else, it's ingrained into us from birth, but it is a wonderful story of personal commitment.
It is possible, you know, if you've been paying attention, that the future just may necessitate such a life for us... that's probably well down the road, though, I'm reasonably certain.
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48 Year-Old Blogger Has Gone 9 Years Without Spending Money
by Brian Merchant, Brooklyn, New York on 10.5.09
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/10/48-year-old-blogger-gone-9-years-without-money.php - click for 100+ comments!!!
Daniel Suelo wasn't poor, a victim of bad luck, mentally ill, or even uneducated. He just decided that he wanted to have nothing to do with money. So he gave up consumer culture altogether, and for the last 9 years, he's survived by living in a cave in Utah, and dumpster diving, foraging, fishing, and occasionally hunting for food. He spends his time in the great outdoors--and in the public library, where he blogs about it all.
Suelo must have the lowest carbon footprint of any blogger in the United States. And he's never taken food stamps or other government assistance, and despite what his lifestyle may lead you to believe, he's certainly not crazy. He's just got an aversion to money.
According to MatadorChange, he was working in South America when he was first moved to consider a money-free, zero impact lifestyle:
While in Ecuador on a Peace Corps mission, he witnessed a rural community acquire increased monetary wealth through farming and shift their traditional lifestyle towards a diet of unhealthy, processed food and a newfound addiction to television ... He made the conscious decision to return home, quit his job, and carve out a life without money.
Suelo himself writes "I've been living without a cent to my name since the autumn of 2000 (with a month's exception during my first year)" on the front page of the website he runs from the public library.
It's interesting to look at Suelo's nearly decade-long dedication to anti-consumerism in contrast to the recent 'eco-stunts' that essentially promote similar ideals: sure, No Impact Man learned how hard it is to walk up six flights of stairs to get to his apartment for a year, but he he got a film and book deal out of it. Suelo's got no cameras following him around, and he mostly just uses his blog to wax poetic about his living philosophy.
Of course, few would be willing to take such a plunge into a moneyless, ultra-low impact life. But simply knowing that Suelo has should be enough to make us think a long hard minute about all the stuff we heedlessly buy. Reverend Billy may be the head of the Church of Stop Shopping, but Daniel Suelo is its patron saint.
1 comment:
I did not choose homelessness, it was thrust upon me, by fates indifferent to me as to any other.
Having spent some years within the lifestyle, and now committed to it,I found I was good at it.
It only takes a while of living OK
without currency, with realizing that your word and hard work, might be enough for meals and some basic supplies.
Later, realizing you might THRIVE in this way, that you might survive with a reasonable amount of class, sets in...
Hunting and fishing to stay alive?
Hunting/gathering?
Hell, yeah.
Add a hefty dose of barter, and you have it.
Off the grid.
Unencumbered.
Free, kinda.
Cool.
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