Try Not To Need

Inspiration comes from the strangest places sometimes. I was watching a segment of Orson Welles’ “Around The World…” series the other day in which he interviewed various luminaries about their philosophies and methods. He spoke with Raymond Duncan, a craftsman and artist whose philosophy and lifestyle were the essence of simplification for over 50 years. A certain quote stood out for me. It came when Orson Welles asked Mr. Duncan if he could reduce his philosophy to a statement. Duncan responded… “I try to make all of the things I need. And I try not to need the things I cannot make.” Ambitious, but admirable. I can’t imagine in this time of inexpensive everything from China and other places that we would really need to make too terribly much. But from a craftsman standpoint, time taken in the artistry of creating a useful thing or appreciable thing like artwork, is time well spent, and time spent on the craftsman himself, which was another of Duncan’s essentially communist philosophies that the development of the worker is more important than the work itself. While I agree that the development of the skills and talents of people is critical, the work itself, unless done purely for the pleasure or development of the craftsman, is critically important too, otherwise the work is selfish and limited.

What I took from it then, applied in my own life and to this project, is my own simplification… “I will try not to need the things I do not truly need.”

Overpacking As Regret Prevention

My wife and I are about to begin our six month adventure in Europe and, since we have a little time during our layover in NYC, I thought I would take a few minutes to write about our packing difficulties and likely overestimation.

Spending six months on the road is a daunting thing for which to pack and plan. Lisa has been a trooper in the trip planning department but the planning of the packing itself has been a study in the alternation between excess and oversimplification. I have been trying to account for not only the standard day-to-day living, but for the hiking, snorkeling, amateur filmmaking, and serious photographic equipment that should be brought to avoid the sentiment expressed in the title, regret for not having brought the one piece of kit that would have enabled a certain activity.

As a result, I’m sure we have packed too much stuff. For a six month trip, a large suitcase and a backpack each seems reasonable, until you consider the nearly two-hundred pounds they collectively weigh. But as a rule I’m the guy who likes to be prepared and hates to regret not bringing something that would be hard or expensive to purchase at the destination. I usually err on the side of “yeah, I’ve got several of those just in case”. Especially when we decided to do a eurocar purchase/buy-back. Having a car encourages all manner of evil overpacking.

That said, even the relatively large amount we have was an exercise in essential gear only discipline that can only be a good for me. Or, perhaps, I’ll be writing soon to complain about something I left behind. Time will tell.

As we sit here in the airport waiting, after a miserable move and a frantic week of final preparations, I’m just glad to have made the go/no-go decisions and have them behind me. I think we have the right stuff, but maybe too much of it. I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that the gear actually just gets in the way. There’s a purity to backpacking travel. The simplicity helps you focus in the place.

We are not backpacking. Perhaps we will be by the time we return.