Cruising Blues and There cure

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Apr 19, 2011
456
Hunter 31 Seattle
[Came across this in cruiserforums and thought I'd share here. Very good!]


Cruising Blues and Their Cure
By Robert Pirsig
(originally published in Esquire, May 1977)


Their case was typical. After four years of hard labor their ocean-size trimaran was launched in Minneapolis at the head of Mississippi navigation. Six and one half months later they had brought it down the river and across the gulf to Florida to finish up final details. Then at last they were off to sail the Bahamas, the Lesser Antilles and South America.
Only it didn't work out that way. Within six weeks they were through. The boat was back in Florida up for sale.
"Our feelings were mixed," they wrote their hometown paper. "Each of us had a favorite dream unfulfilled, a place he or she wanted to visit, a thing to do. And most of us felt sheepish that our 'year's escape' shrunk to eight months. Stated that way, it doesn't sound as if we got our money's worth for our four years' labor."
"But most of us had had just about all the escape we could stand; we're overdosed on vacation. Maybe we aren't quite as free spirits as we believed; each new island to visit had just a bit less than its predecessor."
"And thoughts were turning to home."
Change the point of origin to Sacramento or Cincinnati or any of thousands of places where the hope of sailing the world fills landlocked, job-locked dreamers; add thousands of couples who have saved for years to extend their weekends on the water to a retirement at sea, then sell their boats after six months; change the style and size of the boat, or the ages and backgrounds of the participants, and you have a story that is heard over and over again in cruising areas - romantic dreams of a lifetime destroyed by a psychological affliction that has probably ended the careers of more cruising sailors than all other causes together: cruising depression.
"I don't know what it was we thought we were looking for," one wife said in a St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, harbor after she and her husband had decided to put their boat up for sale and go home. "But whatever it was, we certainly haven't discovered it in sailing. It seemed that it was going to be such a dream life, but now, looking back on it, it just seems . . . oh, there have been beautiful times, of course, but mostly it's just been hard work and misery. More than we would have had if we had stayed home."
A husband said, "We find ourselves getting on each other's nerves, being cooped up like this with each other day after day. We never realized that in order to enjoy being with someone you have to have periods of separation from that person too. We sailed on weekends and short vacations for years. But living aboard isn't the same."
Statements symptomatic of cruising depression vary from person to person, but common to most are long periods of silence in a person who is normally talkative, followed by a feeling of overwhelming sadness that at first seems to have no specific cause, then, on reflection, seems to have many causes, such as:
Everything is breaking down on this boat. Everything is going to hell. Considering the number of things that could break down, the attrition is actually quite normal, but now there isn't the time or tools to make major repairs, and the costs of boatyard labor and overhead are out of sight. So now every part failure - a pump that won't work, a loose propeller shaft, a windlass that sticks - looms up as a catastrophe, and during the long hours at the helm while the problem remains unfixed, it grows larger and larger in the mind.
Money is running short. Most of the big supermarkets are too far from the boat to walk to. Marine stores seem to overcharge on everything. Money is always running short, but now that fact, which was once a challenge, is a source of despair. A serious cruising person always seems to find the money one way or another, usually by taking short-term waterfront jobs, and taking them without much resentment. His boat gives him something to work for. But now the boat itself is resented and there is nothing to work for.
The people are unfriendlier here than back home. Back home people seemed friendlier, but now cruising depression has put a scowl and a worried look on the sailor's face that makes people keep their distance.
All this is just running away from reality. You never realize how good that friendly old nine-to-five office job can be. Just little things - like everyone saying hello each morning or the supervisor stopping by to get your opinion because he really needs it. And seeing old friends and familiar neighbors and streets you've lived near all your life. Who wants to escape all that? Perhaps what cruising teaches more than anything else is an appreciation of the real world you might otherwise think of as oppressive.
This last symptom - the desire to "get back to reality" - is one I've found in almost every case of cruising depression and may be the key to the whole affliction. If one bears down on this point a little it begins to open up and reveal deeper sources of trouble.
One first has to ask where those who are depressed got the idea that cruise sailing was an escape from reality. Who ever taught them that? What exactly do they mean? Scientists and philosophers spend their entire working lives puzzling over the nature of reality, but now the depressed ones use the term freely, as though everyone should know and agree with what they mean by it.
