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Knee Jerk Patriotism

September 26, 2017 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

Knee Jerk Patriotism

There are certain things that make me feel patriotic. And, yes, the national anthem before a sporting event can be one of them…

But what is patriotism, really? And, perhaps an even better question is, what is it not?

At its heart patriotism means having pride in what one’s nation stands for. Certainly in our case that means our liberty, which many have fought hard to defend.

Here’s a recent video of a woman who spontaneously sang the national anthem at the Lincoln Memorial…

Yea, that one made me beam with patriotic pride. Her effort seemed to have a similar effect on those standing around her.

Those who’ve fought to defend our shared liberty come in many shapes and sizes. Certainly the brave young men who stormed the beaches of Normandy fit the bill. But so does the young woman who refused to ride in the back of the bus. So do those who braved the firehoses, nightsticks, and attack dogs of Bull Connor and his officers in the streets of Birmingham, Alabama.

And so does the young quarterback who took it upon himself to demonstrate his concern about social injustice in our country.

In one form or another all of those mentioned above paid a price for their displays of patriotism, some the ultimate price.

To me there is nothing more inspirational than true patriotism. But true patriotism has nothing to do with flag worship, or even worship and praise for the military. That’s what I would prefer to call “knee jerk patriotism.”

You see, when that flag is draped around really bad ideas like racism and bigotry, or around blind support for misguided military excursions that unnecessarily consume our nation’s precious resources and spill its even more precious blood…then it ceases to symbolize liberty, especially for those oppressed.

Donald Trump’s comments for a crowd of his “base” followers in Alabama offer up that brand of knee jerk patriotism that’s anything but inspirational. For many, perhaps most, his comments were infuriating.

They were infuriating to those who know very well that while they might not agree with certain ideas, or the means used in expressing them, peacefully, nevertheless they will defend to the death another’s right to express them.

That’s exactly what all those players and owners were doing out there on the fields across the nation on Sunday.

It had nothing to do with “the flag.” The flag is a piece of dyed cloth. The military is a government program that consumes an inordinate amount of our nation’s capital.

Neither deserve our worship.

But what that piece of dyed cloth represents and what the brave young men and women of our military defend, now that’s another story.

And that “story” is one of our commonly shared liberty…

To the chagrin and outright anger of some, including our sitting president, Colin Kaepernick has become a symbol of that liberty.

And Trump should be wary because in our country true defenders of liberty have a pretty good track record of success against their detractors.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Colin Kaepernick, Donald Trump, Knee Jerk Patriotism

A Satisfactory Philosophy of Ignorance

September 19, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

A Satisfactory Philosophy of Ignorance

In the words of the English philosopher, Bertrand Russell…

The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent full of doubt.

Isn’t it true that most of the trouble in the world tends to derive from cocksured-ness? That is, a dogmatic (or quasi-dogmatic) belief that I am right and the rest of you, well, can either join up, or be annihilated.

Look at the problems in the Middle East, for example. This is an entrenched conflict that has gone on for thousands of years at the expense of millions of lives. And why? Because each side is cocksure of the righteousness of their respective dogmatic opinions about the origins of the universe! And neither really has a clue.

Look at that dude in Syria, Bashar al Assad. Here you have a dictator so full of himself that he’s willing to sacrifice the population of his country (or, at least the part that doesn’t agree with him) just to stay in power.

Right now we have a president in our country that I’d describe as similarly cocksure. And most of what he’s so sure of, such as the idea that global warming is some kind of liberal hoax, he’s dangerously wrong about! And people and planet will suffer for that…believe me.

Wouldn’t it be better if these cocksure leaders had the capacity to look themselves in the mirror and think the novel thought that maybe, just maybe, I might be wrong.

Truth be told, there is one constant in the universe that we can all be sure of. And that is that we’re mostly unsure. Every second of life is chock full of uncertainty.

Did any of those New Yorkers going to work that fateful morning of September 11, 2001 have the foggiest notion of what was about to unfold? Did the U.S. government, the Central Intelligence Agency, or the Pentagon? No, not really. That day we all had to come to national grips with how uncertain life can be, didn’t we?

Does all this mean that there is no grand design, or purpose to it all? Are you kidding me…how would I know?

However, on some spiritual level I do sort of believe that there might be. But I don’t know what and I doubt seriously that I ever will. I believe maintaining a satisfactory philosophy of ignorance in the face of so much that is unknown is the better way to go.

So, what am I really saying this morning? That we should all just stay in bed?

