Working For Free - Working For Freedom

in freedom •  6 years ago 

This is a post inspired by ideas and notions mentioned in two articles I recently read: the first one being this text & video by @kennyskitchen, the other one is this post by @nateonsteemit. Though the topics diverge a bit, both of them mention one thing I've been pondering about a lot lately: Working without monetary compensation.

The concept of volunteering is nothing new for me. I have wwoofed quite a bit in various places around the world, and in recent years I have helped with numerous eco-building projects, mostly Earthships. However, it wasn't until this year that my eyes are getting opened to the incredible freedom that comes with volunteering. Let me illustrate:

Comparing the Last Two Years

If you've been following my blog for the last year, you will be familiar with the projects I have undertaken in 2018, the year I consider by far the best in my whole life. Building the wall in Oaxaca, Earthshipping on Vancouver Island, and even working at the bike shop in Victoria were examples where I dedicated my time, strength, mind, and skills to help with a project that is ultimately not mine, and all without asking for any money in return.

The actual compensation occurred in a different form:

  • I had the opportunity to stay in some of the most wonderfully pristine natural locations.
  • I had the pleasure to do something I knew deep and well that it was good.
  • I was daily confronted with challenges that turned into learning experiences.
  • I was fed copious amounts of the most delicious and healthy food.
  • Doing physical work in a natural setting soon gave me a body to be proud of, including a nice compact, muscular shape, and a healthy suntan that made sunscreen obsolete.
  • I maintained perfect health for a good 16 months, without even a slight 3-day cold or an upset stomach.
  • I got to share all of the benefits listed above with good friends, and amazing people that would become friends.
  • I would depart with lots of cherished memories, while looking forward to future encounters.

The list could go on, but you get the gist: by volunteering you get back so much more than what was originally "bargained for" without actually taking away anything from the host, or anyone. Also, from the host's perspective it's an incredible win, since it would be otherwise impossible to build an Earthship in Canada, for example. After all, who could afford a crew of tire-pounders if they were to be paid legally in the national currency? An arm and a leg is still an understatement.

Legally Paid Work

Now to contrast all that, let's take a look at how our modern system of employment works. After all, this is what I've been experiencing first hand ever since I got back into the system in January.

Congratulations, you are hired! Now, before you can get paid, you need to work for a whole month. Scratch that! Since payday is usually after the 10th of a month (at least where I work), I'd have to work a good six weeks before you get anything in return. On the other hand, should you have rented a place to live at the same time as when you started your job, you'd have to pay the whole month's rent before the first day of moving in. Security deposit, last months rent, and other surcharges are still on top of that.

By now, anyone who's not completely institutionalized by our system should feel outraged. But this is only the start. To be paid you need a bank account (which in turn requires another whole rigmarole of documents I don't want to get into). The bank takes its fees from your pay, but that is still nothing compared to the cut the government snatches in form of taxes. But so far we've only been pushing paper around. You still haven't been compensated for your work. You'd actually have to go out and spend that money (including more taxes!) for things that are notoriously bad, in one way or another. If you look at most goods and services available today, the majority of them are bad for us, toxic, unhealthy, unethical, and/or feeding an exploitative system. As an ethical consumer you can choose not to participate in them, but in the end you're left with few options. Finally you find yourself having to work to support the exploitation of all of us, including yourself.

Serving Others

The one sentence from @kennyskitchen's post that popped right out and stuck with me is this:

Things were so easy when I started traveling; I had no money, no plans, no electronics, and just the focus on being of service to others.

Traveling like that reminds me a bit of my bike journey I took after working on the Earthship, from Vancouver Island down to the US-Mexican border. The difference was that I did have some money (spent around $10 a day), I had my relatively good phone with me for electronic needs, and my potential service to others was overshadowed by my plan of arriving at a certain place at a certain time.

Still, while I was traveling, I was constantly thinking of how nice it would be to just stay in a place, especially where cool projects were going on or where I could be of help, and all without having to catch a flight in the end.

Full-Time Volunteering. Is It Possible?

So if you are wondering why I came back to work in the system yet again, even after seeing all the freedom and possibilities outside, I can tell you the reason: ... Okay, there are various reasons of course, but one major one is fear. Fear that in spite of all the wonderful experiences I had, that lifestyle cannot be maintained for an extended time, and that ultimately I would run myself into ruin.

I know, this is an old fear, held up by my parents and my German upbringing, shared by my wife, as well as as most people I know, and there may be some truth to it. After all, my expenses last year were around $5000 more than my income. That may not sound like a lot, and actually, spending five thousand bucks a year may seem quite prudent to some. Still, I could not keep up that lifestyle for many years... unless, I get some other kind of compensation.

Cryptos and Crowdfunding

This is where @nteonsteemit comes in. In his post Sustainable Volunteering in the Age of Digital Currency he mentions several exciting ideas on supporting people who share their work on sustainability without asking for monetary compensation. Crowdfunding for materials, seeking donations in cryptos, organizing a type of non-profit to make this kinda work possible...

At the moment, these ideas may seem completely nuts - utopian to most of us. But I'm sure there are those who have made sufficient experiences around barter, work-trade, and other examples of true free trade, to get excited by it. (I know I am!)

For right now I'm open and eager to exchange some thoughts on this subject, and hopefully come up with a clearer idea of how something like this may work. Then (God, I hope soon!) I'll get up on my bike again, and start riding through this great land, with clear destinations of places that need my hands and brains, hopefully with other like-minded superheroes, to make some amazing changes to a place, then ride on to do something similar, in another place that needs us. It'll be so wonderful!

