Thursday, December 6, 2007
Chapter 22
Chapter 21
Chapter 12
Chapter 20
Chapter 19
Chapter 18
Chapter 17
Chapter 16
Chapter 15
To me this lifestyle is mundane and intellectually unrewarding. It may be nice to have a fresh nice meal after planning and farming year round, but at want point does the need for self actualization take precedent over the need for simplicity? I am beginning to think that our constant need for growth and accomplishment is trophied by our possessions. It almost seems like benchmarks along the road for our success. There must have been needs that were unfulfilled for us to end up in our current state of being. We once came from this simplistic lifestyle and there is a reason why things didn't remain that way. I guess for some this way of life agrees with them, but for me it would be rather unrewarding.
Chapter 14
Chapter 13
Chapter 12
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Chapter 11
Chapter 10
Chapter 9
Well I wasn’t prepared for scripture, and this chapter probably could’ve been a little shorter. The long of the short that I got from it was that people are people and even though they are in a much different way of life here, friends are willing to overlook things that they don’t necessarily agree with. The fact that Mary and Eric were anything but Anabaptist has meant little to their development as part of this culture. Still not quite sure what the deal is with the pants and dresses for women. From what I got, fat women should not wear pants. If anyone has any clarification on this it would be much appreciated.
Chapter 8
Chapter 8 ends with the notion that sometimes what you have is better than the possible alternatives. Sometimes one needs a reality check once in awhile and I think the trip that Eric and Mary took was just that. They realized that although they are far from friends and family, they have what they need, great friends to help out, and an easy going way of life. They begin to understand that what they have is truly a gift and that although it seems like life would be much better and easier back in the real world, there are other issues that they would have to face. The perfect place does not exist and they will need to make concessions no matter where they are. Leaving behind this new world they have grown accustomed to will not take away problems, they will simply be faced with different problems.
Chapter 7
The sounds of silence chapter really made me question whether or not I may be missing out on the simple things in life. The comment that struck me most was that as students we are encouraged to be like a machine, memorizing and processing information and storing it as knowledge to be used later. We are so hurried and rushed trying to cram years worth of information into semesters. We sometimes lose site of what it is we are trying to achieve. Taking into consideration Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, the ultimate need is for self actualization which does not come from the words on pages we read or the ability to solve a ridiculously hard finance problem, but rather comes from within. Perhaps without all of life’s distraction and the constant need to achieve more and have more we might reach this stage of self actualization much sooner.
Chapter 6
Chapter 6 ends with the comment that little by little they began regaining skills that technology had taken from them. Eric and Mary have been so accustomed to having the privilege of storing food in a refrigerator that it never occurred that there would be alternatives. Just because they choose not to use electricity, it does not mean that they must go without saving and storing food. As I mentioned in the previous post, its beginning to occur to Mary and Eric that they can still try and make things easy on themselves while respecting the values of this culture. They do not have to go without in order to fit into this lifestyle. This way of life is not about depriving one’s self of conveniences, but rather not letting technology rule your life.
Chapter 5
Chapter five has an interesting perspective, “When the quantity of machine shrinks, another area of human realization expands: skill.” I think this statement is extremely true. In our world of machines and technology, we don’t have to think, because someone else has already done it for us. If we had to build our own house its not that we couldn’t it is that we choose not too. If we didn’t have access to the resources we have today, we simply would find other means of creating and doing what needs to be done. Sure it would be more difficult and more time consuming, but we would find a way to make it happen. I think that this has its strengths as well as its weaknesses. On a positive note, it’s a way of taking advantage of skills that people have invested lifetimes in without having to take the time to understand how it works on your own. For example, if a clock breaks do we fix it ourselves? Of course not, we take it to someone who specializes in that field so we do not have to waste who knows how much time figuring it out. On the other hand, if we were the builder and sole creator of the clock, we would not need to take it to be serviced, because we know everything about it since it was made with our own two hands. When different people specialize in different things it frees up more time to take part in the things we are interested in. I would much rather pay someone else to fix my car then to build and service my own. Taking advantage of different people’s skills and trading services has led us to a world of endless possibilities. At the same time, people are able to do the things they are good at making it more successful for everyone.
Chapter 4
I found it interesting that Mr. Miller’s answer to why this lifestyle was saving his children. It can definitely be seen even from my childhood to the childhood of my younger brothers and sisters how things have changed. When I was younger, it was unheard of for us not to have dinner as a family. It was a time for everyone to take some part in the preparation, whether it be setting the table or getting the drinks ready. Meal time was not a time for TV, but a time for a recap on everyone busy day and events that were coming up or had taken place. I thought I must have had the cruelest parents in the whole world, because they would not let us have video games, TVs or phones were not permitted in our bedrooms, and everyone had weekly chores. Coming from a wealthy community this was unheard of and we certainly felt deprived. Now that I am older I miss the days when we all went to park together with the dog or went canoeing in the river. When I go back home to visit I find now that everyone is on their own schedule. Those long lost rules that once bound us together are non existent. Not only do game systems appear in every room where there is a TV, four computers often allow for the entire family to be dispersed and never see each other one roof. As my siblings are reaching the driving age, there are days my mom says my brother simply just doesn’t come home. Because there is no longer a requirement that everyone make it to the dinner table together each of them get tangled up in their busy lives of friends, socialization, and drama. The bonds of closeness are widening as the years go by. Is this a result of a change in society as a whole or does it simply come with age, the need to become more independent? Has technology alone driven this move away from the family as a whole, or is it the need for the reliance of one’s self rather than interdependence?
Chapter 3
Chapter 2
Chapter 1
Chapter one set an interesting tone for the book. One particular comment that was made by the author was that in his young adult years, he found himself working to pay for a car in order to get to work. This got me to thinking that the reason we go to school all of our childhood is so that we are equipped to be successful in the work world, even if that means more schooling when we have finished. The reason we go to college is to beat out all of those who did not attend so that we have a better chance of getting a job that we can have a comfortable lifestyle with. We put in all this time and effort so that we are able to live lives of luxury so that we can buy the bigger house, or the better car. If we weren’t constantly striving to have something more, there would be no need to keep pushing the envelope of technology and knowledge.
When you start to think about it at what point as the human race did we decide that competition among our peers was necessary and rewarding if you happened to succeed. When did we decide that it made us feel better to know that we had more than our neighbors and our peers? I suppose it dates back to the theory of survival of the fittest. Although many college students would have no problems finding a mediocre job out of undergrad, we all chose to go that one extra step to graduate school. Why? Who’s to say we couldn’t be just as “happy” being able to just make ends meet and have the necessities of life?