Affiliate Cannonball Run!!!!!!!!!
I definitely have a bullrun on my bucket list.

My current laptop wallpaper for motivation:
http://myredmamba.com/pics/gt-wallpaper.jpg
Affiliate Cannonball Run!!!!!!!!!
Good for you!
My current motivation is a car, I drag race on the weekends so I'm not really going for the luxury aspect as I am a 10 second car.
What I have:
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I <3 Camaros. My first car was an 89 z28 5.7 Posi Rear end. I miss that thing :/
Good thread. I need to get back up to Chicago at some point soon for a visit (live in FL too). Been way too long.
PS> The Bears are going to be awesome this year. Fuck what the mainstream sports media says.
Hey dude, nice post, I really enjoyed your story. I'll try to follow suit --
Exactly two years ago, I was a sophomore in college, and working over the summer at my second internship at Microsoft. I was in Seattle for the summer, which was a blast, a beautiful city lush with plants and fair weather (in the summer, mind you) and a nice getaway from my life and youth in Michigan. I was 20 and making $6700/mo and I was on track to graduate college, doing one more internship the next summer, and start a steady job at $86,000 at Microsoft all in the next two years.
Michigan, for those unacquainted, sucks. It's grey, wet and cold all the time. We used to joke that the only two seasons were "Winter and the fourth of July". When it's wet and cold all the time, and you're a introspective quiet geek like I was, life gets depressing and even simple tasks like walking up the street to McDonalds seem too tough and time consuming to do (putting on snow gear, and all), so half the time I just wouldn't eat. This isn't just my experience, but what every Michigan emigrant I know says as well. I had to get out of Michigan, and I was sick of paying for college loans when I didn't even go to class. I didn't go to class because I thought I knew everything -- which is silly -- but instead of using the time I saved for anything constructive, I partied lots, like you're supposed to in college. I don't regret this one bit, but I knew that my options were to either a) stay in Michigan for 2 years and get the Microsoft job, or b) leave immediately.
I asked my recruiter if I could quit school and still get the job. She said, approx, "We will not hire you if you don't finish college. We have this policy so that interns won't drop out to get a fulltime job and miss out on a college education." Transferring wasn't an option, because I didn't go to class and my grades were shit.
I'd wanted to go to Burning Man since I was 11. Something about it screamed "This is where you will find meaning and reason" to my impressionable middle school brain. For 7 years, I'd "planned" and hoped and asked my mom to take me, but obviously that was unrealistic because my mom is disabled and a ordained minister, and I hadn't really "planned" anything, I'd just fantasized. I thought that was planning, then. When I was 18 and could go on my own, I put it off because it was the first week of my first year of college, and I didn't want to miss classes. The next year, I used the same excuse. And finally, there I was, sitting at the table with my Microsoft recruiter telling me that the only way I'd ever get that job would be to spend 2 more years in Michigan.
"Ok." I said, and thought for just a minute. "At the end of this internship, instead of going home, I'm going to San Francisco for 2 weeks to buy supplies. I'm going to Burning Man, and when I get home, I'm going to drop out of school and move to California."
And that's exactly what I did.
When I got to the event, that summer, I spent all week wondering at the amazing world around me, and how I'd gotten myself there by my own free will, and a damned lot of hard work. I dosed on the last night, when the man burned, and had some incredible revelations about the kinds of people I want to surround myself with, and human nature in general. I largely attribute this to be the day I lost the "geeky awkward nerd" weight I used to carry on my shoulders. Then I laid and stared at stars, and I won't ever forget what I saw -- I saw the culmination of everything I'd been feeling all week, that I have a tremendous blessing to have so many resources and talent available to me, that I can build things most other people can't, and out of nothing but electrons, and that if I want something bad enough, and act on it, I will achieve whatever I want to in life. And then, I decided that what I really want from life is to go back to that festival for one week every year, and spend the other 51 weeks busting my ass so I can take as much of my creation and art out to the desert as I can, to share with others and to set it all on fire at the end of the week.
Dropped out of school, moved to San Diego, worked at a4d and then bevo, and here I am now, heading out to the desert for my third year in a short six weeks.![]()
. I will OWN a fucking McDonalds before I work at one.
.
But after years I want to thank that recruiter who has never called me, because I have started my greatest life and I earn in a single day what he earns in months, and my "1 day" satisfaction is worth his whole career.
So true, my best lessons and turns have come from my greatest rejections.
Guess I have several moments. Most recent is the most depressing and brought me to tears a few times.
I work for the government. It sucks in ways words can't decribe. Imagine staring at a wall for 8 hours a day, knowing your job is just a joke to make people feel good. I was tested at a young age because my parents wanted to know why I acted out in school and got poor grades. Not to toot my own horn, but when I was tested at 13 years old, I was told to have an IQ of 138 and that school just wasn't challenging enough so I didn't take interest in it and thus the reason for my poor grades. I tell you this because I am literally losing my mind doing a job that requires zero thought process. I've been doing it for 6 years now. I have no problems to solve. No critical thinking. Nothing that requires the use of my mind.
