pull down to refresh

This thought emanated within me while I was having a meaningful conversation with my love. We were talking about how she and I are often seen as the crazy ones for not wanting to settle into a mundane, fiat 9-to-5 life, and not wanting to willingly slave our lives away towards eventual retirement in the name of being "responsible adults" and "living a stable life." Both sides of our family, but especially hers, keep nagging her with questions like, "When are you going to get a full-time job?" or "You need to start making adequate amounts of money to be happy," or "You have to start acting like a responsible adult." Meanwhile, the ones nagging her have those things—a full-time job, financial "stability," "enough" money—and are supposed to be accomplished and "responsible adults," but they are also neck-deep in debt, not at all happy, and lacking financial freedom or any freedom for that matter. And they still expect us to believe and agree with them that this is the way to truly live a life we can only live once? And we're the crazy ones for aspiring to live a meaningful and fulfilling life?
But I've also learned that this way of thinking is not natural but is a product of design, of years and years of programmed, artificial conditioning created to keep us stuck.
And I too would have fallen into the proverbial rat race had I not taken the Orange Pill.
But back to the whole point of this post. Even if you may not understand Bitcoin, and may not understand how the fiat system works, you are able to read the title of this post and ponder over it a bit, reflect on it.
Work to gain experience, not to make money.
In this broken world we live in, we are conditioned to work for money. Money is the motivation; it's what drives us to work. We attach our identity, self-worth, and value to this "money" that everyone here on SN understands is broken, dysfunctional, fake money. Unfortunately, most cannot see past this conditioning. It's the whole fish-doesn't-know-what-water-is conundrum. But there's power in words. They can be used to oppress, manipulate, and corrupt, but they can also do the opposite by freeing our minds, empowering us, and giving us back control over our own livelihood.
When asked, "Why do you work?" most will answer, "For the pay." And I can guarantee that the majority, if not all, who work for money are not happy, are not finding fulfillment in their work, and have no major ambitions or goals to better themselves. Once money becomes the sole motivator, you become stuck, you become a fiat NPC. But maybe if we start changing the words from "I work to make money" to "I work to gain valuable experience to continue my personal growth," gradually more people will find meaning in their job beyond just getting paid to do it. All it takes is a simple shift in mentality, a subtle change in words, and your life can quickly go from dull and gray to full of vibrant color and meaning. And if after further reflection, you realize that money is the primary reason you continue to work at your current job, maybe it's time you moved on.
Love your positive message, and I totally agree. I see a lot of young people making this shift in perspective. In my first job after college, once I understood that the scheme of "moving up" and "excelling" in the job meant competing for management positions (that sucked) or taking your tiny sliver of a raise each year if management deemed you worthy of it, I was out of the game for life. It seemed that everyone was under this myth that the cushier the job, the salary + benefits, the better their life would be. Then you work alongside them everyday, and they can't even breathe.
reply
"In this broken world we live in, we are conditioned to work for money" For as long as you need food to keep yourself alive, and for as long as we divide tasks so that you don't have to hunt your food, build your shelter and sew your clothes all by yourself, and for as long as said work division is organized by measuring exchanges between people with a unit of account to help to allocate resources where they are needed, yes. Money is resources. If you don't want to be conditioned to work for the resources you consume, then either you don't need to consume or someone else will have to work double to provide you.
reply
That's correct, but I don't think it's the most charitable reading of the post.
In the developed world, many people earn far more than they need to for strict survival. Once you've earned enough to cover the necessities, there's scope for making tradeoffs between maximizing monetary earnings and pursuing other forms of value.
reply
I agree and I personally think that way. The absurd part is the "forcing" part. Above basic needs, it's pure freedom of choice. Yet there's a second balance within that freedom in that again money pays for most of those other forms of value. And all along, still no one forces you to do nothing. The "broken world forces me to pay for things I want others to pay for me" part is just a way to blame personal shortcomings, indicisiveness and weakness of spirit on others. And I can't stand it because that's the weakness of spirit and blindness that leads to welfare programs that destroys complete nations.
reply
The ideal would be spending your time in the way you would if you had no resource constraints.
Of course, that's a utopian pipedream. However, if you can get closer to that by figuring out how to get paid for what you wanted to do anyway, then that's a huge quality of life win.
My summary of this post is that we work in order to maximize our quality of life, not our income.
reply
"Jobs are a means, not the ends in themselves. People work to live better, to put food on the shelves. Real growth means production of what people demand." Liberalism at its finest
reply
I fully agree with you. When I was young, I tried to conform to the system, but I always felt that something was wrong. I would change jobs and cities, thinking I was the problem. Then my daughters came along and I realized that you have to slow down and find a balance. Money is needed, but it should not overwhelm us. It's essential to work to live, not live to work, and to find meaning and happiness in what we do. I'm still finding my own balance but I'm committed to occupying my time doing only things that I appreciate and that give me a real experience. It's not easy but there is a choice.
reply
It's really very true. Learning is a lifelong process. Learning starts from cradle and ends in grave. Money doesn't matter Experience matters a lot. Experience is the biggest treasure for us.
reply
Why not both? 😉
reply
Knowledge and compensation
reply