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Life at 12 miles an hour, what does it mean?
Nearly half (47 percent)
of consumers say they already have all the possessions
they need, up from 34 percent in November 2006 — and a
full three-quarters (74 percent) no longer agree that
the pressure to buy more and better material possessions
is greater than ever. - from a
MetLife study
on the American Dream
The message: most
Americans are at, if not past, the point of diminishing
returns. Comfort, health, and wealth by any meaningful
measure have been achieved. We're now over the top,
taking on more stress, longer working hours, more body
weight, more debt, larger homes, cars, etc. for...what?
Not only are we putting our own health at risk but what
does the future hold when those at the top still can't
stop? The collapse of 2007-8-9 is taking much of this
away from us now but why should we miss it or want to
regain it?
The question: Can
our economy survive at a steady state or must we drive
ourselves over the edge physically and emotionally in
order to keep the economy growing for the sake of
growth? If we must keep stepping up the pace for the
sake of the economy then our lifestyle is mandated. How
then can we call ourselves a free people?
my proposal to my
fellow citizens, is a modern American heresy: Put your
well-being first and convenience/luxury/status second.
Choose the small over the large. Choose a bicycle over a
car. Take a walk, rather than ride. Get rid of things
rather than buying more. Voluntarily make things
harder for yourself...not to suffer, but to benefit from
the effort you will be making on your own behalf. Behind
such heresy lies a happiness that can be sustained.
The rationale:
We cannot make the finite
infinite - though technology races forward in the attempt - but we can
control our desire, something well within our power. Suppose you slowed down
voluntarily, not only in traffic but in life as well? Could you find the
peace of mind that seems so elusive in American culture? This website is
about maintaining sanity in a culture of excess and frenzy. Don't
believe we are frenzied? Start with
you are as you drive and
see if the picture isn't familiar.
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