I am not a professional photographer and neither intend to become one. Yet, every once in a while during my travels I take a lucky shot either thanks to the subject, the colours, the angle, or something else. These few pictures are important for me as they represent great memories to treasure for life.
A nice picture taken in a remote part of the world really has the power to transport us over there, to momentarily make us forget the routine of our lives, to raise questions in our heads about creation and the universe.
If a single picture can do all that, when we move from frame to frame in a collection of similarly beautiful shots, we can really imagine ourselves pulled into those far away lands, forget who we are and where we come from. Could the spirit of a traveller be exactly this: to abandon himself into the unknown to rediscover his most hidden nature?
A trip in foreign lands where life is still simple is not just an escape from our homeland, the traffic, our job, etc... It is rather a cut from a limited life, constrained by a society with too may concerns, rules and obligations. Running away, even if temporarily, from such madness is like living in a parallel dimension characterized by complete freedom bounded purely by nature and chance.
The main aim of the real traveller however is not to escape his daily life, but rather to experience a FULL life, where every day is a mystery. A travel is a metaphor of life, a journey into the unknown, a way of testing ourselves, a voyage of discovery, growth, triumph and defeat. How far can we go without sleeping or with limited food in an unfamiliar territory? How do we blend into a slum, a local tribe, or a characteristic food market? What emotions do we face in front of a desert, a jungle, or at 5,000 meters? A trip can be perceived as a search for the “moment”. When I travel, there are no plans, I am alone and always in different places. As a result, every second is new, unexpected, and intriguing. The average day seems to last a week rather than the real 24 hours!
I am strongly convinced that Western (or better Modern) society is significantly damaging our lives. We fear things that are just natural occurrences, our priorities are illogical, our feelings/emotions became more and more shallow, etc. By travelling in remote places, we can still witness today a GOOD life. That can be easily perceived by everyone who is just willing to look as no search is required to find big smiles of children faces, serenity in the expressions of old people, joy and laugh among farmers in tribes where you’ll never find a single piece of plastic, or big families eating together. And most importantly the aspect to reflect on is that such people eat while hundreds of flies feast at their tables, walk miles to and from work/school, sleep on wooden beds, have floors made of dust rather than concrete, and bamboo walls.
We have to completely rethink our way of life if we want to find happiness! Through travelling and by witnessing happy people in poor places we can realize that and then perhaps progressively get rid of most of the fears and delusions that exist only in the minds of modern men. That will eventually help us to find again the simple answers to existential questions that we keep putting aside for better times: how do we find happiness? What is the meaning of life? Should we fear death? What is freedom? What is friendship? What is love?
22 February, 2010
14 February, 2010
The Illusion of World Peace
World Peace is no more than an illusion if proposed by developed nations. It is unattainable and unsustainable because based upon false assumptions of unlimited resources.
Let's first consider the fundamental principle of a capitalist market economy: competition. If there are groups, competition is likely to be part of their nature. It might be hidden through cooperation when resources abound, but it explodes whenever they lack. History is full of examples with almost every war caused by lack of resources by one group and the outcome being a redistribution of wealth.
By analysing the past, one might suggest to eliminate groups. Ok, let's be all the same, equal among equals. Nothing new here in principle as the elimination of classes has already been repetitively attempted in socialist and communist states, although never with real success. Nevertheless, let us assume that socialist ideals could be effectively implemented. That would mean no more diversity, the ending of national borders, and therefore no more reasons for war. However, there would still be a lack of resources as the superabundance of goods and services promised by Karl Marx and the likes is finite given the limits of our planet, while population growth and its needs appear not to be so. Unless people mentality was going to significantly change, the only foreseeable outcome in a stateless situation would be total chaos.
So, we need to simultaneously unite but also change. A process of unification has been underway for more than a decade, but we have been moving in the wrong direction. Instead of copying the best practices in the world and conform to those, we have been following the worst examples. As a result, today we have more drugs, less time for family life, more fast foods, more pornography, more divorces, more violence, less time outdoor, less spirituality, less dreams, less care for nature, more gadgets, more spending, more working hours, less affordable housing, etc. Somehow we need to reverse this trend while there are still cultures and people not yet fully assimilated into the new system and who can still provide living examples of a different kind of life.
In parallel with a unification of people across the globe based on shared ideas and principles rather than ethnicity, religion or nationality, we need to change at an individual level. Many changes have to take place, but most importantly we need to:
1) Become more independent from society, and
2) Become more spiritual (not religious)
Take away frmm a man and he will act like an animal! Humanity has to voluntarily readjust its standards of living to a level of modesty that is sustainable and almost entirely detached from world events. As an example, a Global Financial Crisis should not potentially cause extreme hardship on an individual or a family over the following 12 months, and neither should a raise in interest rates, losing a job, a natural disaster, etc.
Through spirituality we might become more aware, awakened in a world of sleeping people, and basically more alive. Spirituality is the key also in terms of relationships. Similarities with others and sense of belonging depend only in minimal part on cultural backgrounds. It is a false feeling. Much more important is instead to be surrounded by similarly spiritual beings. Also in a couple relationship, same spirituality overcomes all other differences.
Let's first consider the fundamental principle of a capitalist market economy: competition. If there are groups, competition is likely to be part of their nature. It might be hidden through cooperation when resources abound, but it explodes whenever they lack. History is full of examples with almost every war caused by lack of resources by one group and the outcome being a redistribution of wealth.
By analysing the past, one might suggest to eliminate groups. Ok, let's be all the same, equal among equals. Nothing new here in principle as the elimination of classes has already been repetitively attempted in socialist and communist states, although never with real success. Nevertheless, let us assume that socialist ideals could be effectively implemented. That would mean no more diversity, the ending of national borders, and therefore no more reasons for war. However, there would still be a lack of resources as the superabundance of goods and services promised by Karl Marx and the likes is finite given the limits of our planet, while population growth and its needs appear not to be so. Unless people mentality was going to significantly change, the only foreseeable outcome in a stateless situation would be total chaos.
So, we need to simultaneously unite but also change. A process of unification has been underway for more than a decade, but we have been moving in the wrong direction. Instead of copying the best practices in the world and conform to those, we have been following the worst examples. As a result, today we have more drugs, less time for family life, more fast foods, more pornography, more divorces, more violence, less time outdoor, less spirituality, less dreams, less care for nature, more gadgets, more spending, more working hours, less affordable housing, etc. Somehow we need to reverse this trend while there are still cultures and people not yet fully assimilated into the new system and who can still provide living examples of a different kind of life.
In parallel with a unification of people across the globe based on shared ideas and principles rather than ethnicity, religion or nationality, we need to change at an individual level. Many changes have to take place, but most importantly we need to:
1) Become more independent from society, and
2) Become more spiritual (not religious)
Take away frmm a man and he will act like an animal! Humanity has to voluntarily readjust its standards of living to a level of modesty that is sustainable and almost entirely detached from world events. As an example, a Global Financial Crisis should not potentially cause extreme hardship on an individual or a family over the following 12 months, and neither should a raise in interest rates, losing a job, a natural disaster, etc.
Through spirituality we might become more aware, awakened in a world of sleeping people, and basically more alive. Spirituality is the key also in terms of relationships. Similarities with others and sense of belonging depend only in minimal part on cultural backgrounds. It is a false feeling. Much more important is instead to be surrounded by similarly spiritual beings. Also in a couple relationship, same spirituality overcomes all other differences.
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