Note: I never give a caveat in these letters. This time I will, given the subject
matter. If you, or a loved one, are
facing a serious or terminal condition, you may not want to read this simply
because it is about things we want to accomplish before we die.
I started off wanting to write a humorous piece about bucket
lists. The funny thing about wanting to
be funny is that it is really really hard to commit premeditated humor. It is even harder when the topic at hand is
basically not funny. I set out to mock
Bucket Lists and make fun of them.
Somewhere during the second draft, I realized that while in the hands of
a deft humorist this could be scathingly funny.
I had to admit that in my hands, in whatever mood I have been in while
writing this, I have to make it a tad more serious than I had originally
wanted.
In the 2007 movie, The
Bucket List, Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman play two cancer patients
that take their leave from the hospital to go on a road trip with a list of
things to see and do before they die.
Ever since then I have been hearing people talking about having done
this or that and saying that crossed that off their bucket list.
We all have hopes and aspirations. We accomplish some and others are out of reach
or never happen. Often times for the
things that have not happened, we have to face a certain reality at some
point. That reality is that we might not
have the time, money, or talent to actually accomplish a particular goal or set
of goals. Yet, our hopes and aspirations
do not seem aware of our age or economics.
We may have less big dream goals as we age, but those we have or
continue to hold on to are as strong and dear to us as when we were in our
teens.
I do not like the term Bucket List. For some reason it rubs me the wrong
way. It sounds morbid and
contrived. It must come from a list of
things that we would like to accomplish before we "kick the bucket."
Kick the bucket?
What does that mean? A short
internet search provided two theories both of which bring rather harsh images
to a rather benign slangy phrase:
- In days of yore,
people that were to hung often stood on an inverted bucket. With the noose in place, the bucket was
kicked to finish the deed.
- Also in days of yore, the word bucket also referred to a wooden frame from which animals were hung by their feet for slaughter which the animals would kick while being slaughtered.
Like anyone else I have a list of things I would love to
do. The list includes career and
lifestyle things I would love to accomplish.
There are places I would love to visit.
There are books I want to read.
There are things I would like to experience. I have not bothered to write these things
down. As I have not written them down, I
have not prioritized these things.
Furthermore, the list is always changing with my changing
mood and insights into life.
When I was in grade school, during the first manned flights
into space, I really truly wanted to be an astronaut. It was exciting. It was adventurous. I was very much interested in it. I followed each launch. I sent a letter to NASA to get materials on
the program. They sent me bios of the
astronauts and pamphlets on the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs. I read about rocketry and history of rocketry. I was locked in and committed. I was going to do this!
In my readings, I learned about the very the rigorous
training astronauts had to go through. I
learned about the various exercises that mimic the forces and rocky nature of
both the launch and re-entry. I then
realized that maybe this was not for me.
In those days, I would get car sick on long trips. I got nauseous on roller coasters. As a result, I dropped being an astronaut off
of my list. The fascination did not
stop. I just changed my priority and
wanted to learn about engineering and physics.
Over time that interest intensified and became even more abstract. I ended up majoring in mathematics an
interest which I still have today.
This month, l learned that Richard Branson is about a year
away from providing a flight into space for those that can afford the $200,000
ticket. Money aside, I really have no
interest at this point. But, this
certainly would be something one could add to Bucket List.
Also, when I was younger, there was a time when I really
wanted to be a concert violinist.
Achieving that goal, would have required total focus and
dedication. Even with total dedication
and focus, the probability of achieving that lofty ambition would have been
low. Frankly, I just had too many
interests, like being an astronaut, and thus could not really take on anything
that required total focus and dedication.
So, again my list changed at least in terms of priorities.
These kinds of aspirations are not really what people think
about when they talk about their bucket list.
The line items on Bucket Lists are activities that do not require a
large investment of time to acquire a specific set of skills and
competencies. When most people talk
about bucket lists, they are talking about taking a trip to see an important
site or place such as the Grand Canyon or the Eiffel Tower. Others want to do things like go to a fantasy
baseball camp of their favorite team.
Some of us want to jump out of an airplane or walk the Appalachian
Trail.
I will do what I sometimes do in these letters and take a
simple concept like this notion of a Bucket List and make it unnecessarily
complicated. In this spirit take this
one "bucket" and make three.
Let's call them:
- Bucket
List: This is the list as we
have been taking about it thus far. It is the list of things and places people
either want to experience or visit before they depart this life.
- Waste
Bucket List: The items on this list are
things, people, and places that I was once interested in but have little
interest in now or moving forward. Of
course, this list may be populated with things that I did not have the time,
aptitude, or drive to accomplish e.g. learning Japanese. It could also apply to thing I once I had
intense interest in but I have almost no or low interest in now. Here I am talking about things like stamp
collecting, baseball, and Beethoven.
- Chuck-it List: This is the list that I want people to stop bothering me about. The items on this list are clearly delineated in two previous blog postings STFU and Curmudgeon or Just a Crumb. Basically, with each passing year I have less and less patience for hearing anybodies advice on how I should think, vote, pray, work, and eat. So, for me, this list is mostly populated with people I don't need to be around and mingling with. I was going to call it the F*#k-It List. But as my wife, daughter, and mother read these letters, I thought Chuck-It might be more appropriate.
Do I have a Bucket List?
I guess I do but it is not definitive.
