VOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS62.52%
Net Worth
0.377USD
STEEM
0.000STEEM
SBD
0.044SBD
Own SP
6.603SP
Detailed Balance
| STEEM | ||
| balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| market_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| reward_steem_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| STEEM POWER | ||
| Own SP | 6.603SP | SP |
| Delegated Out | 0.000SP | SP |
| Delegation In | 0.000SP | SP |
| Effective Power | 6.603SP | SP |
| Reward SP (pending) | 0.000SP | SP |
| SBD | ||
| sbd_balance | 0.044SBD | SBD |
| sbd_conversions | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| sbd_market_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| reward_sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
{
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "10751.749875 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"sbd_balance": "0.044 SBD",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"conversions": []
}Account Info
| name | happyruss |
| id | 68423 |
| rank | 184,484 |
| reputation | 3265224174 |
| created | 2016-08-17T19:37:21 |
| recovery_account | steem |
| proxy | None |
| post_count | 2 |
| comment_count | 0 |
| lifetime_vote_count | 0 |
| witnesses_voted_for | 0 |
| last_post | 2016-08-20T18:32:54 |
| last_root_post | 2016-08-20T18:32:54 |
| last_vote_time | 2016-08-20T18:32:54 |
| proxied_vsf_votes | 0, 0, 0, 0 |
| can_vote | 1 |
| voting_power | 9,949 |
| delayed_votes | 0 |
| balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| sbd_balance | 0.044 SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000 SBD |
| vesting_shares | 10751.749875 VESTS |
| delegated_vesting_shares | 0.000000 VESTS |
| received_vesting_shares | 0.000000 VESTS |
| reward_vesting_balance | 0.000000 VESTS |
| vesting_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting_withdraw_rate | 0.000000 VESTS |
| next_vesting_withdrawal | 1969-12-31T23:59:59 |
| withdrawn | 0 |
| to_withdraw | 0 |
| withdraw_routes | 0 |
| savings_withdraw_requests | 0 |
| last_account_recovery | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| reset_account | null |
| last_owner_update | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| last_account_update | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| mined | No |
| sbd_seconds | 0 |
| sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| savings_sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
{
"id": 68423,
"name": "happyruss",
"owner": {
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"key_auths": [
[
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"posting": {
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},
"memo_key": "STM82WxGKqcyikoLRqk96TdWPwc4hAXUCUEkNaEMxZY1CU1QY5EHG",
"json_metadata": "",
"posting_json_metadata": "",
"proxy": "",
"last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"last_account_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"created": "2016-08-17T19:37:21",
"mined": false,
"recovery_account": "steem",
"last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"reset_account": "null",
"comment_count": 0,
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"voting_manabar": {
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},
"downvote_manabar": {
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"last_update_time": 1471462641
},
"voting_power": 9949,
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"sbd_balance": "0.044 SBD",
"sbd_seconds": "0",
"sbd_seconds_last_update": "2016-08-21T13:09:00",
"sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
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"savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_vesting_balance": "0.000000 VESTS",
"reward_vesting_steem": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "10751.749875 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
"next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
"withdrawn": 0,
"to_withdraw": 0,
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"proxied_vsf_votes": [
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0
],
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"post_bandwidth": 11217,
"pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
"vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reputation": 3265224174,
"transfer_history": [],
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"witness_votes": [],
"tags_usage": [],
"guest_bloggers": [],
"rank": 184484
}Withdraw Routes
| Incoming | Outgoing |
|---|---|
Empty | Empty |
{
"incoming": [],
"outgoing": []
}From Date
To Date
2019/08/17 20:33:06
2019/08/17 20:33:06
| parent author | happyruss |
| parent permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20190817t203306000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @happyruss! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss/birthday3.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 3 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=happyruss)_</sub> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes! |
| json metadata | {"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #35640910/Trx 461d69fd7f84a45c30497c016334a30e85feafa2 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "461d69fd7f84a45c30497c016334a30e85feafa2",
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"op": [
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{
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"parent_permlink": "for-the-love-of-software-engineering",
