Resilient, Self-Reliant Life Is Hard, by Charles Hugh Smith

“No easy way to be free,” as The Who once sang. From Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com:

Every single thing that increases resilience and self-reliance is impossible.

This reader’s email cut through the clutter: “I’m seeing multiple sites and people that give great insight into what’s wrong with our society and economy etc but what I’m looking for is more information regarding how to protect and prepare myself and those that I care about.”

I’ve been addressing how to forge a more resilient, self-reliant life since 2009 when I published Survival+. More recently, I wrote a brief guide to Self-Reliance in the 21st Century.

But quite frankly, talking about a resilient life of self-reliance feels like being a street-corner preacher: few are actually interested in pursuing self-reliance, and even fewer are willing to make the dramatic life changes required to actually become more resilient / self-reliant.

The reason is that it’s hard, and it’s hard for several reasons. One is the work itself is demanding; there’s nothing easy about the work or the learning-by-doing. Second, in a culture and economy devoted to comfort, convenience, novelty, attracting attention (“engagement”) and status signaling, resilience requires swimming against this immense tide of marketing and “well, if everyone else is pursuing all this, it must be valuable, so I’ll pursue it, too.”

My perspective is based on systems and common sense, but it comes across as doom-and-gloom because we naturally want to believe (and be reassured) that everything we depend on is permanent and solid.

So let’s consider every megalopolis / urban sprawl in the nation, where the majority of people live and work. Cities no longer produce much of anything. Their primary economic activities are: tourism, entertainment (amusing ourselves by spending money), real estate (gaming the RE bubble), credit/banking (expanding the debt bubble), healthcare, the higher education industry (that lives off $1.5 trillion in student loans) and a wide spectrum of complexity work: marketing, compliance, work-flow optimization, insurance, forms / payments / applications processing, oversight, issuing credentials and so on, tasks that are necessary in an overly complex system that depends on the ceaseless expansion of debt to fund itself, but which produces little of what we need to live.

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One response to “Resilient, Self-Reliant Life Is Hard, by Charles Hugh Smith

  1. Most can’t handle that lifestyle.

    I love the Tom Hardy quote about how liberating being alone is away from the meatgrinder of Modernism AKA Clown World.

    Staying mentally prepared as it is the forest during the next plandemic LARP.

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