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Positive Impactfulness

September 19, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

positive impactfulness

Here’s one from the old Costa Rica Guy blog that I wrote before I ever conceived of the idea for Revolutionay Misfit and Impact Mindfulness as a comprehensive worldview.

But, as you can read, the idea was already germinating…

Virtually everything we do, or neglect to do, has an impact, positive or negative.  There are few things that we do that are completely neutral in terms of impact.

And this comes right down to the food we choose to eat and the clothes we choose to wear.  What we say.  Whether we smile when we greet others on the street.  How we conduct ourselves behind the wheel of our cars (or motorcycles, skateboards, bicycles, etc.).

To maintain oneself in an energetic and healthy state of existence, via eating good food and exercising regularly, has positive impacts on your job performance, your relationships, your creativity, etc.

And so on it goes.

So, I believe a positive motivational force can and should be impact mindfulness.

Tony Robbins is able to convince thousands upon thousands of people to come to his seminars and learn to be motivated to achieve success in life.

But maybe a simpler way to self-motivate is to stop and be mindful of the impacts that our decisions (or indecisions) have on others and the planet on which we reside.

The great ones that have walked among us, the ones we immortalize and who inspire us, were people who exercised impact mindfulness.

Think of Ghandi…ML King…Christ…they all practiced it.

All were far less concerned with fame or fortune than they were about having a positive impact on the world, even to the point of sacrificing their own well-being in pursuit of that aim.

The great ones that have walked among us, the ones we immortalize and who inspire us, were people who exercised impact mindfulness.

I really love to blog.  Lately I have been thinking how I can turn this labor of love into something that’s perhaps more than just a hobby. But in doing so I don’t want to rob myself of the motivation I have to write in order to have an impact…and nothing more.

I don’t want this blog to become, even if it’s only in my mind, a “vehicle” for me to gain fame, infamy, or fortune.

I want this blog to be a vehicle that inspires readers to live a life marked by positive impact.

photo credit: “†OnlyByGrace” via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: impact mindfulness, positive impactfulness

What Does it Mean to Be an Expat?

December 26, 2016 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

to be an Expat

I’ve been an expat in Costa Rica for a long time now. From a physical perspective being an expat means absence from one’s home country and presence in some foreign country.

However, to be an expat has more than simply physical connotations.

Let’s first discuss what it certainly does not mean…

To be an expat does not mean one is unpatriotic in any way. Some may feel that it does, but they’d be dead wrong.

In some ways I’ve grown more patriotic as a result of living out of the country for many years now. I believe that in large part stems from my being an observer, or someone on the outside looking in. I’ve been able to observe with a heightened sense of objectivity certain things about my country of birth that concern me deeply.

For example, I’ve been able to observe how U.S. interventionist or imperialistic polices have affected certain people negatively, which in my case means Latinos. I’ve been able to discern that if that has been the case in Latin America, perhaps our interventions in other areas of the world, such as the Middle East, have also been less than laudable.

I’ve been able to observe with a heightened sense of objectivity how the form of capitalism run amok that prevails in my country of birth has widened the inequality gap. It has also led to a reckless disregard for how the pursuit of money and material has taken a heavy toll on the well-being of people and planet. Sometimes those effects aren’t as readily apparent to those on the inside of a wealthy nation like the U.S. as they are to those in the so-called 3rd world.

These observations have not caused me to have contempt for my country, but rather to long for it to be the world leader for positive change that it historically has been.

The U.S. has in large part lost its way in that regard. And the entire world is suffering for it. The world needs the U.S. to lead in positive directions, away from soaring income and wealth inequality, and away from dependence on fossil fuels. But the U.S. refuses to lead. And the recent election of Donald Trump only strengthens its resistance to assume the role of positive leadership in the world at large.

To be an expat means to have one’s eyes opened. To get the chance to really see things from the perspective of others who are very different. It provides ample opportunities to exercise the empathy muscle and to improve one’s capacity for altruism and impact. I call that expat mindfulness.

To be an expat does not have to mean permanent physical removal from presence in one’s country of birth. The ability to go back is always an option. Of course, one can also be a part-time expat.

I believe time in a foreign country can truly heighten one’s ability to make an impact in one’s country of birth. It sensitizes you to things you might otherwise be desensitized to. It heightens your sense of awareness. You become a more well-rounded human being. And all those are very positive traits from undergoing the expat experience and increasing your expat mindfulness.

I’ve written much in the past in my blogs and books about how being an expat in Costa Rica has changed me. It has made me a more humble and compassionate person. Some of my former friends and family members in the U.S. will say that it’s turned me into a left-wing loon.