As best I can make out, reality for them is the mode of daily living they followed before taking to the water; unlike cruise sailing, it is the one shared by the majority of the members of our culture. It usually means gainful employment in a stable economic network of some sort without too much variance from what are considered the norms and mores of society. In other words, back to the common herd.
The illogic is not hard to find. The house-car-job complex with its nine-to-five office routine is common only to a very small percentage of the earth's population and has only been common to this percentage for the last hundred years or so. If this is reality, have the millions of years that preceded our current century all been unreal?
An alternative - and better - definition of reality can be found by naming some of its components ...air...sunlight...wind...water...the motion of waves...the patterns of clouds before a coming storm. These elements, unlike twentieth-century office routines, have been here since before life appeared on this planet and they will continue long after office routines are gone. They are understood by everyone, not just a small segment of a highly advanced society. When considered on purely logical grounds, they are more real than the extremely transitory life-styles of the modern civilization the depressed ones want to return to.
If this is so, then it follows that those who see sailing as an escape from reality have got their understanding of both sailing and reality completely backwards. Sailing is not an escape but a return to and a confrontation of a reality from which modern civilization is itself an escape. For centuries, man suffered from the reality of an earth that was too dark or too hot or too cold for his comfort, and to escape this he invented complex systems of lighting, heating and air conditioning. Sailing rejects these and returns to the old realities of dark and heat and cold. Modern civilization has found radio, TV, movies, nightclubs and a huge variety of mechanized entertainment to titillate our senses and help us escape from the apparent boredom of the earth and the sun and wind and stars. Sailing returns to these ancient realities.
For many of the depressed ones, the real underlying source of cruising depression is that they have thought of sailing as one more civilized form of stimulation, just like movies or spectator sports, and somehow felt their boat had an obligation to keep them thrilled and entertained. But no boat can be an endless source of entertainment and should not be expected to be one.
A lot of their expectation may have come from weekend sailing, whose pleasures differ greatly from live-aboard cruising. In weekend sailing, depression seldom shows up, because the sailing is usually a relief from a monotonous workweek. The weekender gets just as depressed as the live-aboard cruiser, but he does it at home or on the job and thinks of these as the cause of the depression. When he retires to the life of cruising, he continues the mistake by thinking, Now life will be just like all those summer weekends strung end to end. And of course he is wrong.
There is no way to escape the mechanism of depression. It results from lack of a pleasant stimulus and is inevitable because the more pleasant stimuli you receive the less effective they become. If, for example, you receive an unexpected gift of money on Monday, you are elated. If the same gift is repeated on Tuesday, you are elated again but a little less so because it is a repetition of Monday's experience. On Wednesday he elation drops a little lower and on Thursday and Friday a little lower still. By Saturday you are rather accustomed to the daily gift and take it for granted. Sunday, if there is no gift, you are suddenly depressed. Your level of expectation has adjusted upward during the week and now must adjust downward.
The same is true of cruising. You can see just so any beautiful sunsets strung end on end, just so any coconut palms waving in the ocean breeze, just so many exotic moonlit tropical nights scented with oleander and frangipani, and you become adjusted. They no longer elate. The pleasant external stimulus has worn out its response and cruising depression takes over. This is the point at which boats get sold and cruising dreams are shattered forever. One can extend the high for a while by searching for new and more exciting pursuits, but sooner or later the depression mechanism must catch up with you and the longer it has been evaded the harder it hits.
It follows that the best way to defeat cruising depression is never to run from it. You must face into it, enter it when it comes, just be gloomy and enjoy the gloominess while it lasts. You can be sure that the same mechanism that makes depression unavoidable also makes future elation unavoidable. Each hour or day you remain depressed you become more and more adjusted to it until in time there is no possible way to avoid an upturn in feelings. The days you put in depressed are like money in the bank. They make the elated days possible by their contrast. You cannot have mountains without valleys and you cannot have elation without depression. Without their combined upswings and downswings, existence would be just one long tedious plateau.
When depression is seen as an unavoidable part of one's life, it becomes possible to study it with less aversion and discover that within it are all sorts of overlooked possibilities.
