trevorallenvision.com

We can change the world.

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Photography
    • General
  • Podcast
  • Merch
  • Patreon
  • About

Fascinating geology abounds near the Sierra Negra caldera on Isabela island, Galapagos, Ecuador, May 2019

New Year Health Wealth

January 10, 2022 by Trevor Allen

As millions of people embark on their new year resolution journey, the importance of health becomes all too obvious. We take it for granted on a moment by moment basis, but it truly is one of the pillars of our existence (the others being time, and love/happiness). Would you trade confinement to a wheelchair for the rest of your life for a billion dollars?

My half year goals both revolve around my health. It’s so easy to forget what it’s like to feel good, or crappy for that matter. We adjust to the status quo, our recent health state. When we get injured or sick, we remember how much it sucks. Similarly, when we clean up our diet and increase our exercise, it can be hard to believe how we dealt with feeling so poorly, so stark is the contrast of feeling good.

Luckily the antidote to this complacency of sensation lies in the same practice that builds empathy: gratitude. Acknowledgement of the present. If we can reach presence together, the universe is ours to freely explore. 

January 10, 2022 /Trevor Allen
mobile blog

Enjoying a picnic underneath the Setas de Sevilla, August 2019

Weekend Course

January 09, 2022 by Trevor Allen

Even on a weekend in which I was active and productive, the stark discrepancy between a weekend day and week day is apparent. And the concept of a “weekend” is a social construct fought for and created, much as the our other preconceived notions of the workings of modern society.

It’s just a wild world. A result of choices and circumstance and luck, an evolved environment we inherit upon birth and have an opportunity to shape during our lives. Change the course of the universe we will, but how?

January 09, 2022 /Trevor Allen
mobile blog

The beginnings of a school outside Arusha, Tanzania, September 2019

Simple 2022 Gratitude

January 08, 2022 by Trevor Allen

I received a nice message today from acquaintances in Australia. We house sat for them while there; they went up to the northern part of the country, we took care of their cats, and it was a win-win. 

Full of well wishes, their note acknowledged that 2021 wasn’t the best year, as many hoped back in 2020 when the pandemic started (and when we were last in Australia).

That may well be true, but it’s also important to feel gratitude for the blessings we do enjoy. A simple cleanup of my living space has me thankful for my small home. While tidying up I reflected that I enjoy a life of supreme luxury compared to someone in the 1800’s. 

When we find that different perspective, we can feel this true gratitude, and it makes our lives that much better. Because we do enjoy a wonderful existence. We can strive for better, certainly, but we can also remember that it could also be a lot worse. 

January 08, 2022 /Trevor Allen
philosophy

The cold, barren continent of Antarctica, March 2019

Community Understanding

January 07, 2022 by Trevor Allen

Did anyone understand the state of the world way back when? Were people in tune with the general consensus, the overall value system of society, in the past? Because it feels like now, with pandemic surges keeping us inside and away, we prowl the echo chambers of the internet with little sense of how a lot of us feel.

This inquiry and general comprehension and empathy is the key to progress. Changing the world requires work and sacrifice and insight, but that can only begin after willingness to understand. It’s how our tribes first formed larger communities. Now that we are one large global community, it’s time we recognize it. 

January 07, 2022 /Trevor Allen
sustainability

Looking down from the observation deck on the Pearl Tower, Shanghai, China, September 2012

Anniversary Discourse

January 06, 2022 by Trevor Allen

The discourse about the anniversary of January 6th lacks nuisance, much like the discourse regarding the pandemic. The riot, or insurrection, or whatever we call it, was a bad day, a dark mark on our country’s history. Most people seem to agree on that. But we’re still sorting out where it falls on the scale of disaster. Was it 9/11? The war on Afghanistan? 

In order for us to move forward, we need to have an open discussion, and to do that we must listen to each other. Today’s anniversary provides another opportunity.

January 06, 2022 /Trevor Allen
politics

Admiring a rainbow through the rain last week in Maui, Hawaii

The Good of Wrong

January 05, 2022 by Trevor Allen

I’ve had this probably naive thought before, that it’s good to experience some negative emotions sometimes to help set the context for the positive and enable gratitude. A little rain makes the sunshine that much more appreciated, that sort of thing.

Through rapid technological improvements and slow institutional ones, our lives have become better over time. In the rich world, people’s lives are easier than ever before. It seems we’ve come to expect things to be easy, or painless, or simple.

So when things do go wrong, we can utilize that instance as a rallying point, a reminder of how far we’ve come, due to others’ sacrifices and hard work, and how comparatively good we have it. 

Because at the end of it all… we are alive. We inhabit the most wondrous planet ever discovered. We get to enjoy, in this brief spec of time we call life, the mysteries of the universe. 

January 05, 2022 /Trevor Allen
philosophy

The desert salt plays tricks on perspective in the Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia, April 2019

Education Skills and Values

January 04, 2022 by Trevor Allen

Coronavirus cases in schools have been spiking in the Bay Area, and the now age-old argument has resumed: how to handle it. I don’t know enough about our public school operations and management to have the answer, and it’s probably good to remind ourselves that that’s true for most of us. 

