Nov. 28, 2009. 5:15 AM, California, USA. I happened to wake up at 4:30 AM this morning and heard a very brief item from the BBC
about a Buy Nothing Day "festival" going on in Bristol today, beginning at 11 AM, Bristol time. Since Britain is 8 hours away from me, I thought I should get this article up as rapidly as possible as Bristol time is currently 1:15 PM as I write these words. I presume that the activities will continue until early evening. Everything is offered free ~ including food, drinks (non-alcoholic I'm sure), How-to workshops, movies, music, poetry, etc.
The idea is to see that we don't need "no stinkin' " Illuminati-controlled fiat currency system to survive and thrive because we all have EACH OTHER. And by learning to SHARE and take advantage of what is routinely discarded as waste (tonnes of food daily) and put it all to EFFICIENT application and use, no one has to go hungry or live without a roof over his head.
The treasonous NWO sell-outs in America and in Britain need something to lord it over our lives and to transform us into their obedient serfs: they need our COOPERATION with their enslavement devices, such as fiat currencies and a way of life dependent on the use of CREDIT.
Deny them them these control mechanisms, and you are no longer subject to THEIR rules. You don't NEED the Welfare state or the welfare government. You all have EACH OTHER and you have the ENERGY and DRIVE to fix the problem of an intentionally crippled and devolving economy--ALL BY YOURSELVES.
See the many groups linked below that are all tuned into the idea of SELF SUSTAINABILITY through sharing. The universal Law of Attraction is ALWAYS in force. It's simple: The More You Give, the More You Get.
Abundance COMES TO YOU as a by-product of freely sharing with others.
The Freeconomy Feastival 2009 takes place this year on international Buy Nothing Day, Saturday 28th Nov, in
Hamilton House
80 Stokes Croft
Bristol
and it is going to be even bigger and better than last year!
The entire day is FREE for EVERYONE and it all kicks off at 11am on the second floor.
Not only do we plan on cooking a 3 course meal for 300+ people (first come, first serve) completely for free, this years event includes the following gems:
- FREE DRINKS made by Andy Hamilton (author of the 'Self-sufficientish Bible') out of locally grown and foraged ingredients.
- Clotheswap and Bookswap!
- Talk by Mark Boyle on his year 'Living without Money' @ 3.30pm
- Other talks throughout the day (beginning at 11am) by people such as BBC's Fergus Drennan on Wild Food, Transition Town's Claire Milne and Ciaran Mundy on local food and economy, Alf Montague on Freeganism, Andy Hamilton on Self-Sufficiency - and many others!
- Bands and musicians playing from 6pm onwards - all amplification powered by bicycles!
- Free smoothies made on a smoothie bike
- Cinema with local film makers
- Freeshop - give and take for free!
- Free holistic therapies all day including acupuncture, massage and energy healing
- Bike workshop
- Skillsharing workshop!
- Creative Corner
- Dance workshop
- Other performances and poetry!
- The 3 course meal will be getting served up from 4pm onwards
- Non-alcoholic drinks and snacks available for free all day also!
WE DON'T ACCEPT BARCLAYCARD, VISA OR EVEN CASH!
If you want to join the Freeconomy, you can join at www.justfortheloveofit.org
If you have any questions - or even get involved - feel free to email mark@justfortheloveofit.org or on 0775 886 1783
Kids are more than welcome!
So come along from 11am onwards and enjoy a day where you can eat, drink, learn and be entertained completely for FREE!