To begin with, depression makes you far more aware of subtleties of your surroundings. Out on a remote anchorage, the call of a wild duck during an elated period is just the call of a wild duck. But if you are depressed and your mind is empty from the down-scaling of depression, then that strange lonely sound can suddenly bring down a whole wave of awareness of empty spaces and water and sky. It sounds strange, but some of my happiest memories are of days when I was very depressed. Slow monotonous grey days at the helm, beating into a wet freezing wind. Or a three-day dead calm that left me in agonies of heat and boredom and frustration. Days when nothing seemed to go right. Nights when impending disaster was all I could think of. I think of those as "virtuous days," a strange term for them that has a meaning all its own.
Virtue here comes from childhood reading about the old days of sailing ships when young men were sent to sea to learn manliness and virtue. I remember being skeptical about this. "How could a monotonous passage across a pile of water produce virtue?" I wondered. I figured that maybe a few bad storms would scare hell out of the young men and this would make them humble and manly and virtuous and appreciative of life ever afterward, but it seemed like a dubious curriculum. There were cheaper and quicker ways to scare people than that.
Now, however, with a boat of my own and some time at sea, I begin to see the learning of virtue another way. It has something to do with the way the sea and sun and wind and sky go on and on day after day, week after week, and the boat and you have to go on with it. You must take the helm and change the sails and take sights of the stars and work out their reductions and sleep and cook and eat and repair things as they break and do most of these things in stormy weather as well as fair, depressed as well as elated, because there's no choice. You get used to it; it becomes habit-forming and produces a certain change in values. Old gear that has been through a storm or two without failure becomes more precious than it was when you bought it because you know you can trust it. The same becomes true of fellow crewmen and ultimately becomes true of things about yourself. Good first appearances count for less than they ever did, and real virtue - which comes from an ability to separate what merely looks good from what lasts and the acquisition of those characteristics in one's self - is strengthened.
But beyond this there seems to be an even deeper teaching of virtue that rises out of a slow process of self-discovery after one has gone through a number of waves of danger and depression and is no longer overwhelmingly concerned about them.
Self-discovery is as much a philosopher's imponderable as reality, but when one takes away the external stimuli of civilization during long ocean hours at the helm far from any land, and particularly on overcast nights, every cruising sailor knows that what occurs is not an evening of complete blankness. Instead comes a flow of thought drawn forth by the emptiness of the night. Occurrences of the previous day, meager as they may have been, rise and are thought about for a while, and then die away to return again later, a little less compelling, and perhaps another time even weaker, until they die away completely and are not thought of again. Then older memories appear, of a week past, a month past, of years past, and these are thought about and sometimes interrelated with new insights. A problem that has been baffling in the past is now understood quickly. New ideas for things seem to pop up from nowhere because the rigid patterns of thought that inhibited them are now weakened by emptiness and depression. Then in time these new thoughts wear town too, and the empty night dredges deeper into the subconscious to tug at, loosen and dislodge old forgotten thoughts that were repressed years ago. Old injustices that one has had to absorb, old faces now gone, ancient feelings of personal doubt, remorse, hatred and fear, are suddenly loose and at you. You must face them again and again until they die away like the thoughts preceding them. This self that one discovers is in many ways a person one would not like one's friends to know about; a person one may have been avoiding for years, full of vanity, cowardice, boredom, self-pity, laziness, blamingness, weak when he should be strong, aggressive when he should be gentle, a person who will do anything not to know these things about himself - the very same fellow who has been having problems with cruising depression all this time. I think it's in the day-after-day, week-after-week confrontation of this person that the most valuable learning of virtue takes place.
But if one will allow it time enough, the ocean itself can be one's greatest ally in dealing with this person. As one lives on the surface of the empty ocean day after day after day after day and sees it sometimes huge and dangerous, sometimes relaxed and dull, but always, in each day and week, endless in every direction, a certain understanding of one's self begins slowly to break through, reflected from the sea, or perhaps derived from it.
This is the understanding that whether you are bored or excited, depressed or elated, successful or unsuccessful, even whether you are alive or dead, all this is of absolutely no consequence whatsoever. The sea keeps telling you this with every sweep of every wave. And when you accept this understanding of yourself and agree with it and continue on anyway, then a real fullness of virtue and self-understanding arrives. And sometimes the moment of arrival is accompanied by hilarious laughter. The old reality of the sea has put cruising depression in its proper perspective at last.
 

