Sunday, August 30, 2009

I can't afford to travel: and other myths


A former woman friend, used to say to her kids “you can do things or you can have things”. The motto being that as a more or less middle of the road earning American, we only have only so much money and resources to spend in this life and choices need to be made. The most precious thing is time and after that maybe money. Of course these things can be broken down further and you could say that time spent with loved ones is the most precious single thing on earth.
I frequently use the “death bed scenario” when discussing the myriad choices facing the eager young faces I run into. I ask them “hey, if you are lying on your death bed and are recounting your life and all the things you did and didn’t do; what will be important to you? Will it be the time you spent several hours haggling to buy the new Lexus and the drive home? Will it be the time you sat on top of the great pyramid in Egypt? The first time you made love to the love of your life? Will it be watching the Seahawks on your 56 inch television? Or hiking into Machu Piichu?

This is the juxtaposition of experiencing things and owning things. Buying expensive shiny gewgaws gives very little satisfaction once you actually have them in your hot little red hands, while memories of fantastic experiences keep giving and giving, paying interest, throughout your life. Some of these experiences can in fact be so profound they can literally change you and thus change the direction of the rest of your life. In this day and age of almost great-depression-like economic turmoil, many people I know are losing things they worked very hard for. They have had to declare bankruptcy, sell the “dream house” that is irreplaceable, get divorced (because they sold the “dream house”), lose all those things they were proud of and bragged about. Some people feel these things sadly defined who they were. Have you heard the bullshit about “you are what you drive”?
In that case I am a 1996 Chevrolet Lumina, white with dings and coffee stained carpet, almost 100,000 miles, non-descript, looking like an old rental car (because it is of course), reliable and forgettable. I prefer to think it has nothing to do with who I am it just gets me to work on time. However when I see people showing up in the morning in that brand new Lexus SUV and I look at them I think…it is too expensive for me, too much overtime, too much of my life’s blood. That car would cost too much of my very limited time on this earth. Henry David Theroux described it in his great book Walden as being “tools of our tools”. http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=walden

A movie that I have heard many people quote lately is the “Bucket List”. Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman are old men confronted with their eminent and yes imminent, mortality. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0825232/ They decide to make a bucket list, all the things they want to do before they die. Notice it is things they want to do, not things they want to buy or things they want to own. It has touched a chord with many baby boomers as they grow older, and look in the mirror, discovering to their dismay the grey haired, turkey necked creature peering at them, is not them, but some old, world- weary person sneaking around in their house and wearing their clothes! The horror!

So other than the fear, http://425traveler.blogspot.com/2009/07/travel-fear.html the fake fear that has been manufactured and shoved down our 9-11 throats by the fear-mongering media, (and Republicans), it seems money is the main reason people give for not living out their travel dreams, of not scratching out items on that precious “bucket list” of childhood dreams. These are the dreams we had as children when we still dreamed really big dreams, before we got smart and our world shrank down really small with so many limitations. We tell ourselves that we will travel when we retire and we have earned it. We know in our hearts though when older we will be even more afraid, have less money, and failing health.
“Recent studies have suggested that merely thinking about money makes us more solitary and selfish, and steers us away from the spending that promises to make us happiest.” http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/08/23/happiness_a_buyers_guide/?page=full

The time to plan that thing we have always wanted to do is right now, to research it and start to make the budget for it. If you have the big car payment ask yourself if that is really how you want to remember your life, as working overtime to pay car payments and buy things that you won’t remember even owning ten years down the road. It might be time to write a list of ten things you really, really want to do and then focus on the least expensive easiest one out of the ten. Could you plan that thing now? Could you actually do that particular thing, could you live that dream, next year? I think you will find if you start to make those concrete plans it will improve your mood to have something so wonderful to look forward to.

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3 comments:

Cary said...

I would add that there are many paths to what you want. I wanted to travel and of course the wife and family had other plans for all the dollars. I knew that there were jobs that would pay me to travel. Seeing the world essentially for free was my ticket to what I wanted at a price I could afford.

I have a nephew that didn't go to college, didnt do much of anything except work hard and get noticed. Now he has worked for several companies that has had him jet setting all over the globe. His recent goal is to work for Doctors without borders. It doesn't pay in money, but it pays well.

Anonymous said...

If you read that Boston Globe article, one person states "those that say money isn't important don't have any." This Bush recession/depression has hurt many, who can't do those things mentioned in your blog, because, unfortunately, most of them cost some money. Choosing to travel is great, but many have no such option, even after paying only for the bare basics of life. This is a good lesson, but would be better taught by someone making much less than $30 an hour.

eddietsunami said...

I do make enough to live on but I am not maxed out. I work with people who work more overtime than me, they actually make double what I do, and they live check to check and can’t pay their bills without overtime.
It is my contention anyone can save, if you have ten dollars to your name you should save one dollar. I was taught and believe a person should pay themselves first. Many people say they are broke and smoke cigarettes or have $60 a month cable TV, these are not necessities but choices. The local kid here is broke and he smokes weed every day. It is about planning and choices.
I think one reason people don’t make the right choices or have the discipline to save is they don’t plan things. A hazy idea doesn’t get it done. $25 a check is 50 a month is 600 a year and in three years you have $1800 and yes that is enough for a very nice trip. And yet I know people who haven’t gone anywhere special or done much of anything in YEARS AND YEARS!
By making plans ahead a person can also really shop for good airfares and know what is what. It gives people something to look forward to besides the mundane, it is doable.