No, better to repeat this…

I relax my consciousness…

I un-set my heart…

I wear the world as a loose garment…

I learn to dance on the constantly shifting carpet.

There now, with that said, the uncertainty tends to loose its edge over you.

You are now ready for it.

You are now armed with that satisfactory philosophy of ignorance that will help you make it through another day without doing any real cocksure harm.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders

10 Ways to Know You’ve Finally Grown Up

September 11, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

10 Ways to Know You've Finally Grown Up

For those precious few out there who check into this blog from time to time, I guess you’ve noticed the lack of new material.

I apologize for that.

Lately the creative juices haven’t been flowing due to a severe “chakral” imbalance, primarily related to my urgent need for income!

However, the imbalance is gradually coming back in line…

I hope.

I’ll admit this post is not technically “new” material. It’s an old one that I thought worthy of resurrection since it has a good message…for both of us.

In case you were wondering, here are 10 ways to know you’ve finally grown up…and 10 reasons you might want to reconsider doing so hidden within…

1. Your sense of adventure is generally satisfied by sitting on the couch and vicariously viewing Bear Grylls episodes (or maybe Animal Planet)…

2. You go to great lengths not to appear silly in front of peers, no matter how much fun you could have in the process…

3. If generally takes you 4 wheels to get from Point A to B, rather than just 2 (feet or wheels, that is)…

4. You engage in that monotonous routine you call exercise in order to stave off the years (and pounds) rather than gaining the sheer joy that stems from bodily movement…

5. You take yourself very seriously by furrowing your brow in a way that makes you look even older and wiser than you really are (well, at least I do that)…

6. You get a bigger kick out of “rolling up” green pictures of dead notables than you do rolling around in fresh green grass (I’ll admit this one has drug influenced undertones, but that’s really not what I’m getting at)…

7. Your idea of romance is relegated to a robotic routine of relational responsibility rather than a daring dance of interdependent discovery (and that’s about as poetic as I can get)…

8. You spend far more time worrying about what is than wondering about what could be…

9. Your idea of risk taking is relegated to your choice of 401K investments, rather than exposing to the world the artist that lies within…

10. You work in order to realize a dream rather than dream in order to realize your work…

We all know those people who just refuse to grow up.

And I’d generally prefer to try and be one of them.

How am I doing?


10 Ways to Know You've Finally Grown Up

I just published a new book on Amazon entitled Expat Mindfulness – How Expats Can Change the World with Impact Mindfulness.

It’s being offered FREE on Amazon, but just for a limited time. If you grab it, please give it a read and leave me a review!

I’ve written this eBook as a companion to The Definitive Guide to Costa Rica Expat Living. Its purpose is to encourage what I call “expat mindfulness” and to provide ideas about how to put the concept into practice. It’s written with the Costa Rica expat in mind, but the principles are equally applicable wherever you might decide to plant yourself.

Here’s a short video intro…

Get it for FREE on Amazon – limited time offer!

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders

The Fiction of Competitive Self-Interest

July 8, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The Fiction of Competitive Self-Interest

The natural order of things is that there exists within this vast universe, people, i.e., you and me. We are all connected by the fact that we came from and share…space.

Now, of course it’s also very true that you and I are different. We have different desires, tastes, world-views, goals, objectives, etc., etc. Humans have evolved as little bastions of will, each motivated to drive in different directions.

And that’s fine and dandy.

What’s not so fine, nor dandy, is the fiction of competitive self-interest. This fiction gives rise to irrational ideas. Ideas espoused by the likes of Ayn Rand. The idea that one can, and even should, pursue his or her “differences” at the expense of others doing the same. That it’s even a good thing for us to do so, when perhaps it really isn’t.

Now, where did this irrational idea of competitive self-interest originate? It certainly didn’t come from our natural world, or from the universe. We humans evolved from the stuff of exploding stars. But competitive self-interest didn’t. No, we sort of conjured that one up all on our own.

It seems the idea of competitive self-interest is largely the product of industrial age capitalist economic theory. I can’t really pin it on religion. The religions of the world tend to unite, rather than separate, their adherants. Granted, religions do separate those of competing religious affiliation, which is equally dangerous. But that’s a topic for a different post.

What I’m getting at is this fiction of competitive self-interest that gives rise to the notion that I should pursue my individual will, in the context of a world with scarce resources, at the expense of, or in competition with, other humans doing the same.

