Escape Clause

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Image CC0 by Stefan Kunze
Image CC0 by Stefan Kunze

Even while the internet and its emerging subcultures continue to hint at newer, smarter modes of working and living, you may still be told it’s vain to insist on a station more fulfilling than a permanent stall in a well-reputed grid. According to my critics, even if you find your standard weekday boring, painful or unfulfilling, you ought to embrace it, simply because a third-world coal miner would kill for your benefits package. When so many have so little, attempting to escape a situation in which you can reliably feed yourself and fund a retirement could only be an act of the utmost ingratitude.

A minority of us believe the opposite is true — that escaping from an unfulfilling mainstream lifestyle isn’t a moral failing, but rather a moral imperative. It’s precisely because we have all the necessary freedoms at our fingertips (and because others don’t) that spending our lives in the stable isn’t just foolish, but wrong. To remain, voluntarily, in a life where your talents are wasted and your weekdays are obstacles is to be humble in all the wrong ways.David Cain

Via FREELANCER FILES: PEOPLE ARE FUNNY ABOUT MONEY[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

Author: Khürt Williams

A human who works in information security and enjoys photography, Formula 1 and craft ale.