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*COULD YOU SURVIVE WITHOUT MONEY?
MEET THE GUY WHO DOES* *In *Utah, a modern-day caveman has lived for the
better part of a decade on zero dollars a day. People used to think he was
crazy *By Christopher Ketcham*

DANIEL SUELO LIVES IN A CAVE. UNLIKE THE average American—wallowing in
credit-card debt, clinging to a mortgage, terrified of the next downsizing
at the office—he isn't worried about the economic crisis. That's because he
figured out that the best way to stay solvent is to never be solvent in the
first place. Nine years ago, in the autumn of 2000, Suelo decided to stop
using money. He just quit it, like a bad drug habit.

His dwelling, hidden high in a canyon lined with waterfalls, is an hour by
foot from the desert town of Moab, Utah, where people who know him are of
two minds: He's either a latter-day prophet or an irredeemable hobo. Suelo's
blog, which he maintains free at the Moab Public Library, suggests that he's
both. "When I lived with money, I was always lacking," he writes. "Money
represents lack. Money represents things in the past (debt) and things in
the future (credit), but money never represents what is present."

On a warm day in early spring, I clamber along a set of red-rock cliffs to
the mouth of his cave, where I find a note signed with a smiley face: CHRIS,
FEEL FREE TO USE ANYTHING, EAT ANYTHING (NOTHING HERE IS MINE). From the
outside, the place looks like a hollowed teardrop, about the size of an
Amtrak bathroom, with enough space for a few pots that hang from the
ceiling, a stove under a stone eave, big buckets full of beans and rice, a
bed of blankets in the dirt, and not much else. Suelo's been here for three
years, and it smells like it.

Night falls, the stars wink, and after an hour, Suelo tramps up the cliff,
mimicking a raven's call—his salutation—a guttural, high-pitched caw. He's
lanky and tan; yesterday he rebuilt the entrance to his cave, hauling huge
rocks to make a staircase. His hands are black with dirt, and his hair,
which is going gray, looks like a bird's nest, full of dust and twigs from
scrambling in the underbrush on the canyon floor. Grinning, he presents the
booty from one of his weekly rituals, scavenging on the streets of Moab: a
wool hat and gloves, a winter jacket, and a white nylon belt, still wrapped
in plastic, along with Carhartt pants and sandals, which he's wearing. He's
also scrounged cans of tuna and turkey Spam and a honeycomb candle. All in
all, a nice haul from the waste product of America. "You made it," he says.
I hand him a bag of apples and a block of cheese I bought at the
supermarket, but the gift suddenly seems meager.

Suelo lights the candle and stokes a fire in the stove, which is an old
blackened tin, the kind that Christmas cookies might come in. It's hooked to
a chain of soup cans segmented like a caterpillar and fitted to a hole in
the rock. Soon smoke billows into the night and the cave is warm. I think of
how John the Baptist survived on honey and locusts in the desert. Suelo, who
keeps a copy of the Bible for bedtime reading, is satisfied with a few
grasshoppers fried in his skillet.

HE WASN'T ALWAYS THIS WAY. SUELO graduated from the University of Colorado
with a degree in anthropology, he thought about becoming a doctor, he held
jobs, he had cash and a bank account. In 1987, after several years as an
assistant lab technician in Colorado hospitals, he joined the Peace Corps
and was posted to an Ecuadoran village high in the Andes. He was charged
with monitoring the health of tribespeople in the area, teaching first aid
and nutrition, and handing out medicine where needed; his proudest
achievement was delivering three babies. The tribe had been getting richer
for a decade, and during the two years he was there he watched as the
villagers began to adopt the economics of modernity. They sold the food from
their fields—quinoa, potatoes, corn, lentils—for cash, which they used to
purchase things they didn't need, as Suelo describes it. They bought soda
and white flour and refined sugar and noodles and big bags of MSG to flavor
the starchy meals. They bought TVs. The more they spent, says Suelo, the
more their health declined. He could measure the deterioration on his
charts. "It looked," he says, "like money was impoverishing them."

The experience was transformative, but Suelo needed another decade to
fashion his response. He moved to Moab and worked at a women's shelter for
five years. He wanted to help people, but getting paid for it seemed
dishonest—how real was help that demanded recompense? The answer lay, in
part, in the Christianity of his childhood. In Suelo's nascent philosophy,
following Jesus meant adopting the hard life prescribed in the Sermon on the
Mount. "Giving up possessions, living beyond credit and debt," Suelo
explains on his blog, "freely giving and freely taking, forgiving all debts,
owing nobody a thing, living and walking without guilt . . . grudge [or]
judgment." If grace was the goal, Suelo told himself, then it had to be
grace in the classical sense, from the Latin gratia, meaning favor—and also,
free.