Tim R.

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May 27, 2004
3,626
Caliber 40 Long Range Cruiser Portland, Maine
Not uncommon. It is wise to live aboard for an extended period before throwing off the lines. It is also good to have many activities for that stimulation the article references. Be comfortable with yourself and shipmates before you take the plunge.

One other thing I think traps people is the destination. Practically everyone goes to the Bahamas and/or Caribbean. Why? What is so special about these areas other than warmth? Sure, the water is beautiful but it is hot and the economies of many islands is very depressed. We would rather sail the temperate climates of Europe then the Caribbean. We may sail the Canadian maritimes, the US east coast, Bermuda, Bahamas but ultimately the Adriatic, British Isles and Baltic are our true destinations.

Living aboard full time and spending the weekends cruising will give you a pretty good idea of the work involved in maintaining a boat. And you better be able to do most anything yourself because you cannot call the local shipwright when in the middle of the Atlantic.
 
Apr 19, 2011
456
Hunter 31 Seattle
I'm still trying to figure out if its the right thing for me. I'm moving aboard in a about 6 weeks to test the waters. If I get cabin fever then i probably wouldn't be able to do extended cruising. Though there is probably a big difference between living aboard-and-working and living aboard-while-cruising.
 

Tim R.

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May 27, 2004
3,626
Caliber 40 Long Range Cruiser Portland, Maine
Jared1048 said:
I'm still trying to figure out if its the right thing for me. I'm moving aboard in a about 6 weeks to test the waters. If I get cabin fever then i probably wouldn't be able to do extended cruising. Though there is probably a big difference between living aboard-and-working and living aboard-while-cruising.
If you are serious about living aboard, then you need to make it your home. Our homes our boat. Going home means a lot less than most because we can park our home in many different places.
 
Feb 26, 2004
22,992
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
Nice discussion in the OP, but I'd diss the word depression, since the concept seems to simply mean you have good days and bad. Depression is a much more serious and long term issue, clinically speaking.

Good luck to all of you who are in o working toward your dreams.

Roger on Strider had some interesting comments either yesterday or earlier today.
 
Jan 1, 2006
7,476
Slickcraft 26 Sailfish
I didn't make it through the whole article It was an interesting and honest look at the desire to get away Honestly if I'm away for for more than a week I do miss home That's not to say I wouldn't go for more than a week but there's a limit to how long I want to be away I would like to do a Roger like crurise down the ICW but l I might like to skip the trip home I like to go to new places - and to approach a new destination from the water is a thrill Once Im' there the destination is often a disappointment After a few days I would like to move on or go home I also like where I live We have great friends a beautiul place to play and amonge the easiet place to contuct life in the Northeast
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,970
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
Part of the article mentioned money.

Lets get real, it takes a lot of money to live comfortably while cruising. Note the word comfortably. Most 1st world people have a pretty high standard of comfort. Casting off on an adventure seems to be a good diversion from the need for comfort. Yes, for a few weeks or months. But few people can wean themselves off all the comforts of home long term.

And this is not just a big warm dry bed. It's a variety of good food plus the entertainment value of dining out. Beer & booze. It's buying stuff, just to satisfy the need to reward yourself with new stuff. It's staying in a marina instead of fretting over a dragging anchor. Going to movies, plays, museums, sightseeing in a rental car. Flying home to see family. Staying connected to the internet with smartphones & tablets & data plans. Entertaining guests aboard with something more than popcorn. Motoring instead of sailing to your next destination.

Yes, you can do without much of this stuff. But do you really want to? Long term? Not many actually can. So you'd better have a pretty decent bankroll if you want to survive in the manner you have become accustomed to!
 
Apr 29, 2011
134
Finnsailer 38 Massachusetts
I only skimmed the OP but I find Pirsig a bore anyway. My advice to potential cruisers is always to go small, go simple, go cheap at first, and work your way up. Don't save all your life and then sell everything and buy your "dream boat" and decide to take off. It makes no sense. Like anything in life you need to start slowly, learn the ropes, get a taste for it and see if you like it. Experiment at first. Start out with day sails. Go out for weekends next. Spend a few summers cruising the Chesapeake or New England. Those that started out small, sailed for years on a variety of older and cheaper boats, and tried it gradually will have a much better idea of what they are getting into and what type of boat or type of cruising they are interested in. It might not be for you--nothing wrong with that, a lot of people don't like it.

By the way, don't knock the Caribbean or the Bahamas if you haven't been there. Ever been to the San Blas Islands, where the Kuna still paddle around in dugout canoes, live in thatched huts, and hunt for fish with sharpened spears? Pretty interesting area. Cartagena, Colombia, is an old-world city with cobblestone streets and forts that date back to the Spaniards. Or, you can be in places in the Bahamas where you are the only boat in the harbor, the water is so clear you see your shadow on the bottom in 20 feet, and the only light at night is your own anchor light. In any case, I'm not saying they are better than Europe or other latitudes, but they hold their own fascination for some of us. And, I have been north to Labrador, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Maine too. I like variety in my cruising.
 