However, I do subscribe to the belief that our schools are one of the most important institutions in society. Education is the mechanism with which we improve the world across generations. It primarily teaches two skills: how to think, and how to communicate. It also should impart the values we hold to our youth; respect, responsibility, and resolve. If schooling accomplished nothing else, it would still be one of the most important elements of our civilization.

Let’s keep this in mind as we fight our way through the pandemic, and especially, beyond.

January 04, 2022 /Trevor Allen
zeitgeist

An underwater shot of the Great Barrier Reef, January 2020

Organization Evolution

January 03, 2022 by Trevor Allen

We all have opinions about the ongoing pandemic. We have different risk thresholds, different levels of comfortability, and different circumstances in our lives.

When’s the last time you had a discussion about the pandemic without someone with wildly different circumstances than your own? Mass media is designed to resemble an echo chamber, but we must fight devolving into such an environment in our daily lives.

The only way out of this, out of any of our problems, is to learn how to organize ourselves. We can overcome the most dire situations we face, such as climate change and inequality, by organizing. We’ve gotten better at it over the millennia, certainly, but the past few years have demonstrated we still have a long way to go.

Technology is merely a tool, not a solution. We are the solution. Our ability to organize more effectively will determine the fate of not just our species, but the fate of much of the planet, for centuries to come. The time is now: can we evolve?

January 03, 2022 /Trevor Allen
sustainability

A rare view of all Maui’s western peaks upon departure this morning

Bye for now Maui

January 02, 2022 by Trevor Allen

And I’m back immersed in the energy of the Bay Area. It can seem so quick, a vacation that blurs the days together. But the contrast between the sense of aloha in Hawaii and the urgency of the Bay is tangible.

Again I feel I learned a lot in visiting the islands. The people’s friendly smiles, the stubbornly beautiful weather, and the laid back atmosphere all compel you to slow down and reflect on what’s important in life. Time, health and love.. these are the things least replaceable and most precious. A tropical paradise can spark this realization, as comparably nothing else matters. I’m grateful Hawaii could show me that again.

The send off went the same this morning as it has before: one last visit to the beach in Paukukalo, a final wave to the mountains of ‘Iao, and a closing view of the island upon takeoff. Thank you again Maui, for showing me how to see. Bye for now, and back in the Bay. It’s 2022, and it’s time for us to get to work. 

January 02, 2022 /Trevor Allen
travel

Welcoming the new year with quite the fireworks show in the Wailuku neighborhood last night

Effecting Change in 2022

January 01, 2022 by Trevor Allen

A year is such a long time. I think about how many ebbs and flows 2021 held, how much growth and change happened. 2022 will be the same: we will look back on our experiences, on ourselves, with bemused wonder. “I really felt that was important at the time? That’s how my hair looked? Remember how it felt when…?”

For some reason, “one one” holds a sway over me. There’s something about the date that imparts a freshness, a clean slate. It’s the only day of the year that contains such elegance and simplicity.

I have tried to reorient my “years” around my birthday, as that more accurately reflects my time and my life. But the allure of a New Year’s resolution beginning on 1-1 is too strong. I have set myself 2 simple goals easily measured, for the roughly first half of the year until my birthday. In July I’ll reevaluate their efficacy and adjust accordingly.

It seems ripe however, for us to not only consider ourselves in 2022, but our species and our planet, our place in the universe. The pandemic the past couple years has shown that our actions affect others. Our decisions ripple beyond humanity, and extend to the overall ecosystem of our planet. In 2022, can we capture this perspective, and keep it present as we move forward? Can we resolutely take collective action to better not just our own lives, but all life on this planet?

I cannot help but feel we are heading towards a reckoning, and 2022 may prove to be the year we most experience it. Let us inspire each other to remember: we can change the world. 

January 01, 2022 /Trevor Allen
special day

Looking out to Molokini near sunset yesterday

An end to 2021

December 31, 2021 by Trevor Allen

What a year 2021 has been. It feels as we approach the very end, we’re all looking back in awe at what has transpired. 

I don’t have any hot takes to offer…but the end of the year seems to always bring plenty of perspective, to our own lives and society as a whole. What have we done this year as a group, how have we progressed?

Tonight serves as an opportunity to embrace our successes and learn from our failures. What can we not do in 2022?

December 31, 2021 /Trevor Allen
special day

The Valley Isle, taken from the car yesterday, Lahaina, Maui

Vacation Fluctuations

December 30, 2021 by Trevor Allen

I almost feel the point of vacation is to occur a little internal turbulence in order to spur a reset. Not travel, but a “getaway” vacation seems to have this effect. 

We deviate from our normal routine for several days and thus evaluate it, seeing it from a different perspective. It makes it all the more stark when doing so in a serene setting, one completely different than our normal environment.

I can take many things for granted, including the privilege of “going on vacation,” but am grateful for the opportunity it affords. We have this one magical life experience given to us…what will we do with it?

