An exchange of ideas for an effective, fair and fully functioning democratic

Freedom equals social responsibility plus individual accountability. Good government requires nothing more than these two factors, yet we democratic nations around the world neglect one or the other, in favour of a focus on the remaining ingredient. Capitalistic approaches shun social responsibility, preferring, instead, to lean on free markets to drive growth and success. Socialist approaches ignore the merits of individual accountability as a driving force in shaping good governance. Look to the American system to see the dynamics of the former ideology in play, or to much of the European continent to observe the emphasis on the latter concept. Both experience monumental failures and significant successes. This blog intends to explore alternative ideas and mechanisms to the either/or approach to freedom. We eagerly anticipate feedback, guest blogger articles, comments and ideas from you, the reader. Please take the time to register, as well, and, hopefully, we can not only share ideas, but work together to implement change!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Why You Shouldn't Follow Recipes -- In Life Or In Cooking


For the first time in more than four years, my wife and I enjoyed a loaf of homemade bread that was made precisely as the recipe directed.  It is not that we have not had homemade bread in that long.  Heck, we make bread two or three times a week!  It is just that we have not followed a recipe in that long.
Janice often asks me if I could make this dish or that meal again, and I flatly tell her “No.”  Again, I am not being obstructionist, or contrary.  Since I never follow recipes, and spend my meal preparation time “imagining” the spices and complements that I should add to an otherwise straightforward meal, I can never recall precisely what I put in to each construction. Following recipes is almost a stressful task for me.
We – all of us – live our lives within defined boundaries, as is expected of us.  There are rules, social niceties, protocols and not-so-nuanced recommendations as to how we should live. Break them.
Rules, regulations and laws are essential to good, peaceful society.  But rules should be nothing more than common sense.  We don’t steal, we don’t commit murder, we respect each other.  We do not need the Bible’s ten commandments, the Qu’ran, the Torah or any holy books to let us know that we need to respect the rights of others, the physical wellbeing of others and the emotional security of others.  Beyond that, we ought to demand the freedom to be ourselves, and to push our own boundaries. 
There are vociferous, often venomous debates ongoing at all times, regarding what we perceive as freedoms.  We have the right to carry loaded guns anywhere we want.  But what does that do to the emotional wellbeing of those around us?  Everyone has the right to religious freedom, apparently only so long as it does not disagree with our chosen religion.  We need to be free of government intervention, except when we need a new road built, snow cleared, hurricane relief or protection from criminals.  People have the right to affordable education and health care, but only defined by our standards, and not theirs.  Who is right in these great debates? No one.  And everyone. 
We need to be able to choose our path, without intervention or coercion, so long as we do not infringe upon other’s abilities to choose.
And this returns me to my cooking recipes, or lack thereof.
Fifty years ago, unless I was a chef,  I would have been ostracized for admitting that I like cooking.  I also like the symphony and classical music.  Forty years ago, I would have been beaten severely for admitting that, since it must have meant that I was gay.  I think that I have a duty to help those in need when I can, and that government (me and you), too, has a responsibility to care for those who cannot take care of themselves.  Thirty years ago, during the emergence of the yuppie era, I would have been shouted down for being a radical liberal or socialist. I live a very minimal lifestyle, as it is defined by physical possessions.  Twenty years ago, my sanity would have been questioned, for eschewing the great American dream.  A while ago, I gave up my addiction to cable television and technological gadgets, except for essentials (for me) like a computer. Just over a decade ago,  I would have been a heretic, threatening to destroy the foundations of the modern world.  Yet, I think that everyone should be allowed to choose to cook, enjoy their own musical preferences, give or not give to others, own huge gas-guzzling vehicles, or text till their fingers bleed.  So long as it does not harm others.  Live your life the best way you know, not the best way that others know for you!
Cook your life using your own ingredients, and tantalize your own emotional, physical and emotional taste buds.
Since I learned that what others think does not matter, or, at worst, is a reflection of their own biases, life has been a constant meal made with no recipe.  I built and moved to a yurt; a decision jointly embraced by my spouse and myself.  I have started a housing project for low income earners, and found a dozen like-minded people to work with me.  We recently got lost in Ocho Rios, being led into the bowels of the old town by a local, not knowing if we would be able to find our way out safely.  I recently fell off a roof, because I wasn’t taking proper safety precautions, and learned that I am still, at sixty-one, young enough to bounce! At Christmas, I received my customary, and treasured gifts from my grandchildren: rocks.  It is an old tradition that I started with my kids, hearkening back to Charlie Brown’s Hallowe’en special and the practice of giving coal or potatoes to bad children in England.  This month, all of my family will have our annual barbeque, in February, in Manitoba, Canada, where the normal temperature is minus 25-30 for that period.  It is our way of thumbing our noses at winter and tweaking the New Year by telling it that we will not conform.  We have been doing this since 1988. We don’t care what others think.  We are embracing life.
The reason I don’t use recipes is because my tastes are not the same as yours, and yours are not the same as your neighbours, and so on.  Recipes are guidelines.  They are little building blocks.  Just because you have square building blocks does not mean that you can not build a round house with them! Start your innovative life by recognizing that there are good recipes for good reasons: because a lot of people like them.  Then add or subtract from your recipe for life the things that you do not like and the things that you love. 
And, occasionally, go back and conform to a proven set of rules, a conventional recipe.  Being normal occasionally can be an enlightening experience, too.  Do not fear normal.  Just don’t force yourself to adhere to it, if you want to personalize and get the most out of your life.
Now, can I interest you in my favourite recipe?

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