This morning at work I had a conversation with a co-worker who just came back from a 1 week $5,000.00 vacation to Cancun in Mexico, her second vacation to Mexico in 2011.
She was talking about how she and her husband were saving for several years to buy a house. They've recently been looking and she gave me a link to the house they were interested in buying:
http://www.century21.ca/Property/MB/R3Y ... _Drive/133A $500,000 house, where it took them several years just to save for the down payment. (This with 2 upper middle class incomes coming in). The house is the classic McMansion with no land, no future, 2 cars required, high consumption madness.
She said to me "Isn't this a house you'd like to own"! My reply stunned her. I said I would much prefer to live very modestly, having a minor carbon footprint and savings in the bank; than spending the rest of my life in debt servitude to pay off a mortgage I can't really afford. Which is true, because I work at the same company she does and I have a similar job, prospects, and income to hers.
For the balance of the day she looked at me like I'm some sort of eco-nut who doesn't fit in with 'her' version of what society should look like. Unfortunately, she represents both the traditional and majority view of how the world operates.
I'm a severe Asthmatic, and my wife is an insulin dependent diabetic. When pharmaceuticals are no longer available, were both gone with them. I've thought of becoming sustainable, buying land, growing my own food- but we're in our forties, when modern civilization is gone we're toast.
My focus is on the kids. I'm trying to convince my teenage daughter to go into something practical, with real-world value, such as engineering. My youngest, although handicapped, we will encourage to adopt a sustainable community based lifestyle, for once were gone.
In the meanwhile, we're the odd couple out, Preferring a modest lifestyle over debt servitude and overconsumption.