I’m not saying at all that we shouldn’t pursue our interests. That is, I should have goals for my life and I should pursue them. And so should you. But must I do so in ways that interfere with your pursuit? Because capitalist driven competitive self-interest suggests that “competition” is actually the key driver of human progress. That we must compete for what’s there. That the size of the pie is basically fixed and I better be about getting as big of a slice for me as I can.

Actually, that last part will be met with argument since a certain strain of capitalist economic thought says that the pie will actually be enlarged by individuals pursuing their competitive self-interest, so that everyone benefits.

That’s a nice theory, but in practice it hasn’t worked out very well…has it?

The facts of our present world, with inequality rising to unbearable proportions, belies the utility of the “trickle-down” strain of capitalist economic theory. In short, it ain’t trickling down!

The fiction of competitive self-interest is a function of the “system”, largely driven by capitalism. This is a fiction that we created and imposed on ourselves. It is not a function of the natural world that we live in.

So, the question becomes, is it a good fiction? Is it one worthy of adhering to?

The underlying premise of impact mindfulness is that it is not.

Impact mindfulness promotes the idea that we should prioritize impact over self-interest. That notion flies directly in the face of competitive self-interest. It argues rather for cooperative self-interest. That is, that we should pursue our human differences in a spirit of cooperation with our fellow humans…that we should help each other in that regard, not compete with each other.

The hardcore capitalist will read this and dismiss it as utopian poppycock.

However, our species evolved to be at the top of the food change via cooperation, not competitive self-interest. No, that entered into the mix only recently. And it has done some pretty serious damage to the world.

I’d even argue that competitive self-interest, along with competing religious affiliations, are the two fictions that will most likely lead to the extinction of our species.

The fiction of competitive self-interest, inspired by nations pursuing competing capitalist ideals, is the primary reason for most of the horrors flashing constantly across the news screens of our televisions, computers, Ipads, and smart phones.

A world in which warring nations, and the humans of which they are comprised, are in brutal competition for more stuff conjures up a dystopian vision of reality that perhaps you wouldn’t want to live in. However, that’s exactly where we’re headed these days.

Impact mindfulness suggests that we remove the blinder of competitive self-interest. That we pursue our human differences, self-interest, or individual wills in a spirit of cooperation, rather than competition. That we must do so within the fictitious current system, while peacefully trying to change it for the better.

The “system” of competitive self-interest is breaking down before our very eyes.

The point of this post is to see it for what it is…

not really real.

Rather than a world ruled by the fiction of competitive self-interested, I long to see one dominated by competitive self-expression. That is, a world in which humans compete freely to express their differences in ways that make the world more beautiful and life more wonderful for us all.

A world in which the sheer survival aspects of self-interest, those of food, water, shelter, clothing and good health, are met for all using the vast resources this great planet grants us all.

Is this a utopian dream?

Yes, of course it is.

It’s also one that’s possible, but only when and if we shun the fiction of competitive self-interest.


Stories Run Deep in Colombia

My not-so-new-anymore book, The Impact Revolution, is live on Amazon. It was written to inspire empathy, to inspire connection. It was written to inspire the positive impacts that flow from empathy and connection. It was written to inspire an acceptance of the idea that we’re really all in this together.

Get the Book!

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: competitive self-interest

Advice for President Trump

July 1, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

My Advice to Donald Trump

In light of recent developments, I thought I’d offer a little advice for President Trump. Not that he’ll listen…

but someone just might…

I’ve learned a few things about myself, and life in general, over the past 5 plus decades…

I’ve learned that we’re never quite as “good” as we think we are…

  • never as good-looking…
  • never as intelligent…
  • never as talented…
  • never as compassionate…
  • never as insightful…
  • never as strong…
  • never as capable…
  • never as truly popular…

We often suffer from delusions of the ego. And I’d surmise that many of Donny’s tweet storms stem from those delusions. You see the ego deludes from what life alludes. And that is to the fact that we’re never quite as “good” as we might think we are.

Never underestimate the ego’s uncanny ability to overestimate. Tweet it!

And thereby get yo ass in a whole lot of trouble…as Trump appears to be in right now.

But, here’s the thing…

Despite the truths espoused in the above comments, none of it means that we shouldn’t press forward. That we shouldn’t stay in the struggle and keep moving forward with a positive, yet humble, attitude.

Maybe that last part is the kernel of truth to be gleaned from this post…

Stay Humble!

Donald Trump appears not to have a dose of humility coursing through his veins. Perhaps being the leader of the free world will ultimately offer him the opportunity to learn how to be humble…

or, perhaps not.

