Help Produce A New Geocaching Movie
Actor and novice producer Jeff Galfer needs cash to fund his cache-inspired short film Buried Treasure. In a guest post for It’s Not About The Numbers, the American pleads his case and reveals how this hobby has changed his life.
Back then, I was on a job shooting a commercial for Bud Light beer when a fellow actor started talking about geocaching while on a break. I overheard the conversation and eventually asked what in the world was he talking about. He briefly explained the process of geocaching to me and my mind was blown.
I had never heard of such a thing. All around me there were hidden caches and people were playing this game and I didn’t even know it was going on. I was truly fascinated. That day, I went home and wrote my short film. After eight months of revisions, I finally had a workable screenplay and here we are today raising money to shoot the movie.
So why was I so fascinated? I don’t know. I think it had something to do with the fact that the act of hiding or finding a cache contained no ego or greed behind it. You simply hide something of yours for someone else to witness and that’s it. I loved that it was so thoughtful and yet so simple.
I started to fantasise about why someone would leave a cache and why they would leave a particular cache. I began wondering about the people who find the caches, why they go looking for them and what they get out of each find; how it affects them. Of course, I know some people play simply for the sport of it but I was more curious about the emotional aspects of the hobby. Could witnessing someone else’s cache change someone’s life for the better?
Two years ago I lost my father. He was the greatest man I ever knew; my mother was and still is madly in love with him – even after 40 years together. And while she was so tragically heartbroken by his death, she chose to appreciate the fact that she got 40 years with him and allowed this gratitude to slowly heal her wounds. I found her chosen perspective to be filled with strength and I was truly in awe of her ability to proceed the way she did.
Since his death I’ve paid a lot of attention to loss. Recently I read a story about a guy who met the love of his life (they were soulmates, each said) but six months after they got married, she began a battle with breast cancer that lasted years and ended in her death. She was very young.
I could see how my mother was able to move on from my father’s death but I couldn’t understand how a guy so young could live the next 40 years without the love of his life. How could he choose gratitude if he never got to experience a lifetime with her, as my mother did with my father.
And so that’s how Buried Treasure came about. I took a story that completely fascinated me and infused it into a hobby that fascinated me just as much.
In my story, a man has been dealing with the loss of his wife. We don’t know exactly what has happened to her or why she is no longer with him but we know she is gone. And just as he is about to give up on himself and the life he is leading, he comes across a cache, not knowing what it is. His chance encounter with this hide leads him on a path that ultimately changes him and those around him.
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