Well, it has made me more progressive. It has made me more inclusive. It has allowed me to see the error of capitalism run amok in ways that I probably would’ve never detected without the expat experience. It has made me care more about my impact than about my economic self-interest. It has allowed me to see things more from the perspective of the Big US. It has removed many impact blinders that I came to Costa Rica wearing.

In short, it has been responsible for implanting impact mindfulness as my current mindset and worldview.

In that sense, I guess it has turned me into what I like to call, a Revolutionary Misfit. However, I don’t view that transformation in any negative light.

If you’re thinking of taking the plunge and moving to a foreign country, perhaps motivated by the recent election, remember this…no matter where you go, you’ll still be an “American” by birth. If you love your country it can actually make you love it more, albeit for different reasons. It will make you long for change and might even provide the motivation to be a catalyst for that change yourself.

To be an expat and thereby increase one’s expat mindfulness can be an intensely patriotic endeavor. [It’s Tweetable!]

You can read more about Expat Mindfulness, Impact Mindfulness and Being an Expat in Costa Rica in my books.

Click here to go to my author page.

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: Expat Mindfulness, impact mindfulness

Expat Mindfulness

November 23, 2016 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

Expat Mindfulness

Donald Trump is President. That’s a fact.

That will mean different things to different people. Some will rejoice. Others will lament.

But what will it really mean, in general, for people and planet?

More than likely it will mean change. Things are probably going to change in the U.S.A. and in the world. The question is, will they change for the better?

I’ve been writing in my blog for quite a while now that America, and the world, does in fact desperately need a change in direction. I just don’t believe that Donald Trump is the right one.

Trump’s election will most likely usher in a renewed sense of “putting America first”, or of “American Exceptionalism”…as if the rest of the world just doesn’t matter all that much.

And in that effort, jobs will likely be created. Heck, the stock market is already rallying in anticipation of all that pent-up demand being released into the market-sphere.

However, I have a sense that there are many, millions even, like me who believe that a heightened emphasis on money as the measuring stick for human prosperity in the context of a zero-sum, us versus them, world view, is not really the right direction to go in.

It certainly wasn’t the direction strongly suggested by that anti-Trumpian counter-revolutionary named Bernie Sanders…now was it?

However, in my estimation, that’s exactly the direction in which “we” are going…at least for the next four years.

I’ve been operating on dual “career paths” in the last couple years. One in which I espouse this mindset I call “impact mindfulness” in my blog, Revolutionary Misfit, and in books, like The Impact Revolution and The Revolutionary Misfit Manifesto.

And the other where I tout the Costa Rica expat life and offer services for guided Costa Rica Expat Tours, or Costa Rica Expat Consulting, to anyone who thinks they might like to give Costa Rica expat living a try.

I have decided that it wouldn’t be a bad idea for those two paths to merge into a concept you might call Expat Mindfulness. And the change that has now been unleashed in the world, in the form of the Donald J. Trump, is a prime motivator behind my thinking.

Certainly this epiphany is part economically motivated. I do anticipate that many will decide that the direction the U.S.A. is going in just ain’t consistent with their values anymore. I believe that might give rise to more demand for my services.

Hey, we’ve all go to make a buck…right?

But there’s more to it than just that.

I’m thinking more in terms of tribe building.

If you’re one of those who might be thinking of making a change as drastic as leaving your country of birth…well, I want to give you some solace and some inspiration.

Solace in being part of a tribe of others who are of similar mindset. And inspiration in the form of a cogent reason to make your expat move…

Expat Mindfulness.

What Costa Rica offers is the opportunity to simplify one’s life…to reduce the clutter. It offers the opportunity to learn to be happy with less. The ticos, or citizens of Costa Rica, are wonderful examples of that.

Because, you see, the last “change” that the world needs is an even stronger sense of the accumulation mindset. That what really matters is my capability as an individual to become “super successful”, measured in terms of my ability to accumulate more stuff in a dog-eat-dog competitive context.

On the contrary, what the world needs right now is love, sweet love…to steal from a song.

No, really, what the world does need is a heightened sense of togetherness…of the Big US.

What the world needs right now are more people willing to put their impact over their self-interest.

What the world needs right now are people willing to reject the impact blinding messages whispering that what’s most important is accumulation of more, more, more…even if it comes at the expense of people and planet.

Hasn’t our planet indeed been sending us ample signals as of late about the folly of that type of thinking and doing?

Trump and those who lifted him to his current position as most powerful man on earth seem to want to just completely ignore those signals.

But our planet will return the favor and ignore us unless enough of us rise up and resist.

Now, you can choose to resist at home, or abroad (in a place like Costa Rica!). If you’d like to give Expat Mindfulness a try…

I am here to offer you a hand in that effort.