December 30, 2021 /Trevor Allen
philosophy

A turtle coming up for air in a tide pool near Napili Bay Beach

Open Waves

December 29, 2021 by Trevor Allen

Life is certainly never perfect, but I could feel the difference today when I was open versus when I was not. A warm tingling sensation deep within your chest exists when you accept all the universe offers. 

This means both the “good,” and the “bad,” as we so commonly view life through that lens. But when conscientiously exerting presence and openness, that dichotomy quickly fades. 

It dissolves into the most holistic reckoning of life I’ve ever experienced. Thank you Hawaii for making it easier for me to see this, and bringing it back to me. 

December 29, 2021 /Trevor Allen
nature

Watching cars drive down Haleakala last night amidst a magnificent sunset backdrop

Pachamama Feeling

December 28, 2021 by Trevor Allen

Can a white boy experience a connection to Pachamama in Hawaii? That’s what I felt today while driving back from the south side of the island as I looked upon Haleakala. 

If you go back to February’s blog articles, I’m sure it’s the same story as the past few days: my being moved by the stunning nature and spirit of these islands. I’m not sure if it’s the frequency that I’ve visited, but there’s an alluring calling here on Maui. 

Such is the nature of the Earth, and if we truly respect its power and majesty, we reflect on the effect it has on us. We belong to the Earth, in the simplest terms…if we can collectively appreciate this simple fact, life in our realm of the universe will prosper. 

December 28, 2021 /Trevor Allen
nature

Looking back down the Waihee Ridge Trail this morning

Living with Aloha

December 27, 2021 by Trevor Allen

How wondrous the islands of Hawaii are, with mesmerizing views and aloha in the air. It’s impossible to describe how different the island life is compared to home. 

But you can feel it, of that there is no doubt. It is nearly impossible to not experience gratitude here, for all the beauty and fortune, which is why you see so many easy smiles and mellow attitudes.

I hope to keep returning to Hawaii, to keep resetting, to keep growing. One thing I’m learning, slowly but surely: life is better with aloha. 

December 27, 2021 /Trevor Allen
nature

My first glimpse of the Hawaiian islands this afternoon

Travel on Boxing Day

December 26, 2021 by Trevor Allen

After the busyness and gathering of the Christmas holiday, it feels good to get away. I know Hawaii in December is very popular, but this is my first time doing it. 

The moment the islands come into view, you feel a growing sense of calm. Stepping outside the airport, you can feel the aloha in the warm breezy Maui air. 

There is peace here, with the slow lifestyle, the stunning beauty, and the sea. It’s a big beautiful world out there, and Maui is quickly becoming one of my favorite destinations. 

December 26, 2021 /Trevor Allen
travel

A strange Christmas Day in Hong Kong, China, December 2019

It is Christmas

December 25, 2021 by Trevor Allen

Christmas Day is something special, is it not? I relish the opportunity to spend time with the tribe. 

The day is supposed to be about gratitude, and even when it’s hard, it’s important to find it. We come together to congregate for nothing else except each other. 

Is there anything else better? On Christmas Day, I think it speaks for itself. 

December 25, 2021 /Trevor Allen
special day

Dubrovnik, Croatia is beautiful and alluring from any angle, September 2019

Christmas Eve Reflections

December 24, 2021 by Trevor Allen

I was telling my wife today that I remember December 24th being the most charged day of the year when I was young. All the anticipation and excitement for Christmas crescendoed into the day before, which was also an important family gathering time. 

While the year and recent events have been trying for me and my family in some ways, I’m extremely grateful to gather with them once again today. I hope we can all appreciate our families and how important it is to come together. 

And while there’s still tomorrow, Christmas Eve still evokes presence and reflection. Merry Christmas, and may we all enjoy the company and love of our tribes. 

December 24, 2021 /Trevor Allen
special day

Tracing the southernmost coastline of the continent near Cape Town, South Africa, August 2010

End of Year Times

December 23, 2021 by Trevor Allen

The holidays have always afforded me more time for introspection and reflection. There’s something about this time of year that brings about deeper consideration.

I’ve often wondered how much the proximity of Christmas and the New Year affects anything. We come together with our families to celebrate the most important holiday (in mainstream American culture), and then immediately “end” the year and begin anew. 

This pastime has been altered two years in a row already with the pandemic. In the third year, let’s spend time with our tribe, cherish the good we do enjoy, and rejuvenate for more work to be done in 2022. 

December 23, 2021 /Trevor Allen
zeitgeist

Penguins upon penguins on the island of South Georgia, March 2019

Embracing Immaturity

December 22, 2021 by Trevor Allen

Do the holidays or seasons change as we get older? Or do we just continually adapt to changing circumstances as time goes on?

I’m not sure when we’re supposed to feel sophisticated and mature. Every passing year I feel more outside the age I’m supposed to act. 

But from a naive perspective, we see the possibility in the world. Life is full of wonder, and when we embrace our inner child, we can see it clearly. 

December 22, 2021 /Trevor Allen
mobile blog
  • Newer
  • Older