The Soul Tax

My friend Shaun and I talk all the time about life. Conversations are mainly about snowboarding and hiking, where we'd like to go and why and how in the world to get there. We go from a new song to a mountain I'd like to go to, Politics, Girls, Travel, Photography, Some crazy thing I'm Frustrated about, and about Shaun's wife, job, Problems, and dog.

Our friendship formed around our mutual wonder of the West and solidified through the comradery and general availability when both of us finally lived on the West Coast, he in Seattle and I in San Diego. I've been lucky enough to see him a couple of times in Seattle, and it feels like we are neighbors even though we've lived well over a thousand miles apart. Shaun headlines an amazing group of friends I have who enjoy me more for living life a little bit differently and actively encourage me to keep going. Most of my friends have jobs in business, tech, and finance so it's funny when we talk about life, goals, and give each other advice. They can talk practicality in me and I return the favor with thoughts geared towards meaning, passion, and long-term approaches of happiness and lasting power.

This came up time and again as Shaun considered a career change that would take him from the West back East to our home state of Michigan. The amount of factors going into the move spurred many conversations on short term and long term problems and solutions. At first, I constantly felt like an insufficient sounding board for Shaun to talk to and tried deferring him to many of our friends who are my age (I'm a couple years older than Shaun) who have more experience in his field of work, but he kept insisting on getting my point of view. My main concern was giving him bad advice or saying something that he would follow that might not be the right thing.

What eventually made me stop trying to dodge Shaun's questions is that I respect his judgment and if he wanted my opinion I'd give it to him.

The conversations always hinged around his love for his wife, the life they've built out West, and like many the handcuff of students loans which continually keep them from fully investing in the life they want. The move to Michigan spelled out a cure to many of those problems while at the same time worried us both about how it was going to be moving from Seattle to Detroit. Shaun is a mountain man, finds peace in nature, seeks meaning and understanding rather than material goods and a full schedule.

"Okay, here's a good way to look at it." I told Shaun, "You're going back to invest in your future, and it's going to cost you in a lot of ways, but you're going to get a lot in return. So what are the limits? Like, how much is it worth to give up? Consider it like a tax. What would be the acceptable amount for the tax to be taken from your wages before you said it wasn't worth it anymore. Now, apply that to who you are and what you love. What's the soul tax? Once you figure that out, you have to see if it's an acceptable rate. If it's not, don't take the job even if it'll fix a lot of things, because you can keep searching for something with a lower soul tax. If it's acceptable, then you should take it because it seems like a great opportunity but if it's too high and will make you hate life and resent the move and the reasons why you moved, don't take it."

Since then I've had similar talks with friends about their jobs, business pursuits, relationships, and moves. I feel weird and often start with disclaimers about not having "a real job" or living life traveling or pursuing dreams or "are you sure you want to take advice from someone who's going to live in a tiny home in a van?". I'm finding that, ya, it's important to people to have someone who believes in their dreams and doesn't think it's stupid to consider more than the most comfortable life possible. It makes me sad to see the problem many people face in feeling selfish or stupid for thinking of anything other than the impact of monetary gains. Most of us have bigger dreams than our jobs or the home we have. Those things matter, but they matter at the same time and just as much as the dreaming piece in all of us that cries out against the quelling we put on it as to not cause too much noise. It's sad we feel the need to suppress that to aim for something we want less.

Isaiah, a friend who is the younger brother of a Young Life guy of mine who turned into a good friend, asked me for a bit of advice this past year as he was finishing up high school and looking into colleges. "My one bit of advice is to take all that "what do you want to do? Where do you want to go? What job do you want? What will you major in?" and BAG IT! Not that you shouldn't think about it, you should. It's got its time and place, a very important time and place, but ya... Bag it. Literally think of putting it all away for a bit and instead think about how you want to do whatever you do... How do you want to do college? How do you want to make friends? How do you want to spend your money/treat girls/make decisions/decide where to go/have kids and all that fun stuff... Choose integrity, wisdom, creativity, kindness, grace, and selflessness in the 'how's' and the 'what's' will develop from a healthier and better place."

Encouragement rests in the knowledge that it is not what we do or what we have but how we do things and how we have things that matter the most. Our soul tax depends on the compounding choices we make every day alongside the significant moves we choose to form the notches on our timelines.

Shaun lives in Michigan now and I miss him tons but can't wait till he moves back out here debt free and more available to adventure. Isaiah is in his first semester at Grand Canyon University figuring out how he wants to do college.

