And forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair. ~ Kahlil Gibran



Monday, November 03, 2008

Maintenance Free Society

This phrase has been running through my head a lot lately. I am thinking that most of what is wrong with this great nation of ours is that we are looking for a Maintenance Free Society.

Think about it. Folks buy a car, and take care of it for a while. It is clean, it smells nice, they take it in for regular oil changes and maintenance. After a while, though, that car becomes just something to get them from point a to point b with as little fuss as possible. Pretty soon the oil changes are running a couple thousand miles behind schedule and there are french fries ground into the carpet. The car wash becomes something of the past, rust begins to creep along the edges of the wheel wells, the tires start getting bald and going flat. All for a lack of maintenance. Soon a new car is purchased to replace the one that is no longer as pretty or fancy.

Everything in our lives is like this. Our food comes maintenance free (no effort in growing, raising, or hunting it) and in neat disposable containers. Our clothing, when stained, torn, or no longer fashionable is replaced with new and better things. Good quality, heirloom furniture is a thing of the past, with Craigslist full of ads reading "this no longer fits the decor of our new home, so if you want it come and get it". Dishes have become "seasonal decor". Appliances are swapped out for the newest, shiniest, and fanciest. We have "Starter Homes" instead of homes purchased with the idea that you will live there, raise your children there, and (if you are lucky) die there. Obesity and chronic illness are huge issues in our society because even the maintenance on our bodies is too much to handle. We are stripping the Earth of it's natural resources because the maintenance involved with living sustainably is too inconvenient. Everyone is looking for the upgrade.


Friends have become maintenance free, as well. Everyone knows that everyone else is so busy. Folks meet at work or at a function, and they hit it off. Pretty soon they are meeting for drinks or going somewhere together and developing a fine friendship. Pretty soon, though, things taper off to the occasional phone call or email and both parties move on to find new friends. The excuse is that everyone is too busy to get together...maybe after the holidays, we say. Hmmm.

Even families are now often maintenance free. How many divorces are due to the fact that it is too much work to keep your spouse happy and the marriage alive? How many kids are running around getting in all sorts of trouble because it is too hard to keep track of where they are, who they are with, and what they are doing? How many Grandmas and Grandpas are dying of loneliness at home or in care facilities because their families are too busy to come visit or to call on a regular basis?

I dunno. I think maybe Maintenance Free costs more than it is worth.

5 comments:

Rev. Peter Doodes said...

I have shelves full of books that do not sum up our society, its behaviour and the resulting problems 1% as eloquently as that Barefoot...

Finding Pam said...

We are now a disposable soceity with throw away kids, marriages, people and parents. No time for anyone, not even ourselves.
Personally, I think that it is just an unhealthy way to live.

There are some of us that value the life of an unborn child, see the possibilities in the faces of teenagers, and love old and used up people and love Mother Earth.

I think that your blog is a wonderful means to educate people about why we are here. Your actions match your life and I respect you so very much for giving me a glimpse into your wonderfully enriched life.

I hope and pray that people will wake up and smell the roses before it is too late. Thanks again for sharing your life. In the mean time, I am doing my part to make this an undisposable world.

Deb said...

Amen Barefoot, and the above commenters. I especially like the words about "starter homes". I have always had a problem with that concept. Starter homes mean disposable neighborhoods.

I was having similar thoughts yesterday as I was sorting and cutting tops off my carrot crop. My carrots looked pretty gnarly. Real life is messy, uneven, and full of surprises. Store bought carrots are always the same, especially the "baby" carrots. Not a lot of maintenance involved there either.

Wendy said...

Very astute observation. I hope that as our society transitions to a lower energy society, we'll start to see the value in maintaining a few things :).

MojoMan said...

Your words ring true, especially now that everything seems to be falling apart. As much as I worry about the hard times ahead, I try to believe that some good will come of it all after we all start living simpler lives closer to home and we learn that we must all work together.