The most recent tweets show that the above advice for President Trump is not really the direction he’s leaning towards.

We’d certainly all benefit if he would…don’t you think? The reputation of our country throughout the world would stand to benefit if he would.

Donny’s presidential woes remind me of the closing lines of Rudyard Kipling’s immortal poem…IF…

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings—nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And—which is more—you’ll be a Man, my son!

Now, granted, I am a bit reticent to offer advice for President Trump this morning, since I’m politically opposed to every thing he stands for.

But I figure it’s my patriotic duty.

Donald Trump’s presidency is perhaps the greatest American tragedy of my lifetime. And I believe it all stems from his ego’s uncanny ability to overestimate.

The underlying message is that perhaps most self-inflicted human tragedies stem from the ego’s uncanny ability to overestimate.

Donny, you’re just not as good as you think you are.

Neither am I…

And neither are you.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Donald Trump, removing impact blinders

The Lure of Neoliberalism

June 16, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The Lure of Neoliberalism

I just finished reading Naomi Klein’s newest book: No is Not Enough: Resisting Trump’s Shock Politics and Winning the World We Need.

The book does a great job of identifying Trump for what he really is, despite his riding to victory on a wave of populist petulance. Trump is a neoliberal, pure and simple. And a very dangerous one. One who’s even less bashful and more bold than others when it comes to using the “shock doctrine” to push forward policies that favor the rich at the expense of people and planet.

Why does society keep inflicting damage to itself by handing over power to the Trumps of this world? What is behind the lure of neoliberalism? That’s the $100,000 question that this post will pry at an answer to.

My last post was an attempt to debunk the populist-inspired “globalist” conspiracies and reveal the real problem we all face: neoliberalism. I went through a very brief synopsis of how we arrived at this juncture, with societal power reduced to a proverbial sack of potatoes. The rich keep getting richer, and more powerful, while the rest of us seem content to sit back with the popcorn to watch the reality show.

Naomi’s book is a call to get up off the couch and do something about this! She’s right and I applaud her for the effort.

But why? Why do we let these guys get away with it?

Could it be that the idea that happiness and fulfillment can be best achieved via great wealth is one that’s ingrained in our societal psyche? We revere the wealthy. We aspire to their vaulted status. We buy Trump’s books and even pay our hard-earned cash to attend the disgraced Trump University. The message of both is that we can be like him…we too can have our wildest dreams fulfilled if we just focus on winning at the expense of whoever is on the other side of the transaction.

Trump is the most “transactional” president we’ve ever had. Granted, he’s running into some problems with that approach. Being president is not the same as completing a real estate deal. That’s because the “transactions” have more far-reaching consequences.

Nevertheless, Trump is seen as the guy who always comes out on top…and we want to be that guy too…right?

The problem is “we” can’t…at least not all of us. And that’s what neoliberalism does at its core. It rewards the few who are able to come out on top at the expense of the vast majority of the rest of us…and of the planet.

Neoliberal leaders talk about a level playing field (they call it “equal opportunity”), while doing everything they can behind the scenes to tilt it in their direction. If you’re willing to step back and look at the big picture you can see the truth in that statement.

If “trickle down” has worked so well, then why do the top 1% control more income and wealth than the bottom 90%?

It’s really not that hard to see what’s been happening for the past 40 some years. Wages of the middle class have stagnated. Income and wealth flowing to the top 1% have skyrocketed. And at the same time our planet has gradually overheated to the point where we are all about to get cooked!

In our country we hold fast to the capitalist-infused idea of the “American dream.” That anyone can make it and make it big in America. That even I can become Donald Trump, while ignoring the fact that even Trump was only able to “become Trump” with considerable help of inherited wealth and neoliberal-inspired pro-corporate financial laws and regulations.

Perhaps it would be better to call the “dream” a fantasy. Because it’s pure fantasy to believe that 300,000,000 wannabe Trumps, all vying for as much American pie as they can squeeze into their pie-holes, while ignoring the poor suckers who are starving, will ever “make America great again.” It (they) won’t. That mode of thinking gave us Trump and that should be proof enough of its inadequacy as a viable solution to the societal problems we face.

And if that’s not enough it also gave us global warming…

In fact, how much “proof” do we really need that this ideology does not work and will in the end create a nightmarish reality that I don’t believe any of us truly want to wake up in.

The lure of neoliberalism is strong. The marketing of brands like Trump have made it so.

But that doesn’t make it good for us.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: neoliberalism, trump

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