ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
Do these Amish people you hang out with have WIFI? I mean, do they have anything? I just see a bunch of wood. Looting Amish tornado sites has to be the least lucrative criminal endeavor out there.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
I can 100% relate to this with the Hutterites. We would always see the "ex-comunicato" Hoots in the bars and working on the oil rigs in my formative years as the 18 year old boys would rebel and leave the colony. Once they made the choice to leave for modern society that is where they would stay and no be let back. Very strict way of life and culture as you describe similarly to the Amish. Its not always rainbows and lollipops.ffj wrote: ↑Thu Jun 12, 2025 7:57 am@Stasher
I do think one needs to keep the whole picture in perspective. While this is clearly an example of charity at its best, the reality is that these communities live in a hive where dissent isn't tolerated. Now I personally like the community because I enjoy the honesty they exhibit in their thoughts and actions, it's quite refreshing, but I am also aware that I could never come close to living as they do. My biggest negative issue with them is the practice of shunning, which is more common than you think and to us outsiders sometimes over the most trivial issues. The groups in the pictures above are considered progressive and I personally know several of them whose family have shunned them for their lifestyle, as in having no contact. It's crazy once you start delving into the whole situation.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
Amish, Hutterites, some Mennonites and similar brands seem to have built quite effective a cultural barrier around their community. Like it or not, but there might be a thing or two for eremites to learn from the way they organise themselves.Stasher wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 4:46 pmI can 100% relate to this with the Hutterites. We would always see the "ex-comunicato" Hoots in the bars and working on the oil rigs in my formative years as the 18 year old boys would rebel and leave the colony. Once they made the choice to leave for modern society that is where they would stay and no be let back.
I'd love to listen to a conversation between an eremite and someone from one of these communities. I might even know a suitable candidate from the Mennonite community.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
Well on that topic loutfard, I am subscribed to Peter Santenello on Youtube as I enjoy seeing him go across North America sharing what life is really like in so many areas from a down to earth perspective.
Last year he did a video with Titus (now 18 million views) that to me was ERE level to the extreme.
"Deep in the woods of rural Appalachia is a man that lives alone on his land. He grows his own food, has no government ID, his overhead is $140 a month, and he possesses a claimed happiness by being free from the system, inspired by faith. Join me as we travel into the sticks of Kentucky to dive into the fascinating world of Titus Morris."
https://youtu.be/Ir3eJ1t13fk?si=d9U8RI_g_oosnHu7
He had so many people wanting more info that he went back and did another video with Titus
https://youtu.be/BBXVSnegoY4?si=JqmIZR0Ui-Wo8Eav
Last year he did a video with Titus (now 18 million views) that to me was ERE level to the extreme.
"Deep in the woods of rural Appalachia is a man that lives alone on his land. He grows his own food, has no government ID, his overhead is $140 a month, and he possesses a claimed happiness by being free from the system, inspired by faith. Join me as we travel into the sticks of Kentucky to dive into the fascinating world of Titus Morris."
https://youtu.be/Ir3eJ1t13fk?si=d9U8RI_g_oosnHu7
He had so many people wanting more info that he went back and did another video with Titus
https://youtu.be/BBXVSnegoY4?si=JqmIZR0Ui-Wo8Eav
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
@loutfard
They organize themselves around Christ. Everything they do, everything they say is centered around God. That is the primary glue that binds them together with all of the rules as a gatekeeper to keep everybody in line. It would suffocate me living like that and knowing how independent most people are here I can't imagine too many parallels. Can you expand?
@Stasher
I've met Titus. Also a fan of Peter and when he made the first video I knew exactly where he shot the movie. I said, that's in Casey County in the Mennonite Community as I had been there many times before. The last time I was down there I drove by his place and there he was in the field with one of his horses so I stopped and chatted for about ten minutes with him. He's exactly the same as in the videos. I joked that he was wearing shoes that day as it was cold. He hosts a lot of people that volunteer their time with him as those videos had a huge impact.
They organize themselves around Christ. Everything they do, everything they say is centered around God. That is the primary glue that binds them together with all of the rules as a gatekeeper to keep everybody in line. It would suffocate me living like that and knowing how independent most people are here I can't imagine too many parallels. Can you expand?
@Stasher
I've met Titus. Also a fan of Peter and when he made the first video I knew exactly where he shot the movie. I said, that's in Casey County in the Mennonite Community as I had been there many times before. The last time I was down there I drove by his place and there he was in the field with one of his horses so I stopped and chatted for about ten minutes with him. He's exactly the same as in the videos. I joked that he was wearing shoes that day as it was cold. He hosts a lot of people that volunteer their time with him as those videos had a huge impact.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
These people have found a very effective way to build a community very different from the rest of the world in terms of lower consumption. That's super interesting to an eremite.ffj wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 10:04 pmThey organize themselves around Christ. Everything they do, everything they say is centered around God. That is the primary glue that binds them together with all of the rules as a gatekeeper to keep everybody in line. It would suffocate me living like that and knowing how independent most people are here I can't imagine too many parallels. Can you expand?
