"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Days In The Life

Had a strong Bachelor Weekend here in Resthaven. Kellimundo is in Colorado for her sister's graduation, and Mark and Zya went camping before she took off for a three week work stint in the Shasta wilderness. I've been walking around in my underwear, drinking beer and taking the dogs on walks, changing a flat tire, and generally just letting it all hang out.

I'm feeling a shift in gears. My birthday is probably part of that: while the arbitrary marker in time is indeed arbitrary -- one more trip around the sun doesn't really impact yr day-to-day, per se -- it holds up as a psychological milestone.

The good news is things are really coming together with work. I'm starting to have real confidence both in our craft, and in our fiscal solvency. It's a good feeling, and it starts me going ambitious in the career sense. For instance, we just got a gig with the National Aeronautics and Space Agency, for which I took some flight-suit photos, and that's pretty exciting. NASA, Bitches!

The career question is ticklish. Mean motherfucking monopoly player I may be, I don't have a real abiding passion for the world of business. You always read about how really successful people see it as a game, and I can grok that. I'm eternally turned-on by success, but just racking up points isn't challenging or complex enough to really hold my interest.

I can see being committed to the virtue of providing, building a business that gives people jobs and health care and helps them build their lives. It's appealing to me to be a Big Man in that way, tapping into some of the Fatherhood energy, but I wonder where it's heading. Do I want to do this for the rest of my life? I don't really think that's an option (evolving marketplace), but if it were I have to admit wouldn't be too excited about it.

I do have love for my industry, but I also feel the need to transcend as well. The internet ain't everything. Most of all I can't kid myself into thinking that I'm gonna have a job, make some money, and then do XYZ after-hours. That's not how I roll. It's got to be a 100% package.

Typically, I don't really have a place where I feel I fit in. I don't think the Silicon Valley scene is for me, and I'm not quite blossoming in Humboldt County. Politics doesn't feel like the revolution (vocationally), and I gave up on performing as a career a long time ago. What's a boy to do?

It's the 100% thing that sticks. I don't want a job, I want a life. I find myself worrying that the future is going to drive me and my friends further and further apart, that the sardonic Vagabender joke "Part of becoming a man is watching your dreams die" is actually turning out to be true; that we're all just drifting down into grooves, boxes, cubicles and career paths, off on our separate Adulthood trips, and the next time we see one another we'll be sagging and saddled, fighting back the heartburn to relive those Glory Days one more time in the parking lot. I preach a dark future!

Don't get me wrong here; I'm not moping. I still feel like life is beautiful and exciting, and that the future is bright, but I feel like I don't share that with enough people.

That's on me, no doubt, to share more assiduously, and the sentiment is mos def connected to the absence of a romantic partner in all of this. Feeling pushed like this makes me realize just how many walls I build around myself; demands, expectations, low-confidence cop-outs and an inability to relax and be that feels almost like paranoia. I also realize that in the last decade I've gone from living in New York City and living a life that was full of female contact, to living in the woods and working online in a field (Open Source Software Development) that has a 95/5 male-to-female ratio. Yowza.

It's is also connected to my lack of a big-picture vision. I'm a planner, and as long as I'm confused about where things are going and what the Big Idea is, my anxiety runs high and my vision goes furtive. "What's your five-year plan, Josh?" Fucked if I know, and as cheezeball a question as that is, having an answer (glib or notional) might be nice.

That in turn relates to what I've bitched about before in terms of not having a good quick explanation for who I am and what I'm doing, no elevator pitch. It's not that I'm suffering from role confusion or can't explain what I do with my time, it's that I don't have a frame for any of this. I don't quite know what the story is. I'm thinking about this kind of thing from five years ago where I decided to think of myself as an explorer and started having a lot of fun again.

Who am I and why am I here?

Dunno at the moment, but I'm going to go off to heady yoga at the center. Maybe the answer will come in a stretch.