Hamilton House has become a hub for radical perspective in Bristol.It warms my heart and energies me because it has been such a long time coming. I am an elderly hippie who hung out at UFO, Middle Earth and the Drury Lane Arts Lab in the mid 60s. Founded and ran the Beckenham Arts Lab with David Bowie in the late 60s. Was UK rep for the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music 2003-2008. Now I am starting The World in Winter in Bristol www.theworldinwinter.com My co-director is the mercurial Vic Ecclestone MBE who has worked miracles in some of Bristol's deprived Comprehensives. WinW will include free elements and we are hoping to locate the Festival Club at The Canteen. We are also on the lookout for collaborators -- so anyone who knows anyone who makes innovative, high quality music in and around Bristol, we would love to hear demo CDs. And anyone who would like to donate their time and energy to this fledgling project is most welcome. Please contact me via wwwtheworldinwinter.com Hamdulilah! Mary Finnigan
There is a tendency in the environmental movement to talk about 'saving the planet'; the reality is, the planet will be fine in time, regardless how idiotically and immaturely we behave. I'm not denying for a second that we're disrespectfully destroying all the natural resources and eco-systems that it has gifted us, to the point where it will no longer be habitable for us or most of the earth's other species, but even we can't destroy the actual planet. If the entire history of the earth - from its formation out of stellar dust to this very moment - was a twenty four clock, we humans didn't even get here until a second before midnight. That's how insignificant we really are.
What is at stake though is our existence on this planet, and the existence of other species affected by use; which, unfortunately, is virtually all species given the scope of our dictatorship on the planet now.
This is a funny one - many of us claim to want the world's dictators out of power so the people in the countries they oppress can begin their path to freedom; yet which of us at the moment doesn't exercise dominion over all of the other species we share this planet with. To a pig in a factory farm, where the vast majority of our meats come from, to the innumerable species that die as we flatten the rainforests (i.e. their homes) for some nice tropical hardwoods, we humans are what Hitler was to the Jewish people. Apologies if that sounds harsh, but we're all grown up now so lets be honest with ourselves about it.
So whilst we can't 'kill' the planet, we can (and are) killing most of the life on it. 30% of all species that were on the planet 50 years ago, before the worst of industrialisation kicked in, are now extinct. We are at a really critical point in human history now, and whilst awareness of climate change is high, I think the majority of people - most significantly our politicians - underestimate exactly what is at stake if we don't act quickly.
One school of thought is that it's up to the government to act, to give the lead. Another school believe that grassroots activism is the most important thing, and that no government today has the courage to take a serious lead on it. Whilst I side more with the latter, I believe that we are only going to make the required difference if we all do what we need to do. It's going to have to involve politicians, anarchists, religious leaders, bankers, freeconomists, Tories, Democrats, Lefties, Righties, the whole bleeding lot. You're in there somewhere I bet.
There are a few ways to make a big difference. One is through how you spend your money. Ideally, don't spend it at all. If the economy doesn't contract, our ecosystems will. It's one or the other. If you do spend money, spend it locally on things that are as low impact as possible.
How you spend each pound has become the new way of voting. It's certainly not a democratic process though, as George Monbiot says, as some people have a lot more votes to cast that others, and it is precisely those with the most votes (pounds, dollars etc.) that are the most unlikely to want to change the status quo. Having said that, how we spend our money (or don't) will have a huge impact on the market and where cash is invested, and by diverting our money away from destructive corporations towards small scale local people, we are giving the wealthy less votes to cast, meaning that those on lower incomes (organic farmers, craftspeople etc) get more votes. This could perpetuate quite quickly as you can imagine. We just need to give more votes to the people who we trust will also vote well!
Personally it is hard for me to advocate any type of shopping - I believe that buying our way to sustainability is like trying to shag our way to virginity! But the idealist inside me has regular conversations with the realist these days, and I find they usually come to a compromise. Not always though - sometimes it's important to have zero compromise on certain issues.
Another key way to affect social positive change is to support projects that are making a real difference to their local areas. Some of these projects are specific to certain regions, but I am highlighting them because I believe that they can inspire others to replicate them (or at least learn from them) in other parts of the world. Here are a handful of them:
Set up by Stephen Watts in Sheffield, Abundance consists of a bunch of volunteers who harvest the seasonal glut of local fruit - such as apples, pears, berries, plums - and then distribute them, often for free, to people around the city. Not only does this cut food miles to almost zero, and enable people to use less money, it also reconnects people in the city to the food around them.
