Irishman Mark Boyle tried to live life with no income, no bank balance and no spending. Here’s how he finds it.
If someone told me seven years ago, in
my final year of a business and economics degree, that I’d now be living
without money, I’d have probably choked on my microwaved ready meal.
The plan back then was to get a ‘good’ job, make as much money as
possible, and buy the stuff that would show society I was successful.
For a while I did it – I had a fantastic
job managing a big organic food company; had myself a yacht on the
harbour. If it hadn’t been for the chance purchase of a video called Gandhi, I’d still be doing it today. Instead, for the last fifteen months, I haven’t spent or received a single penny. Zilch.
The change in life path came one evening
on the yacht whilst philosophising with a friend over a glass of
merlot. Whilst I had been significantly influenced by the Mahatma’s
quote “be the change you want to see in the world”, I had no idea what
that change was up until then. We began talking about all major issues
in the world – environmental destruction, resource wars, factory farms,
sweatshop labour – and wondering which of these we would be best
devoting our time to. Not that we felt we could make any difference,
being two small drops in a highly polluted ocean.
But that evening I had a realisation.
These issues weren’t as unrelated as I had previously thought – they had
a common root cause. I believe the fact that we no longer see the
direct repercussions our purchases have on the people, environment and
animals they affect is the factor that unites these problems.
The degrees of separation between the
consumer and the consumed have increased so much that it now means we’re
completely unaware of the levels of destruction and suffering embodied
in the ‘stuff’ we buy.
Very few people actually want to cause
suffering to others; most just don’t have any idea that they directly
are. The tool that has enabled this separation is money, especially in
its globalised format.
Take this for an example: if we grew our own food, we wouldn’t waste a third of it as we do today.
If we made our own tables and chairs, we wouldn’t throw them out the moment we changed the interior décor.
If we had to clean our own drinking water, we probably wouldn’t shit in it.
So to be the change I wanted to see in
the world, it unfortunately meant I was going to have to give up money,
which I decided to do for a year initially. So I made a list of the
basics I’d need to survive. I adore food, so it was at the top. There
are four legs to the food-for-free table: foraging wild food, growing
your own, bartering and using waste grub, of which there far too much.
On my first day I fed 150 people a three
course meal with waste and foraged food. Most of the year I ate my own
crops though and waste only made up about five per cent my diet. I
cooked outside – rain or shine – on a rocket stove.
Next up was shelter. So I got myself a
caravan from Freecycle, parked it on an organic farm I was volunteering
with, and kitted it out to be off the electricity grid. I’d use wood I
either coppiced or scavenged to heat my humble abode in a wood burner
made from an old gas bottle, and I had a compost loo to make ‘humanure’
for my veggies.
I bathed in a river, and for toothpaste I
used washed up cuttlefish bone with wild fennel seeds, an oddity for a
vegan. For loo roll I’d relieve the local newsagents of its papers (I
once wiped my arse with a story about myself); it wasn’t double quilted
but it quickly became normal. To get around I had a bike and trailer,
and the 55 km commute to the city doubled up as my gym subscription. For
lighting I’d use beeswax candles.
Many people label me an anti-capitalist.
Whilst I do believe capitalism is fundamentally flawed, requiring
infinite growth on a finite planet, I am not anti anything. I am
pro-nature, pro-community and pro-happiness. And that’s the thing I
don’t get – if all this consumerism and environmental destruction
brought happiness, it would make some sense. But all the key indicators
of unhappiness – depression, crime, mental illness, obesity, suicide and
so on are on the increase. More money it seems, does not equate to more
happiness.
Ironically, I have found this year to be
the happiest of my life. I’ve more friends in my community than ever, I
haven’t been ill since I began, and I’ve never been fitter. I’ve found
that friendship, not money, is real security. That most western poverty
is spiritual. And that independence is really interdependence.
Could we all live like this tomorrow?
No. It would be a catastrophe, we are too addicted to both it and cheap
energy, and have managed to build an entire global infrastructure around
the abundance of both. But if we devolved decision making and
re-localised down to communities of no larger than 150 people, then why
not? For over 90 per cent of our time on this planet, a period when we
lived much more ecologically, we lived without money. Now we are the
only species to use it, probably because we are the species most out of
touch with nature.
People now often ask me what is missing
compared to my old world of lucre and business. Stress. Traffic-jams.
Bank statements. Utility bills. Oh yeah, and the odd pint of organic ale
with my mates down the local.
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