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Responses

I know you know this, but just as a reminder and a link to my writing on the subject: Knaddisons World Tour of Spanish Speaking Countries - It's ON

So, yeah. I'm doing my best to build that platform. Perhaps a little around the world venture will help answer some of the questions ;)

Josh maybe you're here to inspire people like me. I think you take the open source philosophy heart, and have seen you incorporating it into your everyday life. For example the work you're doing in the with dojo and the fact you said you can see yourself "being committed to the virtue of providing, building a business that gives people jobs and health care and helps them build their lives" really says a lot about your character. You believe in community and participation and those are inspiring virtues. The fact that you are a "100%" guy I can totally relate to I'm the same way. I'm not good with partitioning myself, its all of me or nothing. And thats the beauty of it: you don't necessarily have to do what you're doing for the rest of your life. Be the best you can be right now, teach some peeps a couple things and inspire a few others along the way then move on. It okay not to have a 5 year goal or any similar goal because those are just there for the personal comfort of reaching a mental plateau. We think that when we reach the top everything will just settle down and sort of gel. But really life more like a mountain with a never ending peak. We just climb and climb up, and the older we get the faster we climb. I think all this climbing is what keeps us young and explains why some people never seem to get old. And then we hope our friends climb with us so they can stay young too. No need to bound ourselves to rigid expectations. Live in flux flow like water and don't look back because its hard to keep going up when you see how far you've climbed.

Perhaps you should buy a hot dog wagon! :-D

http://www.talk-pix.com/105biglenny2/hotdog.html

I don't have a five year plan. I didn't five years ago either, and I don't regret it now.

So rather than planning my future I prefer to hash out my values so that I make wise decisions when oportunity arrives. Frankly, none of the positive steps I've enjoyed since getting in to college were forseeable to me in advance. So I'd rather cultivate a healthy relationship with opportunity than supply chain.

Complimentary to that, I've been using a new word to describe the life I see as fulfilling, and every time I say it it feels more empowering--episodic. I want an episodic life. Partly because it will keep me from losing track of the time I have. Flying to SF tomorrow.

I like that eisenhower quote. I've never had a plan that I followed, but the act of planning seems to be a source of power. It's more about having a sense of direction and progress than a real "five year plan."

Episodic sounds like a nice lifestyle, though (and this something for me, not you necessarily) perhaps prone to dilettantism.

Thank you all for your support.

I actually really liked that hot dog thing. Kinda sweet.

Wow…burning man Josh looks more like outer space. But must say the NASA Josh looks like a chiseled top gun!

Some other thoughts:

Have no idea who joshf is, but his post is spot on.

“…not having a good quick explanation for who I am and what I’m doing, no elevator pitch.”

Thompson, Bukowski, etc. See them struggling to find an elevator pitch? I think not. Quick explanations for “who you are” are vapid and best left for Cheetos.

Sometimes you just have to pee in the sink...Bukowski

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-m

Quick explanations are what marketing and branding are all about! Come one now. Bukowski was sort of cryptic (he hid the fact that he was a writer in real life) but he definitely had a quick answer: he drank. HST had his whole "outlaw/gonzo journalist" thing working for him.

The proverbial "elevator pitch" can be quite vapid, but only if it's bullshit. For me, the lack of ready explanations is an outward sign that something more deep is missing or unknown.

I think looking for a quick explanation for you who you are and what you are doing could be mutually exclusive.

“What you are doing” might easily fit into your:
Quick explanations are what marketing and branding are all about!

But “Who you are” doesn’t offer such a quick fix.

It all depends on who your target audience is. Women? Friends? Family? Clients? Colleagues? Acquaintances? You? Other? All of the above?

Hmmmm… you could create an elevator pitch for all the various aspects of your life, like love, family, politics, work, the big picture, etc. and do some sort of 30 second mashup.

Sarcasm aside, when it comes to “who you are,” a ready explanation might actually indicate that there is nothing deep or unknown.

My reference to Bukowski and Thompson was only to illustrate that they were complex people, like all of us, and while “what they did” could be captured in 30 seconds, who they were could not.

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-m

I think I met you in person for the first time a few days after that pic was taken. You said you were feeling crispy.

This anecdote is in my chapter of the Dean book. :)

That photo is from 2005 though, but crispy it is. ~100mg intranasal MDMA will do that to ya. For the record of 2003, these audio files are probably your best bet.

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