Beautiful Existence

This morning on my Dallas radio show I shared the story of a woman in Seattle who has gotten some minor national attention for her resolve to eat every single meal of her life this year at Starbucks. Eleven days into the year she’s apparently on track.

The source story doesn’t say why she wants to do this. She says she’s not employed by Starbucks and isn’t making any money for the stunt but I suspect that’s her plan. We all remember the young guy named Jared who became a spokesman for Subway sandwich shops by losing a boatload of weight eating there. If this is what this Starbucks woman has in mind, I kind of feel bad for her. For one thing, it has already been done. And really, Starbucks doesn’t need any help. They’re so successful they’re opening new stores on both sides of every McDonalds in the world.

The other problem is that for every fru-fru croissant and muffin they put in the display case leading to the cash register Starbucks is still basically a purveyor of coffee. Jared didn’t get the best-balanced diet in the world at Subway but at least he got a reasonable portion of veggies and some protein with his caffeine and carbs. Ms. Existence may find her health flagging by the end of February.

Wait, I didn’t tell you her name, did I? It’s Beautiful Existence.

Apparently that is her legal name and if you’re boringly normal like me your first thought is that she’s a nutball. That’s what I thought. But now, a few hours later, it occurs to me that this woman, for whatever reasons related to her life experience, lives on a different plane than most of us. She travels to the beat of a different drummer. A drummer with a banjo.

My good friend Chuck Woodbury spent many years of his young adult life traveling around the western United States in a motorhome gathering and reporting the stories of such people in a wonderful monthly publication called Out West.  One story was about a young man Chuck met in some small town in Utah or Wyoming. The details escape me but I think this guy’s name was David. He earned a living as a dishwasher in a local cafe. He spent all of his spare time at home, alone, with one of those adding machines from the 80s that kept running tabulations on a long roll of paper. He started with 1+1=2 and proceeded from there to add 1 over and over and over and over and over again.

David had his house filled with carefully cataloged rolls of used adding machine tapes.

Before I left work this morning I wrote and recorded a radio report about Beautiful Existence  for use later in the day. It was a professional, typically sterile radio news story that proudly sucks all the reality and fascination out of life.

But I can’t stop thinking about Beautiful Existence.

She might be a nutball or she might be just a Jared copycat.

David, the adding machine dishwasher, might be a genuine looney from where I sit.

“Crazy” is a slippery word and though I don’t know any of the trials and tribulations of the lives experienced by Beautiful Existence or David the dishwasher, part of me greatly envies them.

They wake up every morning with a plan, they follow through and go to bed each night with a sense of fulfillment.

They serve nobody’s expectations except their own.

If that isn’t life well-lived, what is?

Post script: Beautiful Existence apparently succeeded in having every meal at Starbucks for an entire year. And it seems I misjudged her in my assumption that she was trying to get some big paydays for her stunt. Here’s a follow-up article about her achievement and her future goals. – DW, 2022

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Author: Dave Williams

Dave Williams is a radio news/talk personality originally from Sacramento, now living in Dallas, Texas, with his wife, Carolann. They have two sons and grandsons living in L.A.

4 thoughts on “Beautiful Existence”

  1. Wellllll – I don’t know that I’d go so far as to say “well lived,” but then there I go – defining those two words my own way. Maybe by their lights, it’s life well lived.

  2. I’m changing my name to Polypfree Colon.
    Nah, that’s too hard to pronounce, but it is a beautiful existence.
    The real test for any name change is to see if at least three friends can say it without breaking into fits of uncontrollable laughter. If they can – you might have a winner. Or you might need new friends, Moonunit.
    I think the Native Americans had the right idea. Name the child for the first thing the Shaman sees upon the child’s birth. Don’t you agree, Bear Buttocks? Yes, Broken Wind.

  3. Maybe it’s just being snarky, but I figure by the time Ms. Existence gets within sniffing distance of her Starbucks goal, and after many years of buying overpriced mocha at 60% mark-ups (not including tips), making her, soon-to-be, inflated Obamacare premiums might be a tougher putt when she glances over her dwindling checking account, and discovers there’s just enough left over for a box of Rye Crisp and a can of SPAM. Then again, with any luck, the federal government will end up printing money for that , too.

    Not exactly my idea of a Beautiful Existence. But HEY, I still buy coffee at COSTCO, and my doctor isn’t named … Seuss.

  4. Its like you learn my mind! You appear to know so much about this, like you wrote the book in it or something.
    I believe that you can do with some % to pressure the message house a little bit, however instead of that, that is fantastic blog. A fantastic read. I’ll definitely be back.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.