A generous scholarship allowed him to graduate university debt-free, so Adam Greenberg is grateful he could even say that his 20s were a debt-free decade traveling with intention through work with meaning.
It’s time we make it possible for more young people to be able to say the same.
We have got to reform our broken student loan debt issues and make college affordability an actual political priority in the United States. We also need to destigmatize and support trade schools.
It’s time we make it possible for more young people to be able to say the same.
We have got to reform our broken student loan debt issues and make college affordability an actual political priority in the United States. We also need to destigmatize and support trade schools.
For Adam, some of that work includes peaceful student activism (which nearly lost him that generous scholarship); helping rebrand the mission at TOMS Shoes; copyediting in The Obama White House; teaching abroad (and in the woods); art and entrepreneurship in the Gift Economy; touring the US on the Campaign Trail aboard a waste-vegetable-oil-and-solar-powered school bus; two proud terms of national service with AmeriCorps NCCC, helping to rebuild homes after Hurricane Katrina; and pre-COVID evacuation, two years with the US Peace Corps in Zambia – as the cliche goes, “teaching a (wo)man to fish” – as a Rural Aquaculture Promotion Extension Agent, Peace Corps’ only current fish farming post in the world; and following COVID, returning to Zambia two years later to see the farmers he worked with were flourishing and one had built his family a beautiful, new home with his earnings!
Also, edited some books for inspiring authors. Plus a few valuable early years in the restaurant and service industry.
While intention is important, impact matters more. Adam tries to remain mindful of the complex challenges endemic to efforts in development (aid vs. sustainability, resource theft and indebtedness, political corruption, the history of colonialism, the presence of white saviorism and systemic racism, the privilege of even being able to volunteer at all, to name – unfortunately – just a few).
It’s all a process. Development is slow. Change is (often) slow; the right kind has to be. Sometimes we ought to be reminded there is no “saving the world”. Similarly, Africa is not a country.
How we talk about development matters.
But when we talk about talking, impact may at times look something more like listening. (Often, actually.)
And then only facilitating the consideration of a different perspective and encouraging a community to recognize its own ability, to choose to do the work, together.
Or not. Based on their own priorities.
It’s all a process. Development is slow. Change is (often) slow; the right kind has to be. Sometimes we ought to be reminded there is no “saving the world”. Similarly, Africa is not a country.
How we talk about development matters.
But when we talk about talking, impact may at times look something more like listening. (Often, actually.)
And then only facilitating the consideration of a different perspective and encouraging a community to recognize its own ability, to choose to do the work, together.
Or not. Based on their own priorities.
A Fellow of both Young People For and PolitiCorps, Adam is also a graduate of Seth Godin’s altMBA, the New Politics Leadership Academy, the National Outdoor Leadership School, and the University of Miami (where he was directly threatened with suspension, expulsion, loss of scholarship, and arrest for his role in a peaceful 13-hour sit-in supporting campus janitors.)
During those specific instances of civil disobedience, Adam was probably most concerned with being arrested, but in retrospect, perhaps he ought to have been more afraid of losing that scholarship. Had he lost that very generous scholarship, this entire debt-free path – traveling with intention through work with meaning – would likely never have been possible. (But also, without that protest, would he even have had the same drive?)
For how many other young people is such a path already not possible?
Imagine…
Actually, we don’t need to imagine; it’s already happened – and still is – to far too many.
How short-sighted are we to strap a generation with $1.6 trillion dollars of ballooning debt while now expecting them – us – to simultaneously help tackle our world’s most pressing issues and biggest global challenges?
How short-sighted were we—the-old-we—to allow this?
And what are the-new-we prepared to do about it now‽
For how many other young people is such a path already not possible?
Imagine…
Actually, we don’t need to imagine; it’s already happened – and still is – to far too many.
How short-sighted are we to strap a generation with $1.6 trillion dollars of ballooning debt while now expecting them – us – to simultaneously help tackle our world’s most pressing issues and biggest global challenges?
How short-sighted were we—the-old-we—to allow this?
And what are the-new-we prepared to do about it now‽
Prior to Peace Corps, Adam lived abroad for 5 years. After 2.5 years teaching in South Korea, he worked as an editor and consultant while he and Lianne continued to travel – volunteering with help exchanges, CouchSurfing, and house-sitting throughout SE Asia and Australia.
Formerly an ardent dog-person, he now loves cats and enjoys making photos, videos, and time for the guitar.
Formerly an ardent dog-person, he now loves cats and enjoys making photos, videos, and time for the guitar.
I'M GRATEFUL.
Particularly for the amazing people I've met, befriended,
and worked with all around the world.
and worked with all around the world.
It's always people.
Thank you.
Thank you.
A NOTE:
This website has been a work-in-progress since 1999 and is just as much a personal archive for my own history, reference, and memory (i.e., the baby photos, journal from 1992, and kind notes) as it is public for any professional development, career resources, or guidance. So... enjoy the odd mix of stuff you may find here. Cheers!
This website has been a work-in-progress since 1999 and is just as much a personal archive for my own history, reference, and memory (i.e., the baby photos, journal from 1992, and kind notes) as it is public for any professional development, career resources, or guidance. So... enjoy the odd mix of stuff you may find here. Cheers!
And a disclaimer while we're all right here: The views and opinions expressed throughout this site do not necessarily represent those of AmeriCorps, the US Peace Corps, the Obama White House,
nor any other government agency, entity or nation.
nor any other government agency, entity or nation.
SOME OF THE PERSONAL THINGS
I like live music, chess, table tennis, speeding up audiobooks (which I get free from the library), dry wit and puns, checking off to-do list items, smelling orange peels (try it), chipping away at my "Swiss Cheese foundation" in math on Khan Academy, heights—and in that vain: rooftops, balconies, climbing trees, billboards, whathaveyou, etc--
I value efficiency and appreciate others who seek it.
I would be happy to teach you how to learn to solve the Rubik's Cube.
I value efficiency and appreciate others who seek it.
I would be happy to teach you how to learn to solve the Rubik's Cube.
I would also be happy to skydive and ride my motorcycle every day.
I love natural light, eating bread, napping in parks, and drinking clean water. And dogs.
(Dogs named "Bread" drinking clean water in natural light at the park, while I nap.)
(Dogs named "Bread" drinking clean water in natural light at the park, while I nap.)
On Pandora Radio?
"80s Love Songs"
Favorite band not from the 80s?
"80s Love Songs"
Favorite band not from the 80s?
I'm an ENFP and a minimalist.
And before I forget ;-)
If you like important books, here's a gift (three, actually):
(The first two are free (but would most definitely still be worth paying for),
the third is a strong recommendation.)
If you like important books, here's a gift (three, actually):
(The first two are free (but would most definitely still be worth paying for),
the third is a strong recommendation.)