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Yearning to Breathe Free

July 4, 2015 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

Yearning to Breathe Free

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me:
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.

― Emma Lazarus

Freedom is the cherished state we all wish to live in.

Gay people only this week were finally allowed to enter on equal terms as straights.

Yet there are still many who want to deny them that freedom.

I won’t go into the reasons…but they are at their core, entirely ideological…just take a gander at my FaceBook wall, as all that’s discussed ad nauseam.

In this post I want to talk specifically about freedom.

My freedom was recently taken away from me…for about a month in LA County Jail.

When something is taken away from you, or when all of a sudden something that you’ve taken for granted for a long time goes missing, it tends to provoke a re-value-ation.

Do we value freedom in this country?

We say we do. We say it often…ad nauseam…

But do we mean it?

We have this thing called “the constitution.”

People invoke its name all the time…usually as a way of promoting some end…

either political, or religious.

But what does the constitution really do for us as people? What was, and still very much is, its purpose.

Technically speaking it established a framework for our government and puts strict limits on what the various bodies therein created can and can’t do…

but why?

Let’s not speak of the “features” of our constitution, but its purpose…its why.

And the why of the constitution is freedom…generally couched in terms of our liberty and our equality as human beings.

And why is that important?

Why should people be free?

And free from what, or to do what?

I recently repatriated to the U.S. after spending 14 years in Costa Rica. Coming back here has been, well, a shocking experience.

I’ve re-entered the U.S. as one of the tired, poor and huddled.

And as I look around I don’t see much in the way of freedom.

I see a lot of weariness, frustration, and fear.

I see a lot of ideological sniping and finger-pointing about various problems, but little being done to solve them.

And all the while the ranks of the down-trodden grow larger.

And that, my friends, does not bode well for freedom.

Our constitution not only protects and guards our cherished freedoms from government, but it also creates that same government to promote those freedoms.

The freedom we have to take a road trip would be a lot less enjoyable were it not for those government created highways we can zip across.

The freedom to enjoy life’s golden years after decades of hard work would be much less enjoyable for many were it not for that “little” government program called social security.

Granted, the lion’s share is up to us…it falls upon us to live our lives in a way that promotes our own freedom and that of others.

I call that in this blog…impact mindfulness.

Sometimes things get out of whack. Sometimes people go too far in the name of what is really a false sense of freedom.

Sometimes certain ideologies get in the way of it…

even ideologies that we consider freedom promoting…

like capitalism…

and christianity.

When folks start utilizing the mechanism of the state to promote ideologies and thereby curtail cherished freedoms…

well, that’s when the constitution must step in.

We should not accept that health should only be the privilege of those who can afford a doctor because capitalism demands it.

We should not accept that marriage should be a right only enjoyed by this particular sexual orientation because the bible demands it.

Freedom must trump ideology. And we have a constitution (and a government) that should be about making sure that’s the case.

Perhaps we’ve been free so long in this country that we’ve forgotten what it really means.

Perhaps we need to undergo a re-value-ation…

before we lose it entirely.

image credit: Patrick Terol via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: impact blinders

The Ideal of Equality

June 27, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

the deal of equality

The winds of change are blowing…and the status quo is losing a bit of its…status.

This has been a week of momentous happenings in the land of the free and the home of the brave.

On June 17, 2015, a young white boy of 21 years, named Dylan Roof, walked into an historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina, opened fire and took the lives of nine black people who had gathered there for bible study.

It was a senseless act of violence and racial hatred that opened old wounds…for it was certainly not the first time a black church had been violently attacked in the south.

His actions, together with the discovery that he was a confederate flag aficionado, have triggered renewed discussion for removing that symbol, forever stained with slavery and racism, from locations that tend to give it the imprimatur of government sanction.

One of those is the South Carolina State Capitol grounds.

This week the Supreme Court handed down two historic rulings.

One of those upheld, once again and for the final time, the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, or what some like to call, obamacare.

Even more significantly, the Court ruled that LGBT couples have the same rights to marry as straight couples.

All of this has the nation in an uproar…with some celebrating and applauding and others talking of secession and mass civil disobedience.

I’m going to suggest in this post that everyone on all sides of these issues take a step back, along with a deep breath, and consider what’s really important…

That the ideal of equality is more important and should trump all ideological arguments to the contrary. Tweet it Out!

Our founding document says as much…

That all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with inalienable rights…to life, liberty and happiness.

That concept is not about any particular ideology…it’s an ideal.

It’s an ideal we’ve never quite lived up to, but that doesn’t mean we should not keep striving towards it.

