Saturday, October 4, 2008

Self-sufficient

A mere seventy or eighty years ago most of our ancestors grew and preserved there own food, livestock roamed the pasture that provided fresh meat, milk and eggs, and they could go months without visiting the local "store". Have you ever thought why we call the "store" the "store"? A place where things were "stored" until we needed them! Our ancestors did amazing things. I recall my stepfather telling the story of how they went down to the Snake River in the winter and cut blocks of ice and took them to the barn, covered them with straw so they could have ice blocks for the ice box all summer long! As good as they were, they still had an awful struggle during the Great Depression.
How would we fare today? We frequent the "store" almost daily because we fail to "store" at home. We have no family farm, no gardens, no home-preserved foods, and no livestock. We can hardly cook because we eat out several times a week. We are so busy doing less important things!
How would you survive another Great Depression. Imagine your family on a cash basis. Imagine the mortgage company and the tax assessor breathing down your neck. Imagine shortages at the "store" and gas station. Imagine yourself unemployed. Do I have your attention yet?
We have been counseled for decades to have sufficient food, water, fuel, and clothing to be self-sufficient for a length of time. Look around. Where can you improve? Where should you focus your attention? Maybe we should spend less time at the ball field or golf course and spend more time learning to garden, to change the oil in the car and to sew. How long can you go without going to the "store" when the "store" isn't at your house. We need to ask ourselves some hard questions.
This country has worked itself into a bad situation where our oil and gas supply comes from outside our borders. We now are dependent upon those countries and governments for fuel. We are at their mercy. Likewise, we, as individuals, look to ourside our borders (homes) for fuel (food). We are dependent and at the mercy of society for food and supplies, unlike our ancestors who were producers instead of consumers. How would we do in another Great Depression? Look to your own home and you will see the answer.

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