Apr 29, 2011
134
Finnsailer 38 Massachusetts
Lets get real, it takes a lot of money to live comfortably while cruising. Note the word comfortably. Most 1st world people have a pretty high standard of comfort. Casting off on an adventure seems to be a good diversion from the need for comfort. Yes, for a few weeks or months. But few people can wean themselves off all the comforts of home long term.
I disagree. I find it is a lot cheaper to live onboard than on land. At the moment I am living ashore putting two kids through college, etc., but it is a lot cheaper for us to go on vacation on the boat than it is to stay home. I lived aboard for many years on a fraction of the income it takes to live comfortably on land. Heck, my gasoline bill for commuting alone is over $3000 on land per year, my heating and electric runs another $3000, my car insurance is another $1000, and winter and summer storage for my boat is another $3000. Getting rid of those four bills covers half a year's comfortable cruising for me, plus there's a lot more savings when I'm afloat.
 
Apr 19, 2011
456
Hunter 31 Seattle
By cruising I think a 3-6 month voyage off to somewhere warm would be good if not an entire year. I'm not sure if I'd get bored in 2 months or 8 months. Guess it largely depends upon how fast I go through the cash! To be clear- this would be something different than what my "landlubber" life is about. I dont want to take the same life to a boat. Thats not feasible with my bank account and I know and expect this. Internet 24/7? I think I could live without along with a lot of the other "Stuff" that we use to keep us entertained. This is largely part of the article though (for those of you that didnt read through it! )

As the author states in the article they wanted to do something similar. 1 year voyage and then come back to "home".
 
Feb 26, 2004
22,992
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
I think Tim's idea that your boat is your home is a very important consideration when doing this type of cruise, wherever it may be. Being on the boat well before ya go is also critical, from what I've read over the past 35 years! :)

I think their concept of where there is something they're bound to deal with.:):):)
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
Nancy refers to our boat as her little house on the water. She is very pleased with it. She has been encouraging me to get it ready for sailing and cruising this year. But make no mistake she also likes her home on the land with a half acre and central heat and unlimited supplies of water and all that enables. She likes her church and her activities with that. When we decide to go cruising we must understand that something's lost and something's gained but we can't keep it all. I have my shop, gardens, creative endeavours and my friends along shore.
 
May 23, 2004
3,319
I'm in the market as were . Colonial Beach
I think that Ross has a good point. Realizing that it is important to have time away from the boat as well as on it. My wife misses home conveniences when aboard the boat. Having a near endless supply of water and other things are also an attraction.

When you cruise for long periods you have to make compromises and sacrifices. I have been told it is easier on us guys than it is for the women. I see the point that they make when this is said.
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,970
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
Kettlewell
You are right, it is cheaper. No car payment, etc.
My point is that it can be much more expensive than expected. A lot of people have a vision of living nearly free. Some can make that work but most cannot.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
I have no car payment, no mortgage, no boat payment. Going out sailing costs no more than staying home. My food cost simply moves from home to boat but we still eat the same. Health insurance is our largest expence and that is the same no matter what we do or where we live. If I moved aboard full time my food cost would increase because I would not be able to take adventage of food sales because I don't have freezer space on board. At present my food cost for two people is less than 165 per month.
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,970
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
Ross
Health expense might not be the same no matter where you live...coverages do vary state to state, so it would depend on state of residency.

You prove that it CAN be done. My point was that it is very difficult for most people to wean themselves from mass consumption and living beyond their means.

One CAN cruise on $20,000 but you can easily reach $50,000 a year depending on how you live.

Your example of spending $165/mo on food is one. It's easy to exceed $100/week on groceries/household products for 2.
 

Bob S

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Sep 27, 2007
1,797
Beneteau 393 New Bedford, MA
Everything starts to become expensive when it continually goes out with no source of income. He/she has a deep understanding and insight. I know it's a dream to escape and cruise but I can only dream what it would be like and he/she knows. Very interesting insight. I wish I could buy the book.
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
My Health insurance is medicare and medigap and it might be possible to reduce the cost a little but for the most part it covers all of our health care expense. Eating out at restaurants is a major drain on a cruising budget. For the price of a dinner for two out I can cook for a week every bit as good as the meal we get out somewhere. Shrimp can be bought in two pound bags for less than twenty dollars. Compare that to a shrimp dinner at any restaurant.
 

RECESS

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Dec 20, 2003
1,505
Pearson 323 . St. Mary's Georgia
Growing up in Hawaii it always amazed me how many mainlanders got island fever. We had a tropical rain forest and they still could not find enough to busy themselves. I think you will always have a population of people that just cannot adapt to different living environments. Not saying that is wrong of them, it just is.
 
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