"author": "steemitboard",
"permlink": "steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20190817t203306000z",
"title": "",
"body": "Congratulations @happyruss! You received a personal award!\n\n<table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss/birthday3.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 3 years!</td></tr></table>\n\n<sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=happyruss)_</sub>\n\n\n###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!",
"json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png\"]}"
}
]
}2018/08/17 20:44:24
2018/08/17 20:44:24
| parent author | happyruss |
| parent permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20180817t204424000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @happyruss! You have received a personal award! [](http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) 2 Years on Steemit <sub>_Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor._</sub> > Do you like [SteemitBoard's project](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)? Then **[Vote for its witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1)** and **get one more award**! |
| json metadata | {"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #25156578/Trx bb221436554d0ce4bf76e5d084ad48dbf198a70a |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "bb221436554d0ce4bf76e5d084ad48dbf198a70a",
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"author": "steemitboard",
"permlink": "steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20180817t204424000z",
"title": "",
"body": "Congratulations @happyruss! You have received a personal award!\n\n[](http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) 2 Years on Steemit\n<sub>_Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor._</sub>\n\n\n> Do you like [SteemitBoard's project](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)? Then **[Vote for its witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1)** and **get one more award**!",
"json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png\"]}"
}
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}2017/08/17 20:47:51
2017/08/17 20:47:51
| parent author | happyruss |
| parent permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20170817t204753000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @happyruss! You have received a personal award! [](http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Click on the badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about this award, click [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/steemitboard-update-8-happy-birthday) > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)! |
| json metadata | {"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notifications.png"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #14663280/Trx dc8c5a7817d2d79a49e25559cd38164e80061109 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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"author": "steemitboard",
"permlink": "steemitboard-notify-happyruss-20170817t204753000z",
"title": "",
"body": "Congratulations @happyruss! You have received a personal award!\n\n[](http://steemitboard.com/@happyruss) Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit Happy Birthday - 1 Year on Steemit\nClick on the badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard.\n\nFor more information about this award, click [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/steemitboard-update-8-happy-birthday)\n> By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!",
"json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notifications.png\"]}"
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}| parent author | happyruss |
| parent permlink | why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts |
| author | irit |
| permlink | re-why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts |
| title | |
| body | Welcome |
| json metadata | {} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4994051/Trx 62b696099717a49d98acd2e7fd666db396a4566c |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "62b696099717a49d98acd2e7fd666db396a4566c",
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"timestamp": "2016-09-15T14:42:27",
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"title": "",
"body": "Welcome",
"json_metadata": "{}"
}
]
}| voter | irit |
| author | happyruss |
| permlink | why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts |
| weight | 10000 (100.00%) |
| Transaction Info | Block #4994018/Trx 3e2f238b54f8ab79e29d765fdb5f48aeaaa40e3f |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "3e2f238b54f8ab79e29d765fdb5f48aeaaa40e3f",
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"timestamp": "2016-09-15T14:40:48",
"op": [
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{
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"weight": 10000
}
]
}happyrusscustom json: follow
happyrusscustom json: follow
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["happyruss"] |
| id | follow |
| json | {"follower":"happyruss","following":"tracemayer","what":["blog"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4279848/Trx 8405050e0dfb14d0e4387abc6b963d5ed19948b6 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "8405050e0dfb14d0e4387abc6b963d5ed19948b6",
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}happyrussreceived 0.044 SBD, 0.066 SP author reward for @happyruss / why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts
