Go Minimalist. Save the World.

The concept is typically presented as a lifestyle choice – buy fewer things.  Declutter.  Adopt the spirit, “less is more.”  Fight back against the forces of rampant consumerism.  You could limit your wardrobe to 33 items for 3 months and see if anyone notices (this is called taking “the Minimalist Fashion Challenge”).  You could live in a tiny house.  Or out of a pack.

Minimalism is nothing if not pragmatic.  Calculate the benefit of owning any consumer good, net of the costs of acquisition, storage, and disposal.  You will find the net benefit is often negative… Continue reading “Go Minimalist. Save the World.”

Go Minimalist. Save the World.

The Little White Lie in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness

Heart of Darkness ends with Marlow calling on Kurtz’ fiancée in a dimly-lit mansion in an unnamed metropolis which Marlow calls merely the “sepulchral city.”  Still in mourning more than a year later, she wants to know Kurtz’ final words.  Marlow tells her that Kurtz called her name.  But this is a lie – as he lay dying, Kurtz whispered, “The horror!  The horror!”

Marlow’s little white lie was meant to shield a woman’s feelings from an ugly truth.  By the end of the narrative, however, the author Joseph Conrad’s made the point that civilization is based on lies – although we may call them faith, beliefs, ideas, or “the great and saving illusion.”  And we need these lies, he implies, to shield us from the primeval darkness which lies deep within the soul.

But is this really the case?  As someone who spends a lot of time in wilderness, this question nags at me.  I recently reread Heart of Darkness, as I was preparing for a trip to Maine, a place that seems plenty mysterious and primitive, if not quite so far off as Africa. Continue reading “The Little White Lie in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness”

The Little White Lie in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness

Barefoot in New Hampshire

It’s been a long, steep, wet climb up the mountain’s northern shoulder, and now I’m nearing the AMC hut tucked in a col beneath the summit of Mt. Madison. Another 500 feet to go, and I will have completed my quest – to climb all 48 of New Hampshire’s 4,000-footers, and to do so barefoot, which is how I hike and run these days.

Continue reading “Barefoot in New Hampshire”
Barefoot in New Hampshire