Being gay is not an ideology…

Neither is it ideological for a gay person to desire to have the right to marry, just as a straight person already enjoys…

Likewise, being healthy is not an ideology…

Neither is it ideological for a sick and poor person to desire to have the right to receive adequate health care, just as someone with financial means already enjoys…

Arguments to the contrary, either based on religious beliefs, capitalistic free market concepts, or just because one hates Barack Obama…

those are ideological.

What the Supreme Court did with its rulings this week, in effect, was to make sure that the ideal of equality, as in the equal right for gays to marry and the equal right of all citizens to health care, trumped ideological arguments to the contrary.

And that’s exactly what they’re supposed to do because that’s what our constitution really stands for…

the IDEAL of equality.

I am from the south, borne and raised in the Carolinas.

The confederate flag means different things depending on perspective, but you can never wash the stain of slavery and racism from it…

and for that reason alone, it should be taken down.

And arguments to the contrary, once again, are ideological.

Taking down the flag from its position atop that pole on State Capitol grounds will not erase one iota of southern heritage…

But it will send a signal that the ideal of equality is even more important.

I believe that the day white southerners can actually embrace that concept and applaud the signal, along with those who are clamouring for it…

that will be a good day for America.

Send the signal and take it down.

Let the ideals of freedom and equality reign over all ideological arguments against them.

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Charleston, confederate flag, Dylan Roof, the big us

Poor in America

June 23, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

Poor in America

After living in the U.S.A. for 5 months in a condition of economic lack, I feel at least partially qualified to offer an opinion of what it’s like to be…

poor in America.

You see, I’ve not always been poor. I’ve never been what I’d consider rich, but prior to my becoming an expat in Costa Rica, beginning around 2002…

I did have fleeting occasions of moneyed-ness.

Over a decade living in Costa Rica cured me of that pursuit…

the pursuit of happiness via money.

However, now I find myself right back in it…and I feel a bit unconditioned for the exercise.

Because, honestly, being poor in America is a real drag.

Wasn’t so in Costa Rica. There you can be poor and happy. People don’t look down on you. Like you’re some kind of oddball that needs to be kept at arm’s length.

They don’t give you that “get a job” look.

I don’t have a job. I’m an entrepreneur. I’ve been one for the past 20 years…

It’s been a roller-coaster ride.

Right now I’m definitely experiencing a stomach-turning dip.

I do still harbor faint expectations of climbing out at some point, but while I’m down here, I thought I’d give you all a little glimpse of what it’s like to be a poor bastard…

Just in case you’ve never experienced it for yourselves.

Luckily, even though I don’t have a car, getting around in Portland, Oregon, isn’t so hard due to the stellar public transport system.

I couldn’t imagine living without a car in the U.S. in a place that didn’t have that.

Even so, getting around can be a drag. Waiting on the bus is, well, waiting. And who wants to do that, especially in America.

And if it’s raining and cold, it makes the waiting even less pleasant.

But, I guess that’s something those of you with cars wouldn’t understand.

It also makes it a bit burdensome to bring the groceries home.

It does, however, give one an opportunity to see up close and personal what it’s like to be poor in America.

You can read it on the faces of your fellow passengers.

The quiet, well, here in Portland, not always so quiet, desperation…

tinged with anger…

and frustration.

Life for the American poor is very frustrating…because you just can’t have all that bright and shiny stuff that others have.

And we’re taught, conditioned, in the U.S. to strive to have what others have…

to covet.

Never-mind what the bible says about that…we’re talking capitalism for god’s sake!

And capitalism runs off the fuel of covetousness.

So, the poor are condemned to covet what they can’t grasp.

To just sit and stare out the window, blankly, at all that stuff…until depression sets in.

The poor here are a different breed than where I came from…my Colombian wife sees it clearly as well…

They’re a harder-edged breed than Latin American poor…and an angrier one.

They’re called on TV, the dependency class. And who wants to be called that…or even actually be it.

Do the folks at Fox News have any idea how it makes a poor person feel to be branded as a worthless “dependent?”

So, they have good reason to be angry…

It sucks living within a system that relentlessly tempts you to have and then condemns you for the fact that you don’t. Tweet it Out!

You’re not welcome here…that’s the message. You’re a reject…a loser. What’s wrong with you? What are you doing here? Get out? Not welcome…the bathroom in here is only for paying customers and you obviously can’t…just look at you!

Those are the messages WE get.

In fact, from the moment I stepped foot back on U.S. soil, that’s sort of the feeling I’ve gotten.

I don’t know, but maybe it’s time to rethink things?

Now, I’m sure someone will read this and think, wait a minute, our poor have it better off than anywhere else on the planet.

Well, that’s only if being “better off” is measured materially, which is, unfortunately, how everything is measured in a capitalistic society like the U.S.A.