happyrussreceived 0.044 SBD, 0.066 SP author reward for @happyruss / why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts
| author | happyruss |
| permlink | why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts |
| sbd payout | 0.044 SBD |
| steem payout | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting payout | 107.501173 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #4275710/Virtual Operation #3 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
"block": 4275710,
"trx_in_block": 4294967295,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 3,
"timestamp": "2016-08-21T13:09:00",
"op": [
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{
"author": "happyruss",
"permlink": "why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts",
"sbd_payout": "0.044 SBD",
"steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_payout": "107.501173 VESTS"
}
]
}| parent author | happyruss |
| parent permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| author | inz |
| permlink | re-happyruss-for-the-love-of-software-engineering-20160821t060124581z |
| title | |
| body | Very quick and passionate, great account! Me too I'm a computer programmer and started very similar (just like in Russia, in Argentina there were clones of the Sinclair Spectrum, just a few years before your time I believe). So copying code from magazines was the thing to do. At some point, the Spectrum was actually so popular, that an FM radio station had a weekly program where they would broadcast a game that you could download by plugging the radio into your micro computer. Fun stuff! Thanks for sharing. |
| json metadata | {"tags":["introduceyourself"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4267240/Trx a71d6e7bd58bae44097664571bb4f5e070e8f7aa |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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"op": [
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{
"parent_author": "happyruss",
"parent_permlink": "for-the-love-of-software-engineering",
"author": "inz",
"permlink": "re-happyruss-for-the-love-of-software-engineering-20160821t060124581z",
"title": "",
"body": "Very quick and passionate, great account! Me too I'm a computer programmer and started very similar (just like in Russia, in Argentina there were clones of the Sinclair Spectrum, just a few years before your time I believe). So copying code from magazines was the thing to do.\n\nAt some point, the Spectrum was actually so popular, that an FM radio station had a weekly program where they would broadcast a game that you could download by plugging the radio into your micro computer.\n\nFun stuff! Thanks for sharing.",
"json_metadata": "{\"tags\":[\"introduceyourself\"]}"
}
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}inzupvoted (100.00%) @happyruss / for-the-love-of-software-engineering
inzupvoted (100.00%) @happyruss / for-the-love-of-software-engineering
| voter | inz |
| author | happyruss |
| permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| weight | 10000 (100.00%) |
| Transaction Info | Block #4267191/Trx 8e741d2e26bea4dde9d00b7692c5ee1c2fc23f79 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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}happyrusscustom json: follow
happyrusscustom json: follow
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["happyruss"] |
| id | follow |
| json | {"follower":"happyruss","following":"nimble","what":["blog"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4261168/Trx 5e149d8700a3e6de757895d3ec32fae983069b1f |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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}happyrusscustom json: follow
happyrusscustom json: follow
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["happyruss"] |
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| json | {"follower":"happyruss","following":"mrweed","what":["blog"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4261156/Trx d353452c6e3aa5ca300eaf940d7976c52f60c384 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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}happyrusscustom json: follow
happyrusscustom json: follow
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["happyruss"] |
| id | follow |
| json | {"follower":"happyruss","following":"kuriko","what":["blog"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4261134/Trx 6a3c3e41252a81d5b3f25800db1b78ea485a6b6e |
View Raw JSON Data
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}happyrusscustom json: follow
happyrusscustom json: follow
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["happyruss"] |
| id | follow |
| json | {"follower":"happyruss","following":"freeyourmind","what":["blog"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #4261118/Trx f29bb010979b47a06e629b952b78e28a08b58131 |
View Raw JSON Data
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| body | What game would you play with a wombat? -Wom. |
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| title | Re: For the love of software engineering! |
| body | They must change who would be constant in happiness and wisdom. |
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happyrussupvoted (100.00%) @happyruss / for-the-love-of-software-engineering
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}happyrusspublished a new post: for-the-love-of-software-engineering
