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posted by [personal profile] ebonypearl at 10:01pm on 11/04/2009

Learn, lose, love

Learn something you can use to provide for yourself or others: sewing, brewing, gardening, raising bees or chickens, or something similar. Learn it well enough to have others willing to barter for it, well enough to survive off it. This is something I've spoken about before, many times before. This whole blog is filled with tips, hints, and instructions on how to do a great many things. You don't have to be able to do everything yourself; just something others will want enough to trade something they do that you might want.

Lose something you may think you need, but is really only something a modern industrial lifestyle seems to demand, a “keeping up with the Joneses sort of thing, or a constant seeking to upgrade to newer, bigger, more expensive. From recycling, repairing, re-using, keeping the old for its entire lifetime (did you know the average car is generally good for 20 -25years instead of 3?), or eliminating it from your life entirely. Whether it's keeping your car longer, moving to a smaller home, finding work closer to home, or something else that takes up an excessive amount of your time,money,effort, or resources.

Love something well enough to save it. That which survived through the Dark Ages were the things people cared enough to save – cultural traditions, literature, music, philosophical thoughts, science, and technology. Think of your own passions and ways you could ensure they are saved for future generations. Some things will survive because a lot of people will work to save it and pass it on to their children and other descendants – brewing comes to mind. Other things are less common – ham radio, the internet, electricity, modern health care. What do you want to save, and what steps will you take to make sure it will still exist 100 years from now, or 200?

Three things. Just three small things you could do at any time to prepare not just for your personal future, but for a distant future as well. So, think about it. What do you want to learn, lose or love for that future?

There are 3 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] chipmunk-planet.livejournal.com at 03:46pm on 12/04/2009
I've learned a lot of new things in the last year, but the new thing I want to learn is something called Backyard Orchard Culture (http://www.davewilson.com/homegrown/BOC_explained.html).

Hmm ... as far as losing something ... I may need to start moving the amount of time I spend online more towards RL.

Love something enough to save it ... well, that's where I'm going with my genealogy and investigations into Creole culture/language. My culture was taken from me; I hope a tiny part can be reclaimed for my children. Also my interests in alternative health, I guess.
 
posted by [identity profile] madwriter.livejournal.com at 12:09am on 14/04/2009
>>Love something well enough to save it. That which survived through the Dark Ages were the things people cared enough to save – cultural traditions, literature, music, philosophical thoughts, science, and technology.<<

This is a big part of the reason why I have so many books--and didn't want to live with them in a city. :/ For years my top two acquisition rules when it came to books were (1) Do I want to read this?, and (2) Is this worth saving in case of a collapse?

Of course I know in a bad collapse there's a better than even chance the books won't make it through, or I might have to abandon them. But as long as there's a chance of preserving them, then I'll fight for them.
 
posted by [identity profile] madwriter.livejournal.com at 12:12am on 14/04/2009
I should add that #2 has very often trumped #1 over the years. I have books I bought under Rule #2 years ago that I still haven't read yet but considered worth preserving.

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