some nerd wrote:I have 2 questions about your post. 1) My own question for actualization has come down to why we do anything at all? The motivation so often seems to be obscured from what we say it is. So what is the why of ventureERE? (Same question asked differently) What is the personal need that it fulfills for you?
The Why of ventureERE is "because stoke". It falls under my "free 'em all, let Gaia sort 'em out" philosophy.
some nerd wrote:2) It’s hard for me to get out of my head that the best option for the future, as I understand “best option” is to do almost nothing at all and just try to consume as few resources as possible. The problem is I really don’t want to do that and I can come up with a bunch of compelling reasons I don’t have to. But whenever anyone does something that appears to me to be future leaning, I can’t help but wonder if the best thing is not just trying to divorce from the fossil fuel economy as much as possible?
"Divorce from the fossil fuel economy as much as possible" sounds like a great idea for a venture. You wouldn't be the first, so there are even models to follow for inspiration.
This might be dependent on me living in a city. Rn it seems like I can basically just live off of wasted resources of the man and that seems like it would have the greatest personal impact. To do that, the easiest route would be to basically stop doing much of anything except for keeping myself alive.
I see nothing wrong with choosing to do that. It's a fine option. [eta: to emphasize what I said above - the point of ventureERE isn't to maximize impact. It's a model to consider in the process of self-actualization **for those whose form of actualization is something along the lines of a venture as very loosely defined/pointed at here.** For some (many?) people, a venture would not be a good model for self-actualization and they shouldn't touch this idea with a ten-foot pole.]
I'm suspicious of any statements along the lines of "The best thing for the planet is to..."
I think we just don't know. Like, maybe everyone should just lie flat. But also, maybe a bunch of people (who are stoked to do so) should hustle and drive and try to build, like, a permaculture paradise everywhere. Trying to make permaculture happen everywhere seems like a good venture for the kind of twitchy people who aren't going to lie flat anyway due to nature.
I'm wondering wear stoke comes from and wary of options that are like "I am stoked to do a bunch of stuff," but since stoke is personally defined I definitely can't tell someone what is or is not their true stoke.
I went through like a 5 year period of intense guilt for bring a Striver, and put a lot of effort into trying to be not that kind of person.
Honestly it sucked. Yeah, I know the puritan work ethic and societal programming and blah blah, but also, I like to fucking crank and I've got some evidence I was made that way, so I'm pretty comfortable just accepting it and moving on with my life in this direction now.
I am still having my own personal crisis of "but how do you decide what to do?!?" based on my own personal crisis of stoke. But I think stoke is as close to an answer as I've found too.
My other variable is the ever nefarious "undigested experience" = insecurity = trauma. I'm wondering if that is accounted for in your stoke model? In my mind it's a constant struggle between stoke and undigested experience, but the tell tale sign is something like not being in flow all of the time (which is a problem for me).
Digesting experience and working through micro and macro trauma is a lifelong process. The more experience is digested, the 'purer' stoke becomes. It's an iterative process. Try things with eyes open, digest, tweak, try again, repeat forever, die.
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ETA: Another reason I'm thinking about this is because some people are wired to want to engage in intense and risky endeavors. "Retirement" and the mellow vibes of "voluntary simplicity" and the soft-spoken minimalist influencers are turnoffs to some. ventureERE is (can be) a means for integrating "intensity and risk-seeking-behavior" into a post-consumer WoG.