Tag Archives: lifestyle

a Bar conversation

 

– Men build things, then we die. It’s in our fucking DNA! THAT’S WHAT WE DO!

– And when it all falls down?

– We build it right back up again.

– But this time bigger. BETTER!

– Look! Look what we can do. Look how fuckin’ beautiful we are. You think the men that built all this had it easy?

– Hard men!

– Doing hard shit!

– and that gives me a hard on… But not in a gay way or anything like that.

– No, ‘course not

– Yeah it goes without sayin’

– I am so sick of all of this self help, twelve step, leftover hippie generation bullshit!

– Now they don’t want you to do anything, right? Just sit there. Don’t drink.

– Don’t smoke. Don’t drive fast.

– Kiss my ass!

– Fuck it! Do it all I say! Do you think Duke Wayne spent all of his time talking about his feelings with a fuckin’ therapist?There’s no fucking way he did!

– John Wayne died with five pounds of undigested red meat in his ass. Now that’s a man! Real men hide their feelings. Why?

– Because it’s none of your fuckin’ business!

– Men do not cry. Men do not pout. Men jack you in the fuckin’ jaw and say…

Thanks for comin’ out.

He Lives in a Tree, Wears NO shoes, and Brushes his teeth with a Pine Cone

NationalGeo2

 

According to polls, the majority of Americans and many other societies are in favor of change. An estimated 20 percent believe the States are on the right track, but when it comes to health care, environmental reform, and economic division, the masses believe change is imperative. But how far are many willing to go in order to live a more sustainable, connected, and happier life?

With the conveniences of today (packaged food, media frenzy, rapid transportation), it is difficult for many to know a life different from that which has been shown to degenerate, numb, and dull the senses. Not often do kids summon creativity to work random objects into play things, for now their noses are pressed against tablets, IPads, and television screens. But things are changing, and the few, but inspirational, examples which shed light on another way of life may cause perceived ‘ideals’ to change.

For Mick Dodge, his dynamic transformation from living what modern society deems ‘appropriate’ came 25 years ago. He decided to ditch his shoes, grow his beard, and leave his family and all rest in modern civilization to live alone in the Pacific Northwest’s Hoh rain forest. But he is not a complete isolationist; he joined a community of mountain dwellers and agreed (with some persistent effort from producers) to be the subject of National Geographic’s series “The Legend of Mick Dodge”.

In the first story shared, National Geographic captured Doge’s mission to scatter his deceased father’s ashes up in the mountains – if he could recall where he stashed them. “My family has perfected the art of dodging civilizations for hundreds of years. All I have to do is follow my feet,” said the backwoods philosopher.

In another interview with Mother Nature Network, Dodge comes across as a memorable and quirky character with a unique perspective on life.

MNN: What was your life like before you moved to the woods? Did you have a job? Did you get an education?

Mick Dodge: Yes, as a heavy equipment mechanic. I have also dug ditches, chopped wood, washed dishes, and taught the Earth Gym practices. I graduated Kubasaki High School in Okinawa, Japan. Never been to college, but like to read books. If the book makes sense and has value for the earth, I plant a tree and share the book. If the book does not make sense, I plant a tree for it and use it as [toilet] paper or fire starter. My life was about the same as it is now, learning the ways to walk and explore physical exercise and how to create a physical practice that finds the middle ground between the wild and tame, between the gated wild and the walls of modern domestication. However, I must add that I have no feet pain, back pain and my heart is strong [since] I became a barefoot nomad.

What prompted you to go to the forest in the first place?

My feet hurt. I had hammertoes, plantar fasciitis, deformed feet. They hurt so bad that I could barely walk and I had always used my walk and run to handle the stress of modern living, make sense of the modern world story that I was living in, and the Hoh is home for me. So I went home to heal my feet.

NationalGeo

 

 

 

 

 

 

In following my feet I found myself stepping out of the insulation of the modern world and landing in the earth. The    results came quickly. Not only were my feet healing, but my back pain, neck pain and most of all my heart pain disappeared, and in no time at all I was back into a dead run, stepping out of the sedentary, stressed, sedated and secured living of the modern world. I was muscling my mind into the heart of the matter. I was dancing as the fire, running as the wind, strengthening as the stone and flowing as the water within, by the simple act of touching with my bare soles and allowing the Earth to teach. It is a simple matter to follow your feet, but is does not come easy. The Earth will eat you if you are not paying attention.

Is there anything you miss about modern civilization?