But, from an emotional, or happiness, point of view…

according to my observations over the last months, they have it much worse.

image credit: zargoman via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: poor, removing impact binders

The Case for a Moral Universe

June 21, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The Case for a Moral Universe

My last post was an evil one…er, about evil.

If you happened to have caught it, you might remember my five quintessential evil acts…

  1. Exclusion
  2. Hatred
  3. Greed
  4. Indifference
  5. Cruelty

Wait, I can hear someone thinking, those aren’t evil. They aren’t even illegal.

True.

But all the criminals locked up these days aren’t necessarily evil. True that they did some bad stuff to end up in there…but in my mind evil is just another thing altogether.

And plenty of folks with evil intentions are walking around outside of prison walls…some are even the ones with the decision-making power to send the rest of us to that place.

You might also recall that the common thread running through this evil-ness is self-interest…

it is at the core of evil…in my opinion.

That is, self-interest elevated too far above impact, or the antithesis of impact over interest, as you might read somewhere else in this blog.

I ran across a video of the South African civil rights activist and Anglican bishop, Desmond Tutu. In it he makes the case for a moral universe.

His words made me ponder once again the nature of good versus evil.

Isn’t it true that our initial word view, if you can call it that, fresh from the womb, is one of complete and utter self-interest?

In fact, at that infantile stage of thinking, we can’t even distinguish a world apart from ourselves. It’s all connected to us…we are at the center.

Later on we graduate from that level of thinking…

well, sort of.

We gradually begin to recognize that a world indeed exists separate and apart from ourselves. And it’s a dog-eat-dog world indeed…a real jungle out there.

So much so that we fight to separate from it even further and create our own private universes…complete with the two-story house, two-car garage and white picket fence…that once again revolve around us.

You see, we can’t quite shed that need to be at the center, can we?

But the truth that Bishop Tutu is getting at, I believe, is that we are NOT at the center…

it is.

The universe is.

And we are all connected to it…not the other way around.

And by virtue of that connection, we are all connected to each other.

The universe is the glue that binds us…like it or not.

And that very idea means that there is no place in the universe for this obsession with self-interest. It is open rebellion against the universe.

That’s what makes it…and the five evil acts that so often accompany it…evil.

They are contra-connection.

But the universe is larger, stronger and truer than it (self-interest) or they (the five evil acts) are…

and as Bishop Tutu proclaims…the universe will ALWAYS prevail.

The universe is full of light and light is stronger than darkness.

Those whom we look up to as champions of light, or beacons of universal hope, were entirely un-self-interested.

The ones Tutu mentions…

Ghandi

Dalai Lama

Mother Teresa

and others I have mentioned in the past…

Mandela

ML King

They lived their lives in a way that recognized our universal connection.

They were stalwarts against the evils of self-interest run amok, which leads to oppression and unnecessary suffering.

They were good. They were moral.

And their very existence proves the case for the moral universe…as Tutu proclaims.

Their light shone in the darkness and the darkness could not overcome it.

You know how our lights shine in the darkness?

How we can win against it…against the evils of self-interest?

By our impact.

Just like they did.

image credit: fritznold via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: Desmond Tutu, impact over interest, moral universe

On the Need to be Pretentious

June 20, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The Freedom to be Unpretentious

I can be critical of developed country cultures (without naming names).

Are you put off by that?

Sorry, really!

After all, I am from the U.S. and I guess in many ways I’m the proverbial pot who called the kettle black.

I admit that, being a gringo, I’m often guilty of pretentiousness myself. It’s my way of denying (to the world and to myself) how average and unheroic I really am.

Pretentious is defined by Webster’s Dictionary as…”expressive of affected, unwarranted, or exaggerated importance, worth, or stature.”

It’s the attitude of “looking down” or “talking down” to anyone who does not speak, look, dress, smell, or act just like they do.

The truth is that where you were born, or where you went to school, or what you scored on the SAT, your socio-economic position, the car you drive, clothes you wear, or any number of other such “feathers in your cap” do not make you better than the next person.

They only make your experience of life different.

Whenever I feel I must don my feathery cap of pretentiousness, I believe I’m just trying to draw attention away from my unlimited human inadequacies.

And we’re all just human.

My experience of Latin America has largely been limited to my time here in Costa Rica and frequent visits to other countries such as Nicaragua, Panama and Colombia.

With noted exceptions, usually from those of the “higher classes,” the culture here is remarkably unpretentious. Costa Ricans are quite comfortable being exactly who they are socially, economically, morally and in every other way.

There is not a sense, at least I don’t feel it, of having to “keep up with the Joneses.”

I have to admit that this competitive aspect of U.S. culture keeps me here in Costa Rica*.

