Exile Lifestyle
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Exile Lifestyle is the blog of author, entrepreneur, and full-time traveler, Colin Wright. Colin Wright spends most of his time learning, making things hope will be of value, and striving to grow as a person in terms of physical and mental health, knowledge, resiliency, and overall capability.
Exile Lifestyle
1M ago
I probably use my laptop, a 2021 MacBook Pro, more than any other tool I own. It enables and amplifies my efforts in countless ways, and as a consequence I consider the few thousands dollars I paid for it to be money well-spent.
I don’t drive my car very often—I only really use it for roadtrips. But it doesn’t require much upkeep, cost me a relative pittance to acquire (as cars go), and makes those overland jaunts to far-flung locales feasible, as otherwise I’d have to spend a fortune on rental cars to get where mass-transit options won’t take me; so I put my little 2007 Prius in the “money we ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
1M ago
Some of the most incredible creative output of the past ten years (and arguably before that, too) has been created in support of video games and similar cultural artifacts; if you ever need aesthetic inspiration, google around for concept art, soundtrack music, and/or play a game like Disco Elysium (the writing and voice acting in this game!), and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
Many of us have trouble meeting up with friends (and acquaintances who might become friends) as often as we would prefer. Something I find helps with this is planning social situations so they’re either u ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
1M ago
It’s impossible to know what a future version of ourselves will want, need, and prioritize. But we make assumptions about our future selves (and the world they occupy) all the time.
Unfortunately, many of these assumptions are knee-jerk and superficial, predicated on our sense of things, today, or based on an illusory, optimistic, not terribly realistic version of who we kinda’, sorta’ believe we could be at some point.
(There’s an underlying presumption baked into a lot of these predictions that maybe if we buy this widget / take this trip / invest in these shoes, that will help make us that ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
8M ago
Some creative work requires the application of quick, definitive force if you want to take what’s in your head, commit it to a distributable medium, and get it out the door in a shape that’s true to what you pictured in your mind.
Other creative works, though, necessitate the slow, consistent application of effort and energy over time if you want to avoid converting desirable matter into unpalatable char.
The distinction between these categories of work is partially down to the ingredients used (some conceptions are more suitable for extended-duration effort, while others are ideally served es ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
8M ago
I decided at the last second to do away with my usual newsletter format for this final newsletter of 2023 (I’m taking next week off to work on my new book, avoid the news, and eat unhealthy volumes of green bean casserole), and to drop a few final thoughts on my way out the (calendar-year) door, instead.
I unintentionally stopped posting things on Instagram back in early October, and from there just kept forgetting that the network even existed. And I’d love to say it was a liberating, lovely experience, but the truth is I truly just didn’t even think about it, except to periodically realize ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
8M ago
The calendar provides us with all sorts of baked-in milestone moments, and though we don’t require such moments (holidays, birthdays, etc) to pause, assess, try new things, and make changes to how we live our lives (based on those assessments and experiments), it certainly doesn’t hurt to have these latent, potential-laden periods sprinkled throughout the year, ready to be leveraged for whatever purposes we choose.
I’m personally trying something new in these final, waning days of 2023: I’m taking a whole week off, intending to spend that time in calm, quiet reflection, and to work on the new ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
11M ago
It’s okay to not have an opinion about things.
It can be awkward, though, and sometimes people will find it offensive if they share their opinion and you fail to confirm the rightness of their perspective, or if you decline to present your own doctrinal counter-belief that they can then push back against.
That awkwardness is partly the consequence of the desire many of us feel to categorize the world around us: if you don’t share your opinion about the talking point of the day, how will I know which team you’re on, and thus, whether you’re friend or foe?
But it’s also (increasingly) the conseq ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
11M ago
When you consume alcohol, there’s a good chance your prime goal is not to consume alcohol: you’re looking to socialize, you’re interested in feeling altered, you’re maybe just parched and want something to drink.
The same is true of many activities we engage in regularly; the act itself may be just one possible means of achieving an actual, deeper goal.
In such cases, there may be other, superior (for our purposes) means of accomplishing the same outcomes: you could pop around a party with a sparkling water in your hand instead of a beer, for instance, or take mushrooms (or meditate, or work o ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
11M ago
Years ago, I dated an Icelandic woman who—among many other accolades—was an enthusiastic linguist.
She spoke a handful of languages, and was always endeavoring to further her grasp of them. Which in the context of our relationship often meant her asking me about English words and meanings.
She already spoke English incredibly well, and when she asked about this subject she went beyond simple questions, tugging at the threads of a term or concept until she’d unspooled every last detail about it.
That meant this process was generally fairly effortful for me, but also interesting and growth-induc ..read more
Exile Lifestyle
1y ago
The news can be stressful, anxiety-inducing, tribalism-reinforcing, and littered with misleading, misinformed, heavily biased takes.
There are things we can do to make our news-consumption habits more productive, including (for instance) avoiding most TV news, avoiding editorial/opinion content, and sticking with journalistic entities with the right economic incentives (and reputations for generally non-polemical coverage) like Reuters and The Associated Press.
Exposure to solid news coverage is only one component of the world-understanding equation, though: it’s great to be plu ..read more