Things come and go off of the list depending on what I have been
thinking which in turn is dependent on what I might have read or recently
watched on TV. It is constantly changing. As of this writing, there are only two places
that stands out in my head that I feel I would like to see. One is the Grand Canyon and the other is to
visit the towns and villages in occupied Western Armenia that my grandparents
were born. But it is not pressing. I am ambivalent about The Great Wall of
China, Mardi Gras, The Leaning Tower of Pisa, The Sistine Chapel, and any of
the six claims of The World's Largest Frying Pan (why?). Other than that there is nothing I can really
think of. No place is calling out to
me.
As for activities, I would like to ride a century (a one
hundred mile bike ride in one day). This
I definitely want to do. There are so
many books I haven't read and there, of course, are the books I haven't written
yet. There are places I want to go and
see. Heck, there are even places I think
I would like to live and experience as a resident and not a tourist. But,
nothing is on any kind of serious list.
If they happen cool. If they
don’t that is OK too.
We have all known people who plan the major events of their
lives and then make the plans happen.
This is a small minority of people.
They know they want to be a doctor, attorney, business owner, or
whatever and they go out and do it. They
have a list of places that want to either live in or visit. They make it happen. They want to do this or that and they make it
all happen. It is impressive but
something only a select and focused few can achieve.
For most of the rest of us make it up as we go. We act more randomly or as things randomly
happen to us. We have notions more than
goals. If Plan A doesn't pan out, it
morphs into Plan B or Plan C. That is
OK. It works. This either due to indecisiveness, lack of
focus, and an element of randomness that cannot be ignored. Getting ill or winning the lottery is
certainly random and would definitely have an impact on ones plans.
Randomness can be more subtle. For example, let’s think of choosing courses
a particular semester. A course critical
to Plan A is closed or otherwise not available.
You choose and elective course to fill some other requirement. You fall in love with new subject and
voila... You are suddenly operating on Plan B.
In another case, you get recruited for a job in a new city that you
never ever considered living in. You
take the job, fall in love with the new city, meet the love of your life there,
and embrace Plan C which was never premeditated.
That is the way my career and where I live has
evolved. I had plans but circumstances
provided opportunities to change the plans.
Almost everything has had an element of randomness to it. Within the randomness, it was and is up to me
to choose how to react or not react.
Does randomness provide an opportunity or a distraction? I have gotten to the point where I appreciate
the randomness. I look for the
randomness and make decisions as I go.
That is a good thing for me. I
realize it is not a good mode for everyone.
The other thing that bugs me about the concept of Bucket
List is the very idea of death. Everyone
has to die. Some of us are in a race
against that inevitability. Some of us
would rather live like we will live forever.
Some of us know that the end is closer and more certain. All three of the lists become more
important. Things are then in a
different light and with very different priorities. It was clear to the Jack Nicholson and Morgan
Freeman characters in the movie exactly how they wanted to spend their precious
time.
Often, we are not confronted with having to make such
decisions until the time left is preciously and clearly finite. Hopefully when we are, we still have the
ability to act on, fund, and travel to whatever is in our Bucket Lists. The acts and activities that are most
fulfilling might just be appreciating friends and family.
Not everyone has the funds to fulfill a bucket list full of
travel to exotic places. Let's face it
people with little time and full Bucket lists are probably not up to the travel
and their cash is all tied up in caring for themselves. Everyone, however, can afford both the
Chuck-it and Waste lists. They do not
cost a thing. They can be wonderfully
delicious lists to add to. Truth be
told, I spend more time populating these lists than my actual Bucket List. The older I get there are things that I
definitely do not care to be bothered with or about. What are on those lists? That is for each of us to decide. If you want to know mine, read the two blog
postings noted above.
I wondered if anyone else has shared their Bucket Lists on
the internet. There is only one way to
find out, so, I googled “example of bucket lists.” The first on the list took me to a website of
one Danny Dover. He has decided that it
is inane for one to make a list only when they are ill and infirm. So, he developed the idea of a Life
List: things he wanted to do in his
life. In his own words, www.lifelisted.com/life-list, are what he has set out to do:
A life list
is a list of goals you are fully committed to accomplishing before a specific
date while you are living. This is different from a bucket list which is a list
of things you would like to do before dying. Who wants to wait until they are
dying to start living? Not me!
For my list,
I have two rules:
- The entire list must be completed by May 25th, 2017
- I can not add or remove any item from the list
It is as
simple as that!
His list, on the same website, is incredible and he
certainly seems on track to accomplish this list by the deadline he set.
There are other wondrous places on the internet that will
help you craft your Bucket List. There is a blog, Daring to Live Fully, has a
posting: 525+ Ideas For Your Bucket List
- http://daringtolivefully.com/bucket-list-ideas. The other sites
all offer the same basic thing: suggestions
of items for your Bucket List.
It does not seem to me that it is really your list of
things you want to do if you compiled it by picking and choosing from someone
else list of suggestions. One should be
able to compile their own.
So, after all of this, what is my bucket list? The truth is that most of my goals and wants
are still the objectives of a person with career and lifestyle
aspirations. I want:
- To be decent person and a good husband, Dad, son, brother, uncle, and friend to the people that I hold dear.
- To be a lean, well dressed, articulate, smart consultant, professor, musician, and writer.
- My consulting business to grow and thrive. Beyond management consulting, I would love it to have components professional writing (publishing books), professional speaking, and teaching.
- To continue to perform Armenian music for as long as possible and compose my own songs.
These are all easy to say and harder to do. As easy as these are to write, they are tough
for me to read for some reason (probably another blog). Yet, as bucket lists go, this is a list that
is much more appealing to me than going to see the Grand Canyon as memorable as
that would be.
Please leave comments.
I would love to see how others view the concept of Bucket Lists and the
items on their lists.