I don’t miss it. There is no way to get away from it. So I developed a physical fitness practice in how to step in and out of it, stepping out of the walls, machines, electronics, social babble for awhile, ground back into the natural flow of the land, and then go back in.

What’s the best and worst part of this lifestyle?

Wherever there is good there is bad. That is the game of life. My passion in life is to explore, engage, challenge and balance whatever comes in the three terrains that I run through.

I don’t imagine there are many mountain women out there. Do you get lonely?

On my journey, I have formed so many wonderful connections with women, formed strong brother-and-sister relationships with them. I may not be able to figure out what they are always talking about. But if their soles are touching the Earth, I am more able to figure it out. A few years ago my path wandered into the Cedar Woman. We share a common vision of these Olympic Mountains and a deep musing of the lands, and in order for a vision to manifest from the Earth it takes a mission — a mission brings it to a physical reality. Cedar, along with others, created the Olympic Mountain Earth Wisdom Circle. Our lives are guided by the musings that come from living in a deep connection with the Earth, and Cedar holds the feminine wisdom fire of our hearth, which I keep coming back to, what I call the base camp.

MNN

Continue Article on

http://www.trueactivist.com/he-lives-in-a-tree-wears-no-shoes-and-brushes-his-teeth-with-a-pine-cone/

Seeking Adventure?

Staying on the road for 48 hours gives you the time and space to think about your life. The rush of adrenaline you encounter in every new place you visit and every person you meet is enough to make a revolution on one’s self. Indeed, 48 hours are not enough, but still you could at least not have the same thoughts of every day’s life.

What if you could be a new and a different person in every place?

Lets take that thought and widen the scope of our perspective. Every one loves adventure, yet adventure comes pricy. It is indeed expensive now days to live an adventurous life unless you have some inheritance that could care of that! Well that’s a different story.

I have stumbled over more than hundreds of websites and blogs that deals with adventurous lifestyles. Some are talking about their trip to Tibet, others are telling about their African Safari’s. I mean seriously do you know how much a Safari Trip costs! I’m not being cheap and all but come on, if my adventure will cost me 6 months of work then to hell with it.

A true adventure comes from the heart. A true adventurer has a genuine lifestyle, and each day with a new experience, encountered with spontaneous circumstances. I want to show you the few blogs I’ve read that would give the rush to start thinking of your own adventure.

Sophie Cussem

Her name is Sophie Cussen.  Just an average girl living in suburbia, but she’s mission, called the Forget-me-Not Cultivation Blog, where she brings all the things she already loves to do and would love the chance to do together in one list, and push the limits on what can be achieved in life.

Sophie Cussen’s blog is a true adventure that talks about a gardening, personal cultivation, and saving the planet.

Chris Highland

Besides being a Henry David Thoreau enthusiast, Chris is the author of twelve books. He was a Protestant Minister for 14 years. He has degrees in Philosophy and Religion from Seattle Pacific University and San Francisco Theological Seminary.  Chris holds a Community College Teaching Credential and (until recently) a Substitute Teaching Credential from the State of California.

Chris’s life is full of teachings, blogs, articles, books, and photography.

Kim and Kyle

Kim and Kyle have been on a journey together for two decades. They met in kindergarten, and like bike tracks on a wet road, their paths continually crossed in a span of 15 years. Fate finally brought them together in Baton Rouge, LA. Since then they have traveled extensively, gotten hitched, relocated to Colorado, been featured on the Travel Channel, become climbers, and made adventure travel their way of life.

How can you not seek passion and adventure when you are surrounded with such great people. This gives us the reason why we are always living a boring daily routine. Try to change your environment; you don’t have to go on a Safari to that, but to surround your self with enthusiastic and adventurous people, where every one of them lives a new experience and for each day to have a new and a different sun.

 

http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2014/03/03/writing-challenge-threes/

Thank you Followers

Thank you

 

Two weeks since I launched my Blog “ Live Simple”. I honestly didn’t have the courage to post my life on the Internet at the beginning. However, after I saw the number of people who actually share with me the same lifestyle, I got a boost of passion to write and share more. 

I live in a community that is full of hatred, political bigotry and ruthless sectarianism. It is very hard to establish a simple and secure life in Lebanon. Nevertheless, beneath that dark spectrum of animosity one can catch a bright light and live by it. I chose to study Social Work for that reason. I was 20 when I first entered college with a cloud of passion over my head to pour drops of change on my community. I graduated now and got stuck with unemployment and economical distress. Yet, change does not come easy. A man should put all his power to achieve what he believes.

Thank you for following my blog and letting me share my life with you.

 

Regards and in good health; Ayman k.