happyrusspublished a new post: for-the-love-of-software-engineering
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | introduceyourself |
| author | happyruss |
| permlink | for-the-love-of-software-engineering |
| title | For the love of software engineering! |
| body | Hi, I’ve just joined steemit, and I wanted to introduce myself through one of my passions since I copied BASIC code out of magazines and typed it into my Apple II “compatible” to play games with crappy graphics back in the 1980’s – software development.  In my hometown of Pittsburgh, Pa, as the internet became more widespread in the mid-to-late 90’s, I acquired my bachelor’s in “Information Science,” a degree which spawned out of “Library Science,” before cataloging books was replaced by computer databases, I guess. Fresh out of college just before the first tech bubble burst, I landed a job with a bank in Cleveland. They had me writing COBOL before the Y2K bug hit. I wasn’t into it. I complained directly to the IT projects manager that it was a misuse of a talented resource, so they switched me over to the corporate web site. From that point, I stayed on what I felt to be the cutting edge from VB6 over COM+ through C#.net with every variance of SQL Server, Oracle, and DB2 in between.  Then, around 2005, “Agile” development changed the way we did things from a process perspective that really shook up the malaise of large corporations who delivered 300-page analysis documentation, out of date the moment it hit the laser printer because the client changed their mind. I also got into Java to the point where I not only used it at work, but I also went through the rigmarole of getting a “certified programmer” and “certified developer” lapel pin from Sun... and I taught a class on the subject at ITT Tech for a stint. With that accomplishment, I decided to leave Cleveland and move to the warmer weather of Austin, Texas, the “Silicon Valley of the South.”  I worked for a couple of startups over five or so more years, mainly focused on Microsoft-based solutions. By this point, I had decided that it was easier to work with .net than Java because Java had a million ways to do something, none of which were standard, and Microsoft had only a couple, and one was usually more appropriate under given conditions. Also, Microsoft’s IDE (Visual Studio) seemed more developer-friendly than something like Eclipse. In time though, I became bored with the scene and kinda semi-retired in 2011, when software development became a hobby again.  At that point, I got into mobile app development with iOS and Android. I made a few personal projects including one to allow users to [create binaural beats](http://www.guidedmeditationtreks.com/binaural.html), a subject for sound healing. At first, seeing that Android was Java based and I had to use Eclipse, I was way more into iOS programming because XCode was a way nicer IDE. Of course, I had to learn Objective C, but that was no problem. Then, Google changed the game and released “Android Studio,” an IDE specifically for Android. This made things so much easier, and I also realized how much I preferred Java over Objective C. Then, Apple came out with SWIFT to compete in that arena. So, mobile development has indeed been fun, and I feel it’s definitely the near future. Over the years, I’ve been writing in so many languages over so many platforms that I can say with confidence that software development keeps getting easier while it gets more powerful. I am amazed at the things we can create now that were not reliably possible even 5 years ago, but are now standardized as we expand the “stack” of tools available.  Nowadays, I’m writing code for a product that will go on multiple platforms at once, which deals with deep down audio and network operations, so that means multiple codebases instead of a write-once kinda thing. For cross-platform though, I am writing web apps with the MEAN stack on JavaScript. Nowadays, we don’t even use SQL or relational databases anymore. It’s all changed into “documents.” I guess this is feasible since we have such historically monster hardware, but also developing and modeling “documents” instead of “tables” is a totally different way of thinking, which is fun.  That’s what’s great about being a software developer – it encourages creative thinking. Technology can keep us sharp, make life easier, and be fun all at the same time! |
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happyrusspublished a new post: why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | travel |
| author | happyruss |
| permlink | why-i-eventually-stopped-going-to-burn-events-but-still-live-the-good-parts |
| title | Why I eventually stopped going to burn events, but still live the good parts |
