Posts Tagged ‘living life’

22nd January
2010
written by Nick

Technology is great. It allows you to make long distance phone calls, e-mail, travel in comfort, wake up to coffee, and the list goes on and on. Technology has made many aspects of our lives easier and has made access to information just a few taps and clicks away. I won’t argue that technology has made our lives  more convenient. But has it made them any better?

Now don’t get me wrong, I enjoy a good movie or game as much as the next person. But these items come at a large cost. Primarily, our time. The time we spend using these things instead of something else and the time you spend working to pay for them.

Let me use surfing the internet as an example. In order to use the internet you need to have a computer. You also need to have an internet service of some sort to get connected. But eventually, you want the convenience of using the net anywhere in the house. So you also buy a wireless router.

Yearly Cost to access the Internet ( I used 3 years as the average lifespan of a computer/router)

  • Computer: $700/ 3 Years =$233
  • Internet: $40 x 12= $480
  • Wireless Router= $50/3 Years+ $17

Total cost per year to have internet= $730

Now you can take some average wages to figure out how many hours you work to pay for your internet.

  • $730/$7.25 per hour (US minimum wage)= 100 hours (over two full weeks for work)
  • $730/10 per hour= 73 hours
  • $730/15 per hour= 49 hours
  • $730/20 per hour= 36.5 hours

We all love  the internet, but is it worth one week of your life each year? Would you be happier to give up internet and take an extra week or two off work. Or alternatively, would you be happier spending your time doing something else? Going for a hike or picnic instead of surfing the net or playing a board game with the family instead of watching TV.

Since I moved from Tokyo to Miyakojima, I am able to spend a lot more time outside and away from technology. I use my computer and TV far less and my body far more. In the end, I am feel happier and freer than I did when I was a “slave” to technology.

Technology definitely brings comfort. The problem is that comfort doesn’t necessarily equal happiness. Especially when the price is your valuable time.

Let me hear your thoughts. What are your views on the subject? Do you feel that having lots of luxuries and technologies makes you happy or just keeps you working more?

8th February
2009
written by Nick

I recently found this video posted on 4HWW blog and wanted to share it. When I see someone like Nick Vujicic it reminds me of how much we take for granite. A lot of us spend our lives worried and complaining about the small problems in life. We complain about the weather, our jobs, the traffic, our bodies, our financial situation, and just about anything else. I am certainly not excluding myself from this group. But in all honesty, we have so much to be grateful for.

If you are unhappy with something, then you can make it better. Most of us have been told that we can accomplish anything, but somehow we seem to believe that happiness is for the lucky and the gifted. This is quite obvious by the way we hold athletes, movie stars, and singers in such high regard. We believe that they have some secret ability the rest of us don’t possess.

I really do believe that you can accomplish just about anything if you want it bad enough. I think Nick Vujici is perfect proof of this. It all depends on how many times you are willing to fail and keep trying.

I hope you are touched by this video as much as I was. But the question is what are you going to do about it? I mean, what are you going to do right now, to make your life and the lives around you better?