Perhaps some of us might want to go physically live near one of these communities. I'm aware that this possibility is not for everyone. LGBTQ people for example might perhaps fare less well in such a context. For many other eremites, surfing on these sects' less demanding "subconscious material culture layer" might be interesting, making it easier for an eremite as a bystander to spend less. Maybe some form of symbiosis could develop. Just speculating, some way of being a culturally-acceptable-to-them individual interface to the technology world might be interesting.
Perhaps studying the glue of their community from a secular point of view might yield interesting usable inspiration for ERE 2.0 communities.
Just like many eremites, I love my independence. I also recognise a feeling of suffocation should I have to live like them. But... even in that feeling, I recognise a funny similarity with what Joe Sixpack would say about an eremite lifestyle.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
My primary theological question to the Amish would be how does the concept of shunning align with the Prodigal Son narrative.
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
This is an interview with a ex-Amish who has helped people leave (or escape) from the community. He didn't see his mother for 27 years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PIha-_2M38&t=480s
Is it pronounced A-mish or Ah-mish ?
Re: ffj's Early Retirement (round 2)
@loutfard
I don't know that you can take all of the "good" parts of Amish culture without the motivating force behind their behavior. Every now and then I watch videos on intentional communities and the unifying force seems to be to work the least amount while enjoying the communities efforts to sustain you. They live in climates that don't require much heating or cooling, and their homes are a step away from hovels in many cases. Smart or lazy or efficient? you decide. Either way, I don't find it sustainable for many reasons.
A community built on efficiency as well as autonomy with the downstream effects of relative order, cleanliness, food production, and work sharing on large projects would be ideal to me. Basically everybody has their own home, maintains their own gardens (equipment sharing a bonus), takes care of their own families, but comes together for bigger-picture work projects that benefit the guild. Mainly community-building, creating those third spaces that forces you to talk to your damn neighbor. You could make your own community park, build a community center for everybody's occasions, a community commercial kitchen with storage for processing harvests, store shared equipment, hold community classes focusing on skills, let your imagination run wild.
Everybody is expected to be a wonderful neighbor. The golden rule exemplified would be the only rule, and if you can't abide by simple courtesies then well I don't know to be honest.
That's the problem isn't it? There is always going to be one asshole, or their kids turn out badly. The Amish have an iron fist, eternal damnation in the fires of hell. What would we have?
@Henry
The Jehovah Witnesses have the same policy. Either you are in or you are out. There is no gray area. Somewhere in the Bible it references shunning and that is what they go by as to them it undermines and compromises the ones who are on the correct path. Sort of like cutting a cancer out of the body.
@chenda
I've only heard Ah-mish. But even that isn't correct because everybody that dresses primitively isn't Amish. Think Anabaptist first, then whatever sect to which they belong.
I don't know that you can take all of the "good" parts of Amish culture without the motivating force behind their behavior. Every now and then I watch videos on intentional communities and the unifying force seems to be to work the least amount while enjoying the communities efforts to sustain you. They live in climates that don't require much heating or cooling, and their homes are a step away from hovels in many cases. Smart or lazy or efficient? you decide. Either way, I don't find it sustainable for many reasons.
A community built on efficiency as well as autonomy with the downstream effects of relative order, cleanliness, food production, and work sharing on large projects would be ideal to me. Basically everybody has their own home, maintains their own gardens (equipment sharing a bonus), takes care of their own families, but comes together for bigger-picture work projects that benefit the guild. Mainly community-building, creating those third spaces that forces you to talk to your damn neighbor. You could make your own community park, build a community center for everybody's occasions, a community commercial kitchen with storage for processing harvests, store shared equipment, hold community classes focusing on skills, let your imagination run wild.
Everybody is expected to be a wonderful neighbor. The golden rule exemplified would be the only rule, and if you can't abide by simple courtesies then well I don't know to be honest.

@Henry
The Jehovah Witnesses have the same policy. Either you are in or you are out. There is no gray area. Somewhere in the Bible it references shunning and that is what they go by as to them it undermines and compromises the ones who are on the correct path. Sort of like cutting a cancer out of the body.
@chenda
I've only heard Ah-mish. But even that isn't correct because everybody that dresses primitively isn't Amish. Think Anabaptist first, then whatever sect to which they belong.