Committing to Van Life, Happiness, and the Pursuit of What I'm Good at

The past couple of years have brought about a lot of challenges and opportunities. Without getting too into it right now I've learned how sickness, despair, hope, relationships, and nature can change one's view of the world and perspective of their place in it. There's a story there that's possibly going to come out later, but for now, all you need to know is that I'm moving into a van . . . which is admittedly quite odd of a thing to do but I faced myself with the reality that I was kind of settling down and kind of being adventurous and if I kept kind of doing both I would never really do either.

 

I took a step back and looked at what I'm good at, what I'm not good at, what about those things makes me happy/unhappy, and most importantly to me how to balance all those things with making a change in the world I would like to see. My heart has not been in a lot of what I have had to do, but I've done it all with a plan to keep a persevering attitude so when I got to the point when the fog of unfortunate incidents and adversity lifted, I could make good decisions going forward. Not everything has been clear, and I've made a lot of mistakes along the way but to quote some of my mentors "Nothing great was every achieved without enthusiasm" (Ralph Emerson) "To give less than your best is to sacrifice the gift" (Steve Prefontaine) and "If we want authenticity we have to initiate it" (Travis Rice). I tried to keep these things on the front of my mind - stay excited and optimistic, give my best and look at the world/opportunities/skills as a gift, and create my story. So this plan has a lot to do with all those thoughts and feelings as well as listening to my creative mind.

Here's why I'm doing this exactly . . .

Medium-term Goals

  • Last year I asked myself where I wanted to live and came down to the fact that, in an ideal world, I would live in Truckee, California with time spent in Denver and San Diego, with plenty of trips in between. Having a home in each of those is currently impossible, but van-living would make it possible.
  • With my job it makes the most financial sense not to rent a place (read throw away money) I am barely ever in but to own a vehicle/home.
  • I love an adventurous life and want to make it more accessible for friends to join me. This will make it easier for me to go to them or more affordable for them to fly out and join me on an expedition.
  • Have the most fun possible while learning the most possible to grow into a fun, educated, experienced, man who cares about the world a lot by focusing on the beauty and the problems simultaneously (medium-term goal transitioning into the long-term goals).

Long Term Goals

  • I want to be a writer/author/speaker/illustrator/photographer. Flat out; this is what I want to be in life. Van life gives me a studio to work in all the time and allows me the space to get away and be productive while also allowing me to be right in the middle of places I want to experience/write about.
  • Photography - I'm finding this is one of the easiest ways for me to get traction to create change, so I plan on investing my time and energy into getting better, telling more stories, and finding my style. I loved photography in middle and high school, even winning a bunch of state awards for photo journalism, but walked away because I didn't see it as a viable career. It was just something I loved and I looked at it as a hobby. If I could go back and tell myself anything in high school, it might be to never set the camera down. I've missed out on a good ten years of experience/learning but have to look at the positives of what I've learned about myself in between then and now.
  • Spend more time with homeless people: I won't be homeless . . . I will just be home wherever I am. Being able to go many places will allow me time to travel more but also frees up my schedule to connect with people and rekindle my passion that has never really gone away. I want to start up a writing club/therapy format/curriculum to help people who are homeless have healthy outlets, build relationships and have peace/growth through readily available therapy. This will be a weighty endeavor but one I am very excited about. I can't do this all on my own, and we'll see how it will work out, but the hope is to get people involved and set up workshops with open invitations.
  • Continue becoming a kind, hard working, gentle, loving, adventurous, and fun person - the past two years wore on me. At times I've become more negative than I was before (it had something to do with the cancer/being poor/terrible relational decisions/moving/job struggles etc. etc.), but I was the worst version of me I'd ever been. I know this is being hard on myself, but I am a very firm believer in being hard on yourself. I try to have some grace on myself here because during that time I still made a couple of books, didn't give up, tried to be a good friend, inspired others even when I couldn't feel good, gave talks to groups, had plenty of resiliency to overcome, and somehow mucked my way through everything, but again - any productivity came because I was hard on myself and refused to give up working/producing even when I felt like crap. All good things of motivation, healing, and the exit door from the building of hardship I was living in came from the loving generosity and grace of friends and family who didn't give up on me, to which I owe a lot and to which I plan to pay it forward.

This is a lot to focus on, but I plan on being intentional about working hard for the good things I want and feel capable of. I learned what it was like to work hard for things that sucked, but I had to do these past couple years. It feels good to be getting back to where I was before getting sick, before the months where I felt dark and gloomy and cynical about everything I created or did. I miss the person I was becoming before this valley but feel like I'm climbing the slope out of it as a more experienced and determined person.

This is just a fork in the road. I'm just a wild boy trying to take it enthusiastically.