Archive for April, 2005

a BIG surprise!

Well, yesterday was my birthday and it’s sometimes tough spending holidays (your birthday’s a holiday right?) away from home. I’ve done it a few times now since I’ve been over here and I’m not sure it’s something that you really get used to. Anyway, I had a lot of studying to do yesterday and then some friends were going to take me out last night after class to celebrate. So, I was sitting here at my computer attempting to study for a business law exam and somebody buzzed my apartment. I was expecting the UPS driver, so I ran out to the front door, hoping not to miss him (what usually happens, but a whole nother story) and my dad is there with flowers in hand. He made a surprise visit and took me to dinner at a local bistro that we’ve been wanting to try for a while now. The food was excellent and it turned out to be a really neat little place to visit. What a great birthday surprise! I regret that I forgot to take my camera along though.

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“It’s not what you look at that matters; it’s what you see.”

-Henry David Thoreau
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counting down

21 days left until I head for Rome

18 days until Adrienne’s wedding

16 days until school is out!!!!!!!!

7 days until I turn 25 [weird]

So much happening so fast.

America – abundance or scarcity?

This is a little lengthy, but you’ll have to trust me that it’s worth reading. This is how to live simply and contently. Abundance is about more than just surrounding yourself with stuff, even nice things. Eventually stuff, no matter how nice it is, won’t satisfy you. The key is learning to let Jesus be your abundance; ultimately fulfillment is hidden in him.

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Don’t Buy This Shirt Unless You Need It
by Yvon Chouinard & Nora Gallagher
Late Summer 2004

Near the headquarters of Patagonia, on the central coast of California, the Chumash Nation enjoyed a good life for thousands of years. They lived in small villages and possessed fur blankets, intricate baskets and soapstone pots decorated with shells. They painted elaborate abstracts in mountain caves. In every village were game-playing fields and sacred buildings. Almost every day, most Chumash enjoyed a cleansing sweat in the village temescal. In each village was a granary for stockpiling food that would later be distributed to those in need.

Chumash traded exquisite olivella shells for black pigment, honeydew melons, pine nuts, wild tobacco and various herbs and salt. By the 16th century, theirs was a complex society of hunters and gatherers with a far-reaching, sophisticated trade network.

Other nations along the western coast shared this life. Gerald Amos, a member (and former chief) of the Haisla Nation in Kitamaat, northwest Canada, recalls a friend of his father who would leave home in the dark to paddle to his trapline four miles by water. He would spend the day walking the lines, checking and resetting the traps. “Along the way back to the boat, during the late fall and early winter, the coho salmon would be still in the creeks that they passed, so they would stop at one of these creeks and take a couple of coho, which they would clean and pack home in their backpack together with what-ever animals they had taken in their traps. The fish provided them with their supper later that night.”

Such lives are often called subsistence, which brings to mind the barest, hardscrabble survival. But there is another way to look at them. At Patagonia we choose to call them “economies of abundance.” In an economy of abundance, there is enough. Not too much. Not too little. Enough. Most important, there is enough time for the things that matter: relationships, delicious food, art, games and rest.

Many of us in the United States live in what is thought to be abundance, with plenty all around us, but it is only an illusion, not the real thing. The economy we live in is marked by “not enough.” We once asked the owner of a successful business if he had enough money and he replied, “Don’t you understand? There is never enough.”

We don’t have enough money, and we also don’t have enough time. We don’t have enough energy, solitude or peace. We are the world’s richest country, yet our quality of life ranks 14th in the world. As Eric Hoffer, a mid-20th century philosopher, put it, “You can never get enough of what you don’t really need to make you happy.”

And while we work harder and harder to get more of what we don’t need, we lay waste to the natural world. Dr. Peter Senge, author and MIT lecturer, says, “We are sleepwalking into disaster, going faster and faster to get to where no one wants to be.”

We might call this economy, the one we live in, the economy of scarcity.

Lest you think the economy of abundance is gone with the old Chumash, consider Europe. Europeans still buy only a few well-made clothes and keep them for many years. Their houses and apartments tend to be smaller than ours; they rely on public transportation, and small, efficient home appliances and cars. Europeans enjoy a 25 percent higher quality of life than Americans (while we consume 75 percent more than they do).

Or, look at the people of Bhutan, whose king insists on measuring “gross national happiness.”

Any person or nation can grow fatter and fatter, richer and richer, sleepwalking toward disaster. Or we can choose to remain lean and quick, wealthy in beauty and time and, that word that inspired our forefathers, wealthy in happiness.

In Patagonia’s environmental campaign this year, we looked at the plight of wild salmon and what it might take for us to become what Ecotrust calls “a Salmon Nation,” a nation of people who make choices that contribute to the health of whole watersheds and the economies of the people who live in them. A salmon nation is a nation of abundance, where people live in a way that fish can thrive. If you think this is an impossible dream, check out Seth Zuckerman’s essay “The Gift: Salmon Recovered” and learn how wild salmon rebounded in Alaska after the state employed sophisticated tools like sonar, stream bank counters and airborne spotters to ensure their salmon were not overfished. In the last two decades, commercial catches in Alaska have more than doubled.

At Patagonia, we are dedicated to abundance. We don’t want to grow larger, but want to remain lean and quick. We want to make the best clothes and make them so they will last a long, long time. Our idea is to make the best product so you can consume less and consume better. Every decision we make must include its impact on the environment. We make ski jackets that are the right jackets, with no compromises, yet they are elegant enough to wear over dress clothes in a storm in Paris. (Most ski jackets sit in the closet nine months out of the year.) We want to zero in on quality.

In the economy of abundance, wild salmon are given back rivers in which to run. Trees grow to their natural height. Water is clean. A sense of mystery and enchantment is restored to the world. We humans live within our means and, best of all, we have the time to enjoy what we have.

quote of the day

“If we’re wise, we’ll see our duties not as unimportant ways to bide our time, but as springboards, launching us into God’s plan and purpose for our future.”

- Joshua Harris

This is a great quote. So often I get hung up on looking too far ahead that I forget where I’m at today. I misticize God’s plan and purpose and always picture it as something that lies ahead, when really it’s today, it’s what I’m living now. It’s in the mundane, the day-to-day tasks that we are given the opportunity to live out our walk. Today is what I’ve been given, in fact it’s all I’ve got; how am I going to live it?

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