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Life 2.0: How People Across the Country Are Transforming Their Lives to Make Their Own American Dream [NOOK Book]
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| Introduction : living large in smaller places | 3 | |
| Ch. 1 | Trapped in a cloud cave | 13 |
| Ch. 2 | Flying on instruments | 27 |
| Ch. 3 | Upstate New York woes, twin city triumphs | 40 |
| Ch. 4 | You can go home again | 56 |
| Ch. 5 | Smashing small-town stereotypes | 65 |
| Ch. 6 | Searching for the winning formula : a tale of two cities | 82 |
| Ch. 7 | How technology closed the sophistication gap | 101 |
| Ch. 8 | Sometimes, material success is not enough | 120 |
| Ch. 9 | America's hometown | 132 |
| Ch. 10 | Gold in Montana's hills | 145 |
| Ch. 11 | Toni and Mike's permanent island getaway | 166 |
| Ch. 12 | The turbulent 2000s - the decade of cheap | 179 |
| Ch. 13 | America's renewed search for meaning | 204 |
| Ch. 14 | What makes a great place? | 220 |
| Resources : 150 cheap places to live | 233 |
Never in history has any other group of people had as much freedom to choose where they want to live as Americans do today:
Our government gives us the liberty to live wherever we want.
Our prosperity gives us the capacity to live wherever we want,
Our technology gives us the ability to live wherever we want, and,
Our diverse American landscape gives us the opportunity to live wherever we
want. You can choose practically any climate, any environment, and any
population density -and still live-in America
This is a privilege that should not be wasted. There is no reason for most Americans to live in a place they dislike, or is harmful to their health, their soul, or their family. We are free to move.
In choosing a community to call “home” we’ve been blessed with an amazing array of options to select from. Our nation is a smorgasbord of cities and towns of different sizes, styles, surroundings, scenery, social opportunities, and support systems. What we often overlook, however, is that there are serious financial, emotional, and even spiritual downsides to the most popular locations while there are great advantages to be found in less populated cities. For instance, status is always accompanied by stress. Uptown is usually uptight.
Every place has a pace. It is foolish to ignore this fact. Some cities run at warp speed; they never slow down and they never sleep. They live on caffeine and adrenaline, and
everyone always seems in a hurry. It’s exhilarating but exhausting.
Other cities stroll along with a slow saunter, like the lazy river that flows through the middle of many of them. Everything happens at a more moderate tempo. Just as some communities are passionate; others are peaceful. Recently more and more people are rediscovering the advantages of living in the smaller, less-expensive, and family-friendly communities of America’s heartland. My friend, Rich Karlgaard has chronicled this trend with real-life stories in this wonderfully engaging book.
I resonated with many of the stories in this book, having grown up in a very small town (less than 500 population) in the countryside north of San Francisco. It was the best of both worlds. We had the slower pace of rural living, but could drive to the cultural amenities of the city in just a couple hours.
In The Purpose Driven Life, I consider the question “What on earth am I here for?” This book considers another important question: “Where on earth should I be living?” Your life has a context. We live on location, not in some vacuum. In considering your life’s purpose, you need to think, not only about what you’ll do, but also where you’ll do it. Make an honest assessment of how you are shaped and identify the environment that best suits the purpose, passion, and personality of your life.
Overview
“A delightful, and surprisingly moving, tale” -- Michael Lewis, bestselling author of Moneyball“Karlgaard flies in with a companion concept to David Brooks’s On Paradise Drive” -- Tom Wolfe
“While counterintuitive to those on the conventional fast-track, Life 2.0 offers great promise to those who are open to personal innovation” -- Clayton Christensen, Professor, Harvard ...