In Costa Rica I can be poor and damn proud of it!

Here what you have, materially speaking, is not the measuring stick of what you’re “worth” and that is refreshing.

Is that 100% true in all cases? No and especially not in certain areas of San Jose, where U.S. culture and influence are very strong.

But San Jose is not Costa Rica and by and large outside of the social and business scene of that city, there is a liberating lack of pretentiousness. No one is going to judge you by what kind of car you drive, or job you have, or how big your house is.

They will judge you by how big of a smile you wear and whether you know how to be polite and, especially, based on your humility.

Being unpretentious means having the ability to laugh at yourself.

It is to have an awareness of who you are and to be comfortable in being just that person.

In Costa Rica you have the freedom to be unpretentious and just be yourself…as long as you let others do the same.

*Update: I repatriated to Portland, Oregon in March of 2015. I’m reposting this because it seems more relevant for me today than it did when I first wrote it years ago.

Filed Under: uncategorized

Who are You?

June 16, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

beam me up scotty

Here’s a very old post from CRG that I always liked.

Should a human being be defined by one particular trait that tends to “stand out” in the mind of another, or in his or her own mind?

If other people see you as being fat, then do you tell yourself…

I am fat.

Is that who you are, fat?

Or, a father, a husband, a butcher, a baker or a candlestick maker?

Or, an idiot…an idea of which I frequently remind myself.

But the question “who are you” really goes much deeper than surface-level characterizations, doesn’t it?

In fact, when you really think about it, it is a difficult question to answer. I mean sitting here pondering it, I really don’t have a quick answer.

I am Scott Bowers (or is it Costa Rica Guy?).

But that doesn’t answer the question.

Scott Bowers is a name that I inherited. I didn’t choose it. I don’t even like it that much. I would prefer to be Guillermo, or something similarly mysterious and Latin. But my parents saw fit to give me the name Scott, or David Scott to be 100% accurate. I guess I’ve just learned to live with it.

When I was young folks had the habit of calling me Scotty, as in “beam me up Mr. Scotty.” I really didn’t appreciate that so much.

Living in Costa Rica, the name Scott Bowers often poses difficulties. First of all, for most ticos, the name “Scott” is readily associated with papel higienico, or toilet paper. Not a very flattering association, huh? I am reminded of it often here.

And my Germanic last name, Bowers, is virtually impossible to pronounce for most Latinos.

But is that who I am…Scott Bowers?

No, the name in and of itself is meaningless and I hope that I am not, at least not entirely, meaningless. There are a few people in this world that find meaning in my existence.

But the real answer to the riddle of “who are you” cannot be found by looking to names, or character traits, and certainly not to the perspectives of other people. It has to be found in yourself and your unique position in the universe.

When you break it down to the lowest common denominator, who, or better, what, you are, is an “energy force.” An energy force with an ability to direct that energy to your choosing.

You are also an intrinsic component of this universe and when you direct your energy toward a determined end, the universe must follow suit as it is connected to you.

So maybe the answer to the question of who are you depends on where, or how, your energy is being directed at any given point along the space-time continuum.

Wow, I am beginning to sound a bit like Mr. Scotty from Star Trek.

I believe we too easily allow people and perspectives to define our place in this universe. When in reality, we have been gifted with the power to define that for ourselves and to re-define it as often as we see fit.

Of course, you can direct your energy in ways that are destructive, or to ways that are constructive. Or we can just do nothing at all and then our energy will slowly stagnate and dissipate and sooner or later our flame will begin to flicker until it is finally extinguished.

Haven’t you noticed that the more proactive you are, the more energy you seem to have? And the less proactive you are, the more depressed and non-energetic you feel?

So for me the answer to the question is that I am energy. Not a “hey that is an energetic fellow” kind of an answer, but really, when you get right down to it, that is what I am…

energy.

The “who I am” is part and parcel of how I direct my energy…positively, or negatively. I can direct it negatively and be an SOB, or positively and be a saint.

The crazy thing to think about is that this universe to which we are connected is comprised of an infinite number of “energy forces.” However, they have no will…their energy is directed according to physical laws. I mean Saturn can’t up one day and decide to change the rotational direction of its rings, now can it?

The only force that can be self-directed in a manner of the energy force’s own choosing is your energy, my energy, human energy. Hitler’s energy was self-directed, as was Gandhi’s and Mother Teresa’s, just towards different ends.

Does that mean that the “universe” is indifferent as to how I direct my energy?

Hmm, that is an even more difficult question best reserved for another post, another day.

The moral of this story?

Don’t let faulty answers to the question of who are you influence and thereby misdirect the focus of your energy.

image credit: The Rocketeer via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: impact over interest, who are you

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