Can
Going Without Money Hurt the Economy?
One Man's Quest to Be Penniless
By ABBY
ELLIN
Daniel
Suelo is 51 years old and broke. Happily broke. Consciously, deliberately,
blessedly broke.
Not only
does he not have debt, a mortgage or rent, he does not earn a salary. Nor does
he buy food or clothes, or own any product with a lower case "i"
before it. Home is a cave on public land outside Moab, Utah. He scavenges for
food from the garbage or off the land (fried grasshoppers, anyone?). He has
been known to carve up and boil fresh road kill. He bathes, without soap, in
the creek.
In the fall of 2000, Suelo (who changed his name from
Shellabarger), decided to stop using money altogether. That meant no
"conscious barter," food stamps or other government handouts. His
mission was to "use only what is freely given or discarded and what is
already present and already running," he wrote on his web site, Zero
Currency.
The
question many people wonder: Is he insane, or a mooch, or simply dedicated to
leading a simple, honest, dare we say, Christ-like existence?
They're
good questions. And depending whom you ask, the answers vary.
Suelo
wasn't always a modern-day caveman. He went to the University of Colorado and
studied anthropology, at one point considering medical school. He lived in a
real house, with four walls, a window and a door, and shopped in stores, not
their dumpsters.
But over
time he says he grew depressed, clinically depressed, mainly with the focus on
acquisition. "Every time I made a resume for a job, signed my name to a
document, opened a bank account, or even bought a banana at the supermarket, I
felt a tinge of dishonesty," he said.
He was
born into an Evangelical Christian home in Grand Junction, Colo., and took his
religion seriously. Eventually, he started wondering why "professed
Christians rarely followed the teachings of Jesus--namely the Sermon on the
Mount, namely giving up possessions, living beyond credit and debt--freely
giving and freely taking--giving, expecting nothing in return, forgiving all
debts, owing nobody a thing, living beyond payback of either evil-for-evil or
good-for-good, living and walking without guilt (debt), without grudge (debt),
without judgment (credit & debt), living by Grace, by Gratis, not by our
own works but by the works of the true Nature flowing through," he said.
Although
he considered himself a Christian, he discovered that the same principles
applied to Taoism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, Islam,
Mormonism, Shamanism, and Paganism.
One year
he went to Alaska and worked on the docks. But that, too, he says, felt
dishonest. Instead, he and a buddy decided to live off the land—spearing fish,
foraging for mushrooms and berries. (Think Castaway, but with snow). Suelo
(which means soil in Spanish) eventually hitch-hiked back to Moab with $50 in
his pocket. By the time he arrived, his stash had dwindled to $25. He realized
that he only needed money for things he really didn't need, like snacks and
booze.
He began
toying with the idea of living full-time without money. He traveled to India,
and became fascinated by Hindu Sadhus, who wandered without lucre and
possessions. He considered joining them, but then he realized that "A true
test of faith would be to return to one of the most materialistic,
money-worshipping nations on earth, to return to the authenticity profound
principles of spirituality hidden beneath our own religion of hypocrisy, and be
a Sadhu there," he said. "To be a vagabond, a bum, and make an art of
it - this idea enchanted me."
And
soon, that's exactly what he did. He says he left his life savings—a whopping
$30—in a phone booth, and walked away.
But he
didn't do it in a vacuum; he maintained his blog for free from the Moab public
library. Rather than just sitting on a mountain and gazing at his navel, he
wanted to have an impact on others, to spread his gospel.
In 2009,
Mark Sundeen, an old acquaintance he'd worked with at a Moab restaurant, heard
about Suelo through mutual friends. At first, "I thought he must have lost
his mind," Sundeen, 42, said in a telephone conversation. But then he
began reading his blog, and grew intrigued. Sundeen divides his time between
Missoula, Mont., and Moab, where he was once a river guide, and he paid a visit
to Suelo's cave.
Gradually,
he said he realized that much of what Suelo was saying made a whole lot of
sense. This was right around the time the economy crashed, and "It felt
like a lot of what he was saying was prophetic," said Sundeen. "That
money is an illusion, an addiction. That resonated with me after the collapse
for the economy."
Sundeen was so intrigued that he decided to write a book
about Suelo, The Man Who Quit Money, which was published in March.
While
the book reviews have been generally positive, Suelo has come under fire by
some who say he's a derelict, sponging off society without contributing. They
are valid criticisms: This is a guy, after all, who has gotten a citation for
train hopping (what would Jesus say about that?). And he's not opposed to house
sitting in winter--not exactly living off the land.
And
besides: How is he actually helping others by going without? It's not like he's
solving world hunger, or curing cancer.
Sundeen
disputes these arguments. "He doesn't accept any government
programs—welfare, food stamps, Medicare," he said. "The only ways in
which he actually uses taxpayer funded derivatives is walking on roads and
using the public library. So in that regard he's a mooch--he's using the roads
and not paying taxes. But if you try to quantify the amount of money he's
taking from the system—it's a couple of dollars a year, less than anyone's ever
used."
Instead,
he is actively promoting "his idea that money is an illusion,"
Sundeen said. "The Fed just prints it up, it doesn't mean anything and
it's going to lead us down the road to serfdom." Suelo simply doesn't want
to contribute to that, and so he lives life on his own terms.
That
said, Sundeen wouldn't live the way Suelo does. "The appeal to me is the
living outdoors part, but I feel like I got my feel of that working as an
Outward Bound guide," he said. "At this point I have other
priorities."
Suelo,
for his part, has no plans to bring money back into his life. "I know it's
possible to live without money," he said. "Abundantly."
No comments:
Post a Comment