Now I worked with this guy who used to tell me that I was way too smart to be doing this shit. That I'm meant for better things. Him and I would talk all the time about politics, religion, economics, etc. He was much older than me, about 55ish. He hated his job with just as much passion as I did. His wife recently divorced him, took a goo majority of his life savings. He worked all his life to give his kids and wife everything they needed to have a good life, sacrificing time for himself. But, finally, he had things lined up to retire. Between his years in federal service, military pension, and social security, he was going to be able to retire with decent amount of money which would allow him to finally start living his life.
As his retirement day approached, I saw a new man start to form. He was excited, he had a new outlook on life. He would talk about all the things he was going to do, all the things he wanted to do but never could because he was too busy slaving away for his cheating wife and kids who took him for granted. He talked about the travel plans he had, the boat he was about to buy, all sorts of great stuff. The day he retired seemed like the happiest day of his life, at his party he pulled me aside and talked to me for a good 20 minutes. He made me promise him that I wasn't going to live the life he did, that I was going to make something of myself and do it early enough in life that I would enjoy my life now, instead of following the slave, save, retire path he did. I made him that promise.
Then the tragic part. 5 weeks into his retirement he was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. It came out of nowhere and fast. Doctors gave him no more than 6 months, he became weak rapidly, bound to a hospital bed 2 weeks after the diagnosis. He was dead 3 weeks later. The last time I was I saw him was in the hospital, his mind was going but he remembered that promise I made him. He took my hand, looked me dead in the eyes, and said "You do whatever you have to do to keep that promise, but you fucking keep it!" He died a week after that.
That was my defining moment. Looking into a dying mans eyes, a man who lived the kind of life I fear the most, and promising him that I will make something of myself and enjoy life while I can. I miss you Anthony Logan, you were one of the greatest men I had the pleasure of knowing. R.I.P. good sir. I will keep that promise, somehow.
Guess I have several moments. Most recent is the most depressing and brought me to tears a few times.
I work for the government. It sucks in ways words can't decribe. Imagine staring at a wall for 8 hours a day, knowing your job is just a joke to make people feel good. I was tested at a young age because my parents wanted to know why I acted out in school and got poor grades. Not to toot my own horn, but when I was tested at 13 years old, I was told to have an IQ of 138 and that school just wasn't challenging enough so I didn't take interest in it and thus the reason for my poor grades. I tell you this because I am literally losing my mind doing a job that requires zero thought process. I've been doing it for 6 years now. I have no problems to solve. No critical thinking. Nothing that requires the use of my mind.
Now I worked with this guy who used to tell me that I was way too smart to be doing this shit. That I'm meant for better things. Him and I would talk all the time about politics, religion, economics, etc. He was much older than me, about 55ish. He hated his job with just as much passion as I did. His wife recently divorced him, took a goo majority of his life savings. He worked all his life to give his kids and wife everything they needed to have a good life, sacrificing time for himself. But, finally, he had things lined up to retire. Between his years in federal service, military pension, and social security, he was going to be able to retire with decent amount of money which would allow him to finally start living his life.
As his retirement day approached, I saw a new man start to form. He was excited, he had a new outlook on life. He would talk about all the things he was going to do, all the things he wanted to do but never could because he was too busy slaving away for his cheating wife and kids who took him for granted. He talked about the travel plans he had, the boat he was about to buy, all sorts of great stuff. The day he retired seemed like the happiest day of his life, at his party he pulled me aside and talked to me for a good 20 minutes. He made me promise him that I wasn't going to live the life he did, that I was going to make something of myself and do it early enough in life that I would enjoy my life now, instead of following the slave, save, retire path he did. I made him that promise.
Then the tragic part. 5 weeks into his retirement he was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. It came out of nowhere and fast. Doctors gave him no more than 6 months, he became weak rapidly, bound to a hospital bed 2 weeks after the diagnosis. He was dead 3 weeks later. The last time I was I saw him was in the hospital, his mind was going but he remembered that promise I made him. He took my hand, looked me dead in the eyes, and said "You do whatever you have to do to keep that promise, but you fucking keep it!" He died a week after that.
That was my defining moment. Looking into a dying mans eyes, a man who lived the kind of life I fear the most, and promising him that I will make something of myself and enjoy life while I can. I miss you Anthony Logan, you were one of the greatest men I had the pleasure of knowing. R.I.P. good sir. I will keep that promise, somehow.
+REP
Your friends story made me remember the novel by Yates, Revolutionary Road. That life is the scariest thing in the world to me.