By 1999, he was living in a Buddhist monastery in Thailand—he had saved just
enough money for the flight. From there, he made his way to India, where he
found himself in good company among the sadhus, the revered ascetics who go
penniless for their gods. Numbering as many as 5 million, the sadhus can be
found wandering roads and forests across the subcontinent, seeking
enlightenment in self-abnegation. "I wanted to be a sadhu," Suelo says. "But
what good would it do for me to be a sadhu in India? A true test of faith
would be to return to one of the most materialistic, money-worshipping
nations on earth and be a sadhu there. To be a vagabond in America, a bum,
and make an art of it—the idea enchanted me."

THERE ISN'T ENOUGH SPACE IN SUELO'S cave for two, so I sleep in the open, at
the edge of a hundred-foot cliff. No worries about animals, he says. Though
mountain lions drink from the stream, and bobcats hunt rabbits under the
cottonwoods, the worst he's experienced was a skunk that sprayed him in the
face. Mice scurry over his body in the cave, and kissing bugs sometimes suck
the blood from under his fingernails while he sleeps. He shrugs off these
indignities. "After all, it's their cave too," he says. I hunker down near a
nest of scorpions, which crawl up the canyon walls, ignoring me.

The morning ritual is simple and slow: a cup of sharp tea brewed from the
needles of piñon and juniper trees, a swim in the cold emerald water where
the creek pools in the red rock. Then, two naked cavemen lounging
under the Utah
sun. Around noon, we forage along the banks and under the cliffs, looking
for the stuff of a stir-fry dinner. We find mustard plants among the rocks,
the raw leaves as satisfying as cauliflower, and down in the cool of the
creek—where Suelo gets his water and takes his baths (no soap for him) —we
cull watercress in heads as big as supermarket lettuce, and on the bank we
spot a lode of wild onions, with bulbs that pop clean from the soil. In
leaner times, Suelo's gatherings include ants, grubs, termites, lizards, and
roadkill. He recently found a deer, freshly run over, and carved it up and
boiled it. "The best venison of my life," he says.

I tell him that living without money seems difficult. What about starvation?
He's never gone without a meal (friends in Moab sometimes feed him). What
about getting deadly ill? It happened once, after eating a cactus he
misidentified—he vomited, fell into a delirium, thought he was dying, even
wrote a note for those who would find his corpse. But he got better. That
it's hard is exactly the point, he says. "Hardship is a good thing. We need
the challenge. Our bodies need it. Our immune systems need it. My hardships
are simple, right at hand—they're manageable." When I tell him about my rent
back in New York—$2,400 a month—he shakes his head. What's left unsaid is
that I'm here writing about him to make money, for a magazine that depends
for its survival on the advertising revenue of conspicuous consumption. As
he prepares a cooking fire, Suelo tells me that years ago he had a neighbor
in the canyon, an alcoholic who lived in a cave bigger than his. The old man
would pan for gold in the stream and net enough cash each month to buy the
beer that kept him drunk. Suelo considers the riches of our own forage.
"What if we saw gold for what it is?" he says meditatively. "Gold is pretty
but virtually useless. Somebody decided it has worth, and everybody accepted
this decision. The natives in the Americas thought Europeans were insane
because of their lust for such a useless yellow substance."

He sautés the watercress, mustard leaves, and wild onions, mixing in fresh
almonds he picked from a friend's orchard and ghee made from Dumpster-dived
butter, and we eat out of his soot-caked pans. From the perch on the cliff,
the life of the sadhu seems reasonable. But I don't want to live in a cave.
I like indoor plumbing (Suelo squats). I like electricity. Still, there's an
obvious beauty in the simplicity of subsistence. It's an un-American notion
these days. We don't revere our ascetics, and we dismiss the idea that money
could be some kind of consensual delusion. For most of us, it's as real as
the next house payment. Suelo doesn't take public assistance or use food
stamps, but he does survive in part on our reality, the discarded surfeit of
the money system that he denounces—a system, as it happens, that recently
looked like it was headed for the cliff.

Suelo is 48, and he doesn't exactly have a 401(k). "I'll do what creatures
have been doing for millions of years for retirement," he says. "Why is it
sad that I die in the canyon and not in the geriatric ward well-insured? I
have great faith in the power of natural selection. And one day, I will be
selected out." Until then, think of him like the raven, cleaning up the
carcasses the rest of us leave behind.

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