During his 29th year, spending just $19,420.68,
less than it would have cost him to stay at home, Adam Shepard visited
seventeen countries on four continents and lived some amazing adventures. He
writes about this year in his new book, One
Year Lived. The following is a shortened excerpt from one of Adam's adventures. Learn more about Adam at his website.
Imagine what it might be like to reach through the
computer screen to confront a person on the other side.
Years ago, I read some articles and a couple of books
on outsourcing, and it changed the structure of my life. The Internet has
brought virtual assistance to the commoner on a digital silver platter. The
little guy—you with the lawn care business or you trying to sell homemade
reversible purses—can now research affordably, manufacture affordably, and
market affordably.
If you can somewhat coherently list instructions in
an e-mail, assignments will be completed for you overnight, finished by the
time you sit down at the table for your bagel in the morning. Globalization
allows for a collaborative effort to be affordable and efficient for everyone.
So, a couple of years before my world adventure
began, I had plopped down on my sofa and flipped my laptop open. A few clicks
and I began my search.
A Rafael Apolinario III’s credentials spanned my
screen. I settled on him due to his glowing enthusiasm.
Not only is my boy Raf logging hours for half the
cost of America’s burger-flipping minimum wage, he’s doing some pretty advanced
computer work for me. I can send him a list of one thousand colleges and
universities and say, “Raf, I need the names and e-mail addresses of the vice
provosts at these universities. You think you can do that in forty hours?”
He says, “Yes, of course, Sir Adam, but I will try
hard to do it in thirty!”
I asked him once whether he knew how to put together
a video from a file of pictures, and he wrote, “Not today, Sir Adam. But I can
learn by tomorrow!”
I send him money; he sends me quality work. It’s a
very simple relationship.
From the outback, Ivana wanted to go to a beach. One
with powdery sand and few people. One where we could lounge by the shore and
eat filet mignon and drink a bottle of chardonnay. One where she could swim
without concern for sanitation.
I e-mailed Raf and he replied almost instantly.
“Adam…you are welcome anytime! I am excited to finally meet you personally. I
live just an hour and a half ride from Boracay, the most beautiful beach in the
world.”
He was exaggerating, kind of. Just this year,
TripAdvisor touted Boracay as the second-best beach in the world, just after
Providenciales in the Turks and Caicos.
“Adam, sir!” Raf hollered. “You made it!” Around five
feet tall, he weighed in at 115 pounds. I was almost literally two of him. He
sported a Fisher Price My First Mustache and had curled the top of his hair
into a mini-mohawk, the style of the decade among Filipino men.
I learned that he was two years from thirty, though
he looked to be between fifteen and seventeen years old. I’d never known his
age.
The tide shifted when I met Raf. I was no longer in
charge. Raf, the Raf who always apologized for simple, meaningless errors and
always asked me twice whether I found his work sufficient, morphed into a man
in control. He showed Ivana and me to the cool spots on the beach, he took us
to buy fresh spices and produce, he gave us a tour of the creaky but clean
office he worked out of, he introduced us to his family, and he helped us to
avoid getting swindled. “No, man, don’t buy that one,” he advised when we
passed by souvenir shops.
He cooked. Sauteed prawns and pork adobo. He combined
shrimp, spinach, string beans, tomatoes, onions, peppers, fish sauce, and a
tamarind base to make a tangy traditional Filipino soup. I bought ingredients,
he cooked them.
And then we went wakeboarding. Raf spit out Tagalog,
the native language, all over that island until we arrived at the only place
with the equipment to offer wakeboarding.
I forget where we settled. It wasn’t in my favor but
far better than a white man would have been able to negotiate on his own in
Boracay. I really didn’t have a choice anyway. This man owned the only
wakeboarding equipment on the island. I spent pocket change to fight bulls in
Nicaragua, and I was ready to go to the ATM in order to wakeboard, with
Boracay’s lounging green hills and rough cliffs as a backdrop. Boats were
zipping this way and that under the sun’s full gleam. A few white tufts
littered a mostly cloudless sky. It’s irresponsible to spare expense for these
once-in-a-lifetime experiences.
A half hour later, I was sitting next to this dude,
this guy I’d known for two years, but really only a few hours.
“Did you get that one?” I asked, surfacing from a
spill after one of my jumps. I shook my head to fling water from my shaggy
hair.
“Hm. Yes, man. But I tell you it might be a better
picture if you can get off the water a little bit.”
Meeting Raf in such a beautiful atmosphere was an
interesting blend of business and pleasure. We have nothing in common, and
there wasn’t a whole lot to talk about. He was nice; I was nice. We spoke very
little about current political happenings and a lot about Manny’s fight.
Raf lives a world away from me, literally and
metaphorically. The people of his country are almost as poor as the people of
Honduras. Raf lives in a cramped one-bedroom apartment and cooks his
meals—mostly rice and bits of fish. He deposits most of his earnings into his
nineteen-year-old brother’s college education fund or into a savings account
for the business he wants to open one day. He walks around town, whether his
destination lies one block or a couple dozen away.
And in between home-cooked meals and time on the
boat, it felt good to be able to step out of the virtual world, establish a
real connection, look him in the eye, shake his hand, and thank him personally.
Cheers Anastasia! Thank you for posting this excerpt from my book.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I think that from a professional level, this was the most important component of my entire trip--to be able to meet the guy who I had been outsourcing work to for so long.