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Ah, so awesome... and how I moss the freedom traveling without much money. There was something about that that really was freeing, no monetary responsibilities to worry about.

Can't wait to see what kond of ideas you come up with. Crypto is beautiful bit still very up and down! I'll have to read Nate's post too.

We are searching for something similar my friend, though I will most likely stay put on the property with all our projects. But the goal is to have no bills where we live (unfortunately real estate taxes will still have to be paid!). We will need some sort of money maker at the same time to expand and finish different projects.

Nice post makes you think about all the possibilities... we have to think agriculture where we are to get the taxes down to a farmland level!

Oh yes, there are always expenses, including the stupid ones of gov't extortion. Though it should be doable, especially with a proper network of helping hands and other similar homesteads, not to mention products... What do you mean by "we have to think agriculture"? Does the governMAN require you to use agro-industrial techniques (machines, chemicals, etc.) if you don't want to be taxed like crazy? That's kinda where things are going in Hungary, which is why I'm kinda glad I didn't acquire land while I was there. But the States...? Oh, I guess nothing is too surprising these days!

No, no big machines required... I have to show a couple years of making a certain amount of money under the many things that are concidered "agricultural" and than I can apply for a farm status which will bring my taxes way down.

Agriculture in my county can mean anything from harvesting wild mushrooms or other wild foods to boarding a horse!

Oh, sounds perfect, especially if you can combine things: mushrooms, horses, flowers, apples, kitchen herbs, firewood, compost, etc. I bet all these things together would probably easily fulfull the required amount!

You've been visited by @porters from Homesteaders Co-op.
Love your enthusiasm (it's catchy!) and clear vision and what a vision it is! Great for @nateonsteemit and @kennyskitchen to get the ball rolling and there is so much possibility with modern technology, Cryptos and Crowdfunding! You go man and I hope many more follow suit! --- Homesteaders Co-op A community marketplace of ethical, handmade and sustainable products available for STEEM, SBD (and USD): https://homesteaderscoop.com follow: @homesteaderscoop
Love your enthusiasm and clarity you bought through your

Thank you, @porters! I'm so happy my enthusiasm is contagious, though for me it doesn't feel like enthusiasm at all! More like keeping my head above the water. But one thing is certain: all these posts I mentioned, plus a number of other ones I just saw, makes me feel like something is coming up... not sure what. A free-write post, probably, to sort through my ideas. Thanks again for stopping by, actually it was your comment more than anything that got me enthusiastic. :-)

Of course fulltime volunteering is possible, especially with the help of wwoofing, helpx and workaway. There are also many ways to earn an income without paying taxes as well or even acquiring a business license.

I myself scavenge Industrial and Business Districts for metal, electronics and pallets, strip it all down and turn them in for cash. I've done this for 10 years and can't see myself ever getting a job again.

I'm not even interested in owning property. The ideal would be to find a place where I can barter my skills for room and board and finish out my days caring for someone elses land, while living in a shack.

I hope you make it back out on the road less traveled again soon, my friend.

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Ah, sweet! Scavenging usable material... gotta love it! The only dumpstering experience I've had was with food, and the differences are night and day between the US / Canada on one hand where dumpsters are overflowing with luxurious, delicious and healthy foods, places like Germany / Hungary on the other, where you're less likely to find good stuff, and are more likely to get in trouble with the authorities, and finally Mexico / Hungary (yeah, places overlap), where you are bound to be confronted by other professional scavengers on whose turf you are treading.

This is not meant to be a criticism, by the way. Please tell me more, keep writing some cool posts about these ways towards freedom. I'm super excited to read them, and yes, hopefully soon I hope to be on the less traveled path again. :-) At the moment the paths I'm traveling are teeming with folks who don't even know there is path under their feet... :-(

We need a whale. Like a big whale to help support with daily upvotes. A $5 vote per day would go quite a ways for some. That's where @fundition comes in.

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Oh YES YES YES. It annoys me that people thing travellers asking for money to volunteer is entitled and frivolous.. yes, we do get that dialogue here... when really they are doing FAR more to save tge world than those doing 9 to 5. The very least people could do to ease their conscious is to donate to a cause...

Damn, there has to be DAPP for this.

@nateonsteemit... yes! Dapp that!

Well, that's probably because people don't understand what "traveling" means. Sure, for covering the hostel fees, the evening margaritas, and an occasional ride on a camel, I would not donate a cent! But, as you said, for people who are actually doing the work which our 5-to-9-ers can't do, it's a whole different story. And I believe it is up to us to make this distinction clear: though traveling is a major part, that's not what the trip is about.

I think we have a dapp already. I think steem is the dapp.

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Or a community witness and/or mining pool. Everyone chip in for some equipment or hashing power and divide the profits according to who chipped in how much.

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It would have to be a network for sure. Projects, hosts, volunteers, pooling resources, documentation, ... Right now I'm just placing unconnected pieces onto the table. But I think effective documentation would do wonders. I'm thinking of the Homesteaders Co-op as an inspiring example. In any case, it would probably be most impactful to focus the efforts on one project at a time. By the way, I just remembered seeing something along these lines back, maybe a year ago. Have you heard of SHEP? https://steempeak.com/community/@shep-heard/calling-all-travelers-steemit-now-provides-a-way-for-you-to-travel-room-and-board-free

Living materially lean but overflowing with ideas, connections and creativity? Yes, it's possible. Volunteering is never without cost, and who should bear that cost is a big question. WWOOF has always been a great place to start - so many great projects out there to get involved with!


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