| body | Everyone has a different reason to attend burn events like Burning Man. For some, it’s an opportunity to let go, get a little crazy, and escape life. For others, it is all about the community vibe, culture, and connecting with like minds. For me, it was all about creative expression and "living a dream" for those few days a year.  Burn events presented me with a blank palette on which to express myself in ways that seemed impossible in my daily life. As a musician, artist, and free spirit, the burn was an outlet for energy that became contained through my day-to-day life as a productive member of society with a day job. For 5 years, I was a religious attendee of Austin’s regional burn, “[Burning Flipside](http://www.burningflipside.com),” as a card-carrying member of Redcamp. Each year, we'd invest months in planning and meetings. We’d build structures, discuss how we would give away a bunch of liquor, logistically plan how to get our infrastructure out to the playa, assign camp leads, and have fun at our weekly meetings. One year, we even [wrote and choreographed a full play](http://www.gunkyfunky.com/dr-tikis-script.html) for that year’s theme, Dr. Tiki’s Medicine Show. As a white-collar desk jockey, I was able to live my passions each year by escaping to flipside. At the burn events, I adhered to the credos taught to me: “unconditional giving,” “radical self-expression," "radical self-reliance,” “community,” “leave no trace,” and “no spectators.” The event was unlike a concert experience, where we came as consumers. I found that Flipside was best approached without a consumer mindset. The idea was that if everyone brought their gifts to the table, the experience would create itself. In my case, I’d spend hours playing solo piano under our red dome on my Fender Rhodes or roaming with my sax. I might serve up free vodka-infused drinks to people that visited our camp in between greeting them or smoking them out and having in-depth conversations about the meaning of life. Then, in 2012, things changed for me. Actually, I changed. I realized that I didn’t need to go away to some far off unsustainable transformational festival to live the life I desired. Instead of escaping life to live the values for only one long weekend per year, I could live the rest of the year with those same values. So, I quit my day job and focused on "living a dream." I joined a touring band to express my musical artistry. I created a “silent disco” company to create unique events and bring people together in an interesting way. I started producing [guided meditations](http://guidedmeditationtreks.com) and doing yoga and pranayama breathwork to create psychedelic experiences and explore infinity in different ways. For the community and culture vibe, I took a trip [around the world](http://www.spintheworldaround.com) and stayed with locals everywhere. At home, I threw intention-based parties and provided some great food and drinks; we even did mini-burn ceremonies sometimes. At local Austin meetups, people come together for interesting topics like mindfulness, the planets, travel, art, crystals, and other metaphysical stuff. I began to live the life of a burner without actually going to Burning Man. Well, sort of... It's impossible to generalize as I have been, but as Burning Man continues to grow, surely you can still get a taste of this as a yearning seeker -- the catalyst. Yet the festival's growth has contributed to a slew of articles about how Burning Man changed or how it’s become just an outlet for people to consume, get wasted, or have unbridled sex. Instead of bringing an experience, you can just buy one, even though money is technically frowned upon in an unconditionally-giving society. Instead of leaving no trace, you can let someone else to clean up after you. It seems that many who attend are looking for an experience, but unwilling to create one. Burning Man has always been an adult fairyland where you could satisfy any intention, no matter how whimsical, magical, far-out, seemingly-impossible, or even depraved it may sound. That is what is so magical about it. It is a reminder that we can create our own reality. It is the same for life! We have the power to create our own reality with our intentions, actions, and awareness, and we don’t need to escape reality to do this. Being stuck in a day job or life that isn’t living up to potential, transformational festivals can be the catalyst to help one transform into that we wish to become, as they did for me. The catch is, you must be the change you wish to see, and YOU must initiate the transformation if you want it to be sustainable. Of course, just like at Burning Man, life is not always easy. Between the dust storms, supply chain issues, travel expenses, bugs, and ‘shit happens’ events, things won’t always go your way. The crazy thing is that these setbacks are also a huge part of what make the experience at Burning Man -- AND IN LIFE -- so impactful. When we embrace the hardships next to the good times as opportunities for growth and introspection, we make the rapid progress that really helps us grow and live up to the term “transformation.” In the end, if you can't make it out to the desert to transform yourself, it's ok. With a measured effort, some faith, and a little bit of magic, we can create a utopia where everyone can express their potential as a contributor to the wonderful world that surrounds us. We can experience the joys of unconditional giving, the connectedness of working with like-minded people towards a common goal, and the contentment of living a dream. To do so, we must be the transformation to which we wish to escape. Only then can we experience the joys of Burning Man – without the dust storms. |
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"title": "Why I eventually stopped going to burn events, but still live the good parts",
