The Journal of the Wandering Engineer

The Die With Zero Cheat Code Part 1

 

PS The audiobook version of my book Deep Response is now up on Audible/Amazon. As of Friday it’s something like 50% because of inscrutable Amazon-algorithm reasons. Non-Amazon option coming soon.


Several months ago Sarah asked me if I thought about mortality much, and what I thought about Bill Perkin’s book Die With Zero (DWZ).

I do think about mortality much, as it happens, and I used her question as an excuse to read DWZ. Turns out I do have thoughts about it. Here’s part 1, an overview.

The DWZ Claims:

  • To be for people with surplus wealth. He comes right out and says if you're scraping to get by, the book is of little value to you. He is specifically targeting oversavers - people who work most of their lives and die with large fortunes that they spent very little of.

  • The purpose of life is to have positive/fulfilling/rich/rewarding/etc experiences.

  • Money is the primary way to access experiences.

  • (Implicit, not stated: the primary purpose of work/a job is to generate money)

  • Money left unspent when you die represents un-lived experiences - it represents a waste of labor.

  • The primary forms of wealth are time, money, and health.

  • As you age, your access to certain kinds of experiences will diminish and even close. (For example, you cannot have a young-20-somethng European hostel-backpacking experience if you are a 60yo with a bad back and bougie tastes).

The DWZ advice, in oversimplified list form, is to:

  • Organize your desired experiences per decade, so you don't lose access to experiences as your age increases/health declines.

  • Get your financial affairs in order so that your baseline needs are met,

  • Execute bequeathments before you die, not after.

  • Allocate your surplus wealth to your desired-experience list with the aim to spend approximately all of it by the time you are likely to die.

My claims in response to DWZ:

  • If everyone followed the DWZ advice we would burn the planet up even faster than we already are: from a resource stewardship perspective his advice is ecocidal. I state this as a technical/thermodynamic opinion, not a moral one. GDP is a measure of economic consumption and is tightly correlated to energy and resource usage, of which we're already at 1.7x times the global sustainable limit. This is a matter of math, not sin, on the first order. I leave second-order ‘moral’ claims to others.

  • The fundamental premise of DWZ assumes that The Way to get a good life is to buy it - to convert money into experiences. DWZ is ideologically consumer-core.

  • The right cheat code unlocks for a much higher percentage of the population the high-fulfillment life that DWZ is attempting to point at from within the ideological constraints of consumerism. No surplus wealth required, just time and attention.

  • Bonus: with the DWZ Cheat Code not only is high-fulfillment unlocked for most humans, we don't have to trash the planet to do it.

I’ll expand my thoughts on Die with Zero in Part II.


Practically Speaking

I’m a huge fan of wheat and rye. I get the stuff in 25lb sacks for north of 1,000kcal/$ - organic, grown in the US, and packed with nutrients. I make hearty pancakes and flatbread with it.

The trick is, I have to mill it. I had access to a mill at Quail Haven (I’ve never known my mom to be without a grain mill) but now that I’m up in Alaska I needed my own mill.

Grain mills got popular after the pandemic and prices rose. A used Whispermill goes for $300 minimum on ebay.

I found a Whispermill for $167 on ebay - the catch being that it was just the mill, without the filter-bucket that the milled flour ejects into. It’s sort of an important component, but I figured I could rig something up. Behold:

A stick of PEX pipe, a re-purposed protein powder jug, some register filter pads, and five minutes with a drill bit later, and I’m in wheat-milling business again.


Fatbikes are Made for Alaska

I’m back in Alaska, just outside of Fairbanks.

I got a fatbike (a 2011 Salsa Mukluk) and am hustling to be prepared to do a bikepack trip with some friends in the White Mountains in a week.

Sunrise ride

11F (-12C). Balmy for this time of year.

 

Imagine

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