steveo73 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 03, 2022 10:41 pm
Detail it out.
steveo73 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 04, 2022 6:17 pm
Of course not but if you can't detail it out it's not a valid plan.
***
There is still no detailed plan.
For the sake of this discussion I'm going to assume these are sincere requests on your part. And as I said above, this isn't likely a "plan" for you, as we're not likely to agree as to what the ends are/should be.
- Marry young, and marry someone from your hometown from a good family from the same church as you and your family.
- Don't leave your hometown.
- Don't go to college.
- Don't use birth control.
- Have lots of children.
- Homeschool your kids.
- Avoid organized sports for your kids, or other organized "pay-to-play" activities.
- Don't own a TV or pay for any "entertainment" other than books.
- Play an instrument and make your own music.
- Paint and make your own art.
- Write your own prose and poetry and histories and plays.
- Learn every card game worth playing and invent some of your own, and play cards (and chess) as your primary form of leisure activity.
- Surround yourself with family, including 1st, 2nd, 3rd cousins, etc., and with those handful of like-minded non-family neighbors that time has convinced you are worthy of friendship.
- Don't read anything written after 1900 until you've read everything that has been preserved that was written before 1900.* Start at the beginning and work your way through chronologically.
- As much as possible, only eat and drink what you've made with your own hands or what you've received from family or bartered for with neighbors.
- Avoid using cash as much as humanly possible.
- Avoid debt always, and don't participate in usury, either as a usurer or a usuree.
- Lift weights and don't be a glutton.
- Avoid the health care system as much as humanly possible, like for anything short of traumatic injury.
- Don't invest in the stock market, in any form, and especially don't invest in any restricted "tax-advantaged" account that will use your money to pay for the pensions of strangers a decade or 4 older than you, who won't be around to return the favor when the government finally grants you access to your money (if anything is left).
- Don't travel anywhere that requires anything more than a couple hours in the car.
- Don't trust anyone with anything you value who isn't
both family and a short car ride away.
- If you're not already "landed" when you start your family, then seek employment and work only so long as necessary to buy land and make it productive.
- Productive means:
Hristo Botev wrote: ↑Tue Jan 04, 2022 9:44 am
Vegetable farming, livestock, orchards, rental homes, hunting leases, hay and tree harvesting, AirBnBs, Harvest Hosts, RV park, trailer park, special event facility, any number of businesses built around giving urbanites a chance to be "country" for a day (skeet shooting, dirt bike/BMX tracks, etc. . . .); I'm sure there are many, many other options.
- For any cash that comes your way: (a) stock up on pantry items; (b) buy books; (c) invest it in your land (e.g., more fruit trees); (d) invest it in businesses you own; (e) invest it in businesses owned by those family members who are also neighbors who you also think are competent; (f) buy more land.
- For any more cash that comes your way not already spent on (a)-(f), I guess silver makes more sense than sticking it under your mattress. But I don't know, I'm not there yet.
- Keep your kids close--horses are a good way to do that with daughters; hunting is a good way to do that with sons; make clear always the expectation that you and your spouse have that the reason you are working your ass off caring for your land is because it will be theirs one day, and that if they ever sell it you will come back from the dead and haunt them incessantly.
Remember always that you are a participant in the Theo Drama; the Ego Drama is boring and sad and pathetic and gross and degenerate.
*Exceptions should of course be made for the likes of Wendell Berry and Paul Kingsnorth; likely some others.
ETA: Maybe keep a TV in the basement or something so that you can watch episodes of the Office or Office Space or whatever from time to time so that your kids will learn that, yes, some ways of living are in fact objectively and universally better than other ways of living.