‘The Moneyless Man’

November 12, 2011 at 10:56 am 7 comments

CourtesyEric Hohn, Arlington, Yexas
—————————-
‘The Moneyless Man’ describes living for a year with no income and no expenses — Dumpster diving, growing and foraging for food, riding a bike and using solar power.

This post comes from Mark Frauenfelder at partner site Credit.com.

In these lean times, people want to reduce their spending. It’s easy to cut back on nonessentials such as video games and restaurant meals, but once you eliminate discretionary spending, you’re stuck with an essentials budget that’s hard to reduce. At least that’s what most of us think.

Mark Boyle had different ideas. He’d been working as a businessman in the organic foods industry in England, and had become concerned about his relationship with money. To him, money was a negative influence: “It enables us to be completely disconnected from what we consume and from the people who make the products we use.” He also believed money was largely responsible for environmental destruction and that banks spur this on by “pursu[ing] infinite economic growth on a finite planet.”

So in 2008 Boyle decided to try living for a year without money. His self-imposed rules were simple: He would close his bank account and not spend or receive money (including checks and credit cards). He would live off-grid — meaning he would produce his own energy for illumination, heat, food preparation and communicating with the outside world.

Boyle sold his houseboat and used the proceeds (a few thousand dollars) to get ready. Here are some of the things he did:

He bought a $300 solar panel to keep his laptop and cell phone charged (accepting incoming calls didn’t require subscribing to a cell phone plan).
He obtained an old trailer for free from a woman who wanted to get rid of it.
He made a deal with an organic farm to let him park the trailer on the land in exchange for a few hours’ work each day.
He built a compost toilet near his trailer to harvest the “humanure” for his gardening needs.
He set up a solar shower, which consisted of a black plastic bag and a rubber hose for bathing.
For heating the trailer, he bought a wood-burning stove made from an upcycled propane tank, and for cooking he built a “rocket stove,” designed to produce high-heat using small pieces of wood.
A bicycle provided transportation.
Started on Black Friday

He started his year of moneyless existence on international “Buy Nothing Day” (the day after Thanksgiving, also known as Black Friday — the biggest shopping day of the year). And he wrote about his experiences in his new book, “The Moneyless Man: A Year of Freeconomics Living.”

Even though Boyle launched his experiment at the beginning of winter, when gardening and foraging for food was out of the question, he discovered that food wasn’t a problem. He found all he needed, and more, by Dumpster diving for products that supermarkets were required to throw out after the sell-by date expired. In the summer months, farming and foraging yielded additional food.

Transportation became an immediate problem. His bike tires punctured so frequently that he soon ran out of patching material. He posted about the situation on his blog, Freeconomy, and, fortunately, a company that makes solid, puncture-proof tires sent him some in exchange for a mention on his website.

Once Boyle got started, he fell into a routine. It was quite labor-intensive — he had to wake up early and, in the winter months, put wood into the stove to heat up the trailer. Then he would have to go out and fire up his rocket stove to cook his food. If he needed to go into town, he had to hop on his bike and pedal 18 miles. He was busy from sunup to sundown.

Discovering simple pleasures

Summer was easier. In the book, Boyle recounts the pleasures of “long evenings walking in the woods, camping by the beach at the weekend, cooking food that you’ve grown and picked yourself, cycling, listening to acoustic music by a camp fire, wandering in the wild foraging berries, apples and nuts, skinny-dipping in the lake, and sleeping under the stars.”

At the end of the year, Boyle organized a festival for 1,000 people who came to enjoy free food and drink, made with the help of friends who foraged, Dumpster dived and bartered for the food, as well as fermented the beer and wine that was given away. The festival, along with his experiences over the year, prompted Boyle to make the decision to remain moneyless after the year-long experiment. He used the advance from the book to establish a trust to purchase a plot of land for a moneyless community.

Inspiration for living with less

I suspect that most people who read this book won’t want to go completely moneyless. But it could inspire them to think about ways to reduce spending. For example, you can prepare more of your meals at home from fresh ingredients rather than eat at restaurants. You can play board games at home with friends and family instead of going to the movies, and you can invite friends over for impromptu amateur music jam sessions instead of going out to concerts and nightclubs.

Before Boyle started his experiment, he had prepared himself by learning “carpentry, vegetable growing, permaculture design, medicine, clothes making and repairing, cooking, bushcraft, and teaching.” It turns out that these skills, while valuable, were of secondary importance to the “primary skills” for freeconomic living: “physical fitness, self-discipline, genuine care and respect for the planet and the species that live on it, and the ability to give and share.”

Advertisement

Entry filed under: True story. Tags: .

Nails in the fence Pin Drop – American Spirit

7 Comments Add your own

  • 1. chandravadan  |  November 12, 2011 at 11:14 am

    Inspiring Story !
    Thanks for sharing.
    Dr. Chandravadan Mistry
    http://www.chandrapukar.wordpress.com
    Hope to see you on Chandrapukar !

    Reply
  • 2. chaman  |  November 12, 2011 at 12:56 pm

    This will open the doors whoever may be thinking to do something like this.
    We need these type of storys to inspire the young generation.
    Sureshbhai, you and I have passed that age. However, we are doing something within four walls that will inspire the Indian retirees.
    CHAMAN

    Reply
  • 3. ગાંડાભાઈ વલ્લભ  |  November 12, 2011 at 3:17 pm

    Very interesting story. I like it as it is something I was dreaming of since I was at university but could not do it.
    Thanks Sureshbhai for sharing it.

    Reply
  • 4. Rajeshwari Shukla  |  November 12, 2011 at 5:22 pm

    Very inspirational……Thanks for sharing.

    Reply
  • 5. Capt. Narendra  |  November 13, 2011 at 4:34 am

    Very interesting story.
    Thanks Sureshbhai for sharing it.

    Reply
  • 6. Nitin Shukla  |  November 13, 2011 at 9:09 am

    While not many will be able to (nor would want to) live like Mark Boyle, it clealry shows the enhanced need for “simple living, high thinking”. I wonder the reason behind excessive craving for money by individual; is it lack of self-esteem or sense of insecurity or combination of both. One needs to, in that case, have higher self-esteem and lesser insecurity to ensure right place of money in his/her life.

    Many thanks Sureshbhai for sharing with us. It is a coincident that I am in US for few weeks on vacation to spend some time with Stuti at Cambridge, Boston, MA.

    Reply
  • 7. nilam doshi  |  November 18, 2011 at 4:24 am

    inspiring story..thanks for sharing this, dada.. atleast we can do something you have suggested..that will also enough for us..

    like this..if we can imply accordingly..

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Expressions of my being

Recent Posts

Categories

 

November 2011
M T W T F S S
« Jun   Feb »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930  

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.