In addition to the blog you are reading right now, learn more (and participate) about Expat Mindfulness at one or all of the following locations…

The Costa Rica Expat Tours website

The Costa Rica Expat Living Facebook Page

The Impact Revolution Facebook Page

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: Expat Mindfulness, impact mindfulness

The Impact Point

October 28, 2014 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

The Point is Impact

Would it surprise you to know that there is, in fact, a point to this blog?

The home page reads…

The Revolutionary Misfit site is a forum for thought, conversation and inspiration on the topic of impact mindfulness.

So, if you kinda get an inkling about that vague word, impact, you’d at least be getting really warm, as you’re struggling to grasp the impact point.

Because the fact is, we all have one…

It’s hard to get away from it, really.

Remember when grocery store check-out clerks always would ask, “paper or plastic?”

Seems like an innocuous choice, but an impactful one nonetheless.

If you stop to consider that plastic is made of the same substance that when burned releases dreaded carbon into the atmosphere.

And if you consider that normal plastic basically never breaks down, environmentally.

And then there’s the matter of so much plastic waste ending up as floating garbage dumps in our oceans, or in the bellies of fish and sea mammals.

Of course, there’s a problem with paper too…it can get confusing.

So, the decision, as small and insignificant as it might at first blush seem, has impact…

As does the stupid act of giving us that choice to begin with.

Whenever you use a public restroom facility, do you leave the light on, or do you flip it off?

Again, a choice with impact.

When you shop for groceries, do you buy locally grown stuff, or manufactured food, filled with chemicals, and that has to be shipped in from afar?

Impact-full choice, once again.

And then there’s the bigger impacts…

Like what we choose to do with the vast majority of our life time allotment in exchange for those little green pieces of paper adorned with images of dead notables.

Who we vote for.

What we consume, physically, or mentally.

How we use our “free” time.

What we contribute towards enhancing the well-being of others, including the less fortunate.

How we simply treat other people.

What we think of them if they happen to have been borne different from us.

So, you see, there probably isn’t a more point-full topic to blog about than impact.

This blog is simply an attempt to get people to pay more attention to the impacts they have on a moment to moment basis.

You know, like to leave the earth (and its inhabitants)  better than the way we found it (and them).

And I believe that there are three things that generally impede our being mindful of impacts…

  1. Self-interest (especially the economic variety)
  2. Small us thinking
  3. Impact blinders

If you desire to know more, there is a plethora of posts regarding each of these impediments.

But, in our westernized world, it’s private property that gets the lion’s share of our mindfulness.

We work hard to acquire it, maintain and grow it, protect it and ultimately pass it on in some form or another (sale, inheritance, etc.).

We only ask of others that they refrain from impacting our shit in any negative way.

What they do with everything else…who cares!

That pretty much sums up the narrow spectrum of popular thought regarding impact.

“Don’t tread on me”, becomes our battle-cry as we engage in grave struggles in the name of private property protection (we call it freedom, since that provides better motivation)…

We even coin a new phrase for the acquisition of stuff and immortalize that in our most cherished freedom document…

We call it…

The pursuit of happiness.

But then the reality finally hits that this is a non-sustainable notion.

As we just witnessed in 2008, when the excesses of Wall Street’s great decade of capital sequestration ended up impacting Main Street in a negative way as the value of everyone’s stuff plummeted…

Except for those that didn’t have any to begin with…

In that case, the people themselves were devalued.

Impact is simply hard to get away from…it’s sort of built in, like a physical law.

Now, granted, hedging against all hell breaking loose may not be the most laudable reason to be impact mindful.

But, hey, at least it’s a reason.

Working to enhance the enjoyment of all life forms on this planet helps assure that they won’t try just as hard to rob me of mine.

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: impact mindfulness

The Impact Mindfulness Worldview

August 27, 2014 by costaricaguy 3 Comments

peole planet universe

When you first hear or read the phrase impact mindfulness, what comes to mind?

Probably some sort of save the world kinda of a thing, no?

And it is that, but much more.

In this post I want to explain in more detail what the impact mindfulness worldview really means.

You see, the normal way of thinking about personal impact is to put the cart before the horse…

That the best way for me to have an impact on the world is to first focus in a self-interested way on my economic success…and from that firmly established and comfortable platform, I can have my greater impact.

Sounds perfectly legitimate…doesn’t it?

Here’s the problem with it.

If you’re Donald Trump and you make sure that a certain percentage of your success is funnelled towards some type of image-driven impact, a certain very small percentage…

It doesn’t detract from the fact that the other 90+% of your daily energy and focus is purely self-interested, group interested, consumption oriented and certainly not People and Planet interested.

The impact mindfulness worldview suggests that a larger percentage of your interest be impact focused. In fact, all of it…

Yea, you heard that right, 100%!

It must permeate every aspect of your life.

It must become who you are and what you’re about.