"body": "Everyone has a different reason to attend burn events like Burning Man. For some, it’s an opportunity to let go, get a little crazy, and escape life. For others, it is all about the community vibe, culture, and connecting with like minds. For me, it was all about creative expression and \"living a dream\" for those few days a year. \n\n\n\nBurn events presented me with a blank palette on which to express myself in ways that seemed impossible in my daily life. As a musician, artist, and free spirit, the burn was an outlet for energy that became contained through my day-to-day life as a productive member of society with a day job.\n\nFor 5 years, I was a religious attendee of Austin’s regional burn, “[Burning Flipside](http://www.burningflipside.com),” as a card-carrying member of Redcamp. Each year, we'd invest months in planning and meetings. We’d build structures, discuss how we would give away a bunch of liquor, logistically plan how to get our infrastructure out to the playa, assign camp leads, and have fun at our weekly meetings. One year, we even [wrote and choreographed a full play](http://www.gunkyfunky.com/dr-tikis-script.html) for that year’s theme, Dr. Tiki’s Medicine Show. As a white-collar desk jockey, I was able to live my passions each year by escaping to flipside.\n\nAt the burn events, I adhered to the credos taught to me: “unconditional giving,” “radical self-expression,\" \"radical self-reliance,” “community,” “leave no trace,” and “no spectators.” The event was unlike a concert experience, where we came as consumers. I found that Flipside was best approached without a consumer mindset. The idea was that if everyone brought their gifts to the table, the experience would create itself. In my case, I’d spend hours playing solo piano under our red dome on my Fender Rhodes or roaming with my sax. I might serve up free vodka-infused drinks to people that visited our camp in between greeting them or smoking them out and having in-depth conversations about the meaning of life.\n\nThen, in 2012, things changed for me. Actually, I changed. I realized that I didn’t need to go away to some far off unsustainable transformational festival to live the life I desired. Instead of escaping life to live the values for only one long weekend per year, I could live the rest of the year with those same values. So, I quit my day job and focused on \"living a dream.\"\n\nI joined a touring band to express my musical artistry. I created a “silent disco” company to create unique events and bring people together in an interesting way. I started producing [guided meditations](http://guidedmeditationtreks.com) and doing yoga and pranayama breathwork to create psychedelic experiences and explore infinity in different ways. For the community and culture vibe, I took a trip [around the world](http://www.spintheworldaround.com) and stayed with locals everywhere. At home, I threw intention-based parties and provided some great food and drinks; we even did mini-burn ceremonies sometimes. At local Austin meetups, people come together for interesting topics like mindfulness, the planets, travel, art, crystals, and other metaphysical stuff. I began to live the life of a burner without actually going to Burning Man. Well, sort of...\n\nIt's impossible to generalize as I have been, but as Burning Man continues to grow, surely you can still get a taste of this as a yearning seeker -- the catalyst. Yet the festival's growth has contributed to a slew of articles about how Burning Man changed or how it’s become just an outlet for people to consume, get wasted, or have unbridled sex. Instead of bringing an experience, you can just buy one, even though money is technically frowned upon in an unconditionally-giving society. Instead of leaving no trace, you can let someone else to clean up after you. It seems that many who attend are looking for an experience, but unwilling to create one.\n\nBurning Man has always been an adult fairyland where you could satisfy any intention, no matter how whimsical, magical, far-out, seemingly-impossible, or even depraved it may sound. That is what is so magical about it. It is a reminder that we can create our own reality. It is the same for life! We have the power to create our own reality with our intentions, actions, and awareness, and we don’t need to escape reality to do this. Being stuck in a day job or life that isn’t living up to potential, transformational festivals can be the catalyst to help one transform into that we wish to become, as they did for me. The catch is, you must be the change you wish to see, and YOU must initiate the transformation if you want it to be sustainable.\n\nOf course, just like at Burning Man, life is not always easy. Between the dust storms, supply chain issues, travel expenses, bugs, and ‘shit happens’ events, things won’t always go your way. The crazy thing is that these setbacks are also a huge part of what make the experience at Burning Man -- AND IN LIFE -- so impactful. When we embrace the hardships next to the good times as opportunities for growth and introspection, we make the rapid progress that really helps us grow and live up to the term “transformation.”\n\nIn the end, if you can't make it out to the desert to transform yourself, it's ok. With a measured effort, some faith, and a little bit of magic, we can create a utopia where everyone can express their potential as a contributor to the wonderful world that surrounds us. We can experience the joys of unconditional giving, the connectedness of working with like-minded people towards a common goal, and the contentment of living a dream. To do so, we must be the transformation to which we wish to escape. Only then can we experience the joys of Burning Man – without the dust storms.",
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