Categories
Happiness

Money

If you figure out money, life is incredibly easy. If you don’t, life is insanely hard. You don’t need lots of money. But you do need enough, and be able to deal with it.

The simplest way is low overhead and no debt. People who live far below their means enjoy a freedom that people busy upgrading their lifestyles can’t fathom because it’s hard freeing people from the chains they revere.

Not needing wealth is more valuable than wealth itself. The late NYC street  photographer Bill Cunningham treated his independence fiercely. He said “Once people own you, they can tell you what to do. So don’t let ’em. If you don’t take money, they can’t tell you what to do.”

Categories
Food and Drink

Beer or Bread

Which came first, bread, farming, or maybe beer?

A recent find in Jordan of a 14,500-year-old flatbread indicates that bread was first made about 4000 years before agriculture was invented.

The flatbread, was fashioned from wild cereals such as barley, einkorn or oats, as well as tubers that had been ground into flour.

Did the invention of bread drive the invention agriculture?

One researcher  wondered, “We now have to assess whether there was a relationship between bread production and the origins of agriculture. It’s possible bread may have provided an incentive for people to take up plant cultivation and farming, if it became a desirable or much-sought-after food.”

Another researcher thought, “Bread provides us with an important source of carbohydrates and nutrients, including B vitamins, iron and magnesium, as well as fiber.”

There’s also another  theory that’s difficult to prove, but plausible. It was the human desire for a steady supply of alcohol, not food, that drove the shift to agriculture and settlement. Maybe beer came before bread. And as soon as people got a taste of it, they would’ve wanted more than could be produced by gathering seeds or fruits or honey.

This would certainly help explain why early humans would ever have traded the comparatively easy lifestyle of the hunter-gatherer, who typically devotes far less time and effort to obtaining food than the farmer, for the toil and inferior diet of the early agriculturist.

(I think this was chopped and changed from an article on Kottke.org)

Categories
Happiness Ideas

Snap out of it

People’s worries are endless. “My mother didn’t love me.” “I try to do too much.” “My husband isn’t attracted to me.”  “I’m a success but I’m still alone.” “I can’t leave my house.” “So and so at work avoids me.”

Jerry Seinfeld and a comedian pal were riffing about what happens during most psychotherapy sessions. They speculated on the best  advice the therapist could offer, concluding the best response a therapist should usually give at the end of a session was, “Snap out of it!”

Andy Warhol supposedly said that sometimes people let the same problem make them miserable for years when they could just say, “So what?”

The vast majority of most lives will be boring and not noteworthy. It’s normal and it’s okay. So “Snap out of it.” might be good advice. Or maybe try similar ideas like: move on, so what, or just drop it.

Marcus Aurelius said that you have power over your mind but not external events. If you can abide by that,  you’ll be able to go through life less perturbed.

Not everyone has the privilege of saying “Snap out of it, move on, or so what?” in every situation, but changing your perception about things you have little control over is a powerful tool.

Categories
Ideas

Looking forward with Bucky

There’s more talk lately about creating some sort of guaranteed basic income once, or before, AI and more automation come online. Basically everyone gets the same monthly amount. It’ll be enough to live on and up to you to pursue more money or other interests.

It sounds radical to most people, but some form of it will probably happen. But it’s not a new concept. A little ahead of his time, in a 1970 issue of New York magazine article Buckminster Fuller said this about the massive economic lever of technology:

We must do away with the absolutely specious notion that everybody has to earn a living. It’s a fact today that one in ten thousand of us can make a technological breakthrough capable of supporting all the rest. The youth of today are absolutely right in recognizing this nonsense of earning a living. We keep inventing jobs because of this false idea that everybody has to be employed at some kind of drudgery because, according to Malthusian-Darwinian theory, he must justify his right to exist.

So we have inspectors of inspectors and people making instruments for inspectors to inspect inspectors. The true business of people should be to go back to school and think about whatever it was they were thinking about before somebody came along and told them they had to earn a living.

Categories
Happiness

Telluride 12 years later

We returned to Telluride, Colorado in May after a 12 year hiatus.

In many ways it’s the same town I lived in for 13 years before we moved, just more expensive.

Many of the houses are beautifully renovated. They’re so nicely renovated that the renovations could only be afforded to be done by wealthy folks. They’re second homeowners in Telluride because they need to live somewhere else most of the time so they can make enough dough to afford to have a house here.

The result is that some of the neighborhoods are very quiet. You can see lots of stars at night when you walk around because there aren’t many lights on.

There’s always a lead/lag going on with housing and the people interested in living in a beautiful spot. So we’ll have to see how long this predicament goes on. Maybe billionaires will chase out the millionaires. One thing making Telluride so appealing is it’s small size, but the inability to grow also drives up the real estate market.

Telluride is still a great place to live, and we’ll be back next summer.