Because only when enough people do that will we begin to solve the problems we have in this world…

Problems that have been exponentially growing to uncontrollable proportions…

right before our very eyes in just the last generation.

Problems like religious fanatics that unleash genocidal rage on unbelievers, global warming that’s already wreaking havoc on the planet’s weather systems, a growing income gap that threatens social unrest around the globe, developed nations that are literally consuming the world out of existence, etc., etc…

We have a killer virus on the loose in Africa and it seems the worldwide response is to seal borders and leave those inside them to their fate…rather than find a real (but non-marketable) solution.

To solve these problems impact can’t be sequestered in that small slice of our lives we label as charitable.

It must pervade every waking moment of your conscious existence.

That’s the “mindset” of impact mindfulness.

It’s not simply donating time or money to this or that worthy cause…even though doing so is a very good and impact worthy activity.

It’s adopting a mindset that sees the world and our place in it in terms of the three foundational pillars of Impact Mindfulness…

Prioritizing Impact Over Interest – that is, making sure our daily choices or activities, especially those consumptive and economically focused ones, are impact mindful…

Embracing the Concept of The Big US – that is, seeing the entire world and its inhabitants as fellow crew members on a planetary ship…the only ship we have…so that it becomes of utmost priority that we take care of it and each other…

Removing Impact Blinders – that is, being mindful of status quo ways of thinking that serve to trap us into doing “it” (life) in the same old destructive ways…you might even call that “wilful blindness.”

The world, our world, needs people who are thinking and acting according to the impact mindfulness worldview.

These are the people that can save us…

and they are YOU and ME.

Please join us at Revolutionary Misfit and be a part of the change!

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: impact mindfulness, world view

Paying Attention

November 20, 2013 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

stop, stoop and recover

How can we really make a difference?  Maybe even change the world (as we know it….and it knows us)?  Feed the starving? End war? Cure cancer?  Well, of course, all of those would be positive developments, but realistically speaking, how?

I will go out on a limb this morning and suggest something a tad simpler….paying attention.

I have been on kind of a mindfulness kick lately, adopting the habit of meditating in the morning and reading a lot on the subject. Mindfulness means, among other things, paying attention to what is going on in your life.  To use a very well-worn cliche it means, basically, stopping to smell the roses.  And that is a good habit to instill.  To train one’s mind to be, well, mindful, can, I believe, enhance one’s quality of life.  But this post is more about changing the quality of life of others, about making a difference.  So, how can mindfulness help us do that?

It dawns on me on a regular basis that people in general just don’t pay attention.  Why is that?  The simple and probably most accurate answer is that they don’t want to pay the price of doing so.  Paying attention takes time, energy, and effort.  It can be annoying to try to do so in the midst of one’s busy day.

Let me provide an example that I experienced recently.  While walking along the pristine paths that lead to the summit of Cerro Chirripo, Costa Rica’s highest mountain and one of its most beloved national parks, I chanced upon an alarming sight.  Trash that some hiker who was NOT paying attention had thrown down on the ground.  Maybe intentionally.  Maybe not.  I am not here to judge.  I was tired.  I had a large backpack that was making my shoulders and  lower back ache and burn.  I did not want to notice the trash, let alone stop, stoop and recover.  After all, where would I put the stuff.  I don’t want to stick someones dirty crap in my pocket, do I?  But then I thought, what was the RIGHT thing to do?  What would be impact-full? What would make a difference, albeit a small one, but a difference nonetheless?  After considering all that in the blink of an eye, I stopped, I stooped and I recovered.  In fact, by the time I reached Base Crestones, I had two pockets full of the stuff.

After considering all that in the blink of an eye, I stopped, I stooped and I recovered.

You might regard my example as a trivial one.  Maybe so.  But it does get right at the heart of what I am talking about.  And that is, being mindful of the impacts we have.  Paying attention to how our actions, and in-actions, can influence the world, or other’s experience of it.  I will promise you that if you begin to pay attention, you will quickly find that throughout each waking day, there are about 1 million ways to make a difference, to have an impact, just by paying attention.

Throughout each waking day, there are about 1 million ways to make a difference, to have an impact, just by paying attention.

Once you begin paying attention, that inner voice will lead you to the right action.  Oh yes, there will always be a competing voice as well.  But if your goal is to be an impactful person, to make a positive difference, to live with integrity and honor, then the “good voice” will usually win the battle, as long as we are paying attention in the first place.

It is much easier to be indifferent.  To rationalize that your actions really can’t make much of a difference.  That there are more important things to do….things reserved almost exclusively for me and after all, you gotta look out for number one, don’t you?  No, not that much.  Not nearly as much as we generally reserve time for.

Paying attention is enlightening and liberating and extremely important to the quest of making the world a better place.

Why not start today?

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: impact mindfulness, paying attention

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