The above stands for Growing Real Organic Food in Urban Neighbourhoods. Its aim is to increase the number of growers and maximise the amount of organic local produce in urban areas, and in the process perfect a model of best practice easy replicable in any community in any city of the world. Oh, and it just makes growing fun, like it says on the tin.
If you want to do it wherever you are, contact the founder Nadia Hillman.
I went down to see these guys in Bristol last week as they've happily agreed to work with us on making the *Freeconomy Feastival 2009 happen on Buy Nothing Day, 28th Nov in Bristol, and was amazed by it.
What they basically do is set up relationships with food businesses, big and small, where they take food that is about to pass its best before date and distribute it to those who need it most. Simple but totally inspiring, and run by the fantastic Jacqui and Pete.
Founded by one of the movement's real heroes, Rob Hopkins, this is an exploration into the head, heart and hands of energy descent. The idea is to take crises such as peak oil and climate change and turn them into opportunities to build closer, more resilient communities. It's likely your local community has already got one going, if it hasn't then why not go off and get one going yourself?
OK, this is a sideshoot of Freeconomy, organised by the Bristol Freeconomy Group, and is now starting to be taken on by the various local Freeconomy groups across the globe. It's basically this - you get one member from your local freeconomy group (or elsewhere if your local group is still small) to come along and show everyone else how to do a certain skill. So not only do a load of people get to learn an important skill for a post peak oil future, they also get to meet lots of other like-minded people, leading to greater resilience, friendships, romance (!), collaborations and god knows what else!
We've run this for the last two years now and have shown crowds of between 15 to 150 people how to do everything from Electrical DIY in the home, to how to make beer and cider, to how to make your own cosmetics, to reflexology, to how to make raw chocolate and bread, and even shown people how to communicate non-violently. It has become an institution here and it is free for everyone, always.
If you fancy setting Freeskilling up where you live, drop me a line, as we've almost finished a package that will show you how you can do it easily and efficiently.
If a project you feel really passionate about already exists where you are, try and support it if you have some spare time. If it doesn't, then take that passion and go set it up, and before you know it there'll be loads of people helping you.
What local projects inspire you? Or have you set up a project that we could all learn something from? If so, let us know, and feel free to give website addresses so we can find out more.
THE FREECONOMY BLOG is written by Mark Boyle, founder of The Freeconomy Community. Mark is currently living without money for a year.
*Everyone is welcome to the Freeconomy Feastival 2009, if you are interested in moneyless living it will be a perfect chance to see how it can all work. Follow the link in the blog for more details.
Comment on this Post:
Pat comments ...
A project that really inspires me, although it's not a free one, is what the Oklahoma Food Cooperative has done in encouraging local food markets: http://www.oklahomafood.coop
They give their open-source co-op software away free and will give any group that wants to start their own project a tour, information, etc. without charge. It's all volunteer-run and a lot of fun.
Quite simply, sharing is a most beautiful human trait. However, there does need to be an element of trust between those parties involved.
My husband gathers heaps of food from the bin at the back of our local supermarket. We share the food with another family, who do not feel able to go out to the bins at night.
What's in it for us? Well, they get heaps of lovely food for free and are made so happy by this (so this makes us happy). We feel good because the food, packaging and potential compost is saved from landfill and given another use. They see a good side of human nature and then start sharing themselves.
It was not long before delicious, piping hot meals started to arrive on our doorstep, prepared by a cook far superior to myself.
In our western world, there is enough for everyone and a heap more too.....
Why do we often cling onto our resources, skills and money?
Thank you Mark for challenging us to think about releasing this grip and embracing the joy of sharing.
Check out the Perth Really Really Free Market's blog http://rrfmperth.blogspot.com/
I am really really proud and happy to know that there is some one who is trying to prove that we can live without money by supporting and sharing with others. Being an business man i had seen life and travel all over world and seen how bad is our lives. every day we eat, sleep and die for the sake of money and nothing else. I will definitely try to do some thing for the society/people without expecting anything in return.
Not really answering the questions asked- but interesting what you've mentioned about dictatorship and later about how we'll 'save the planet' either through grassroots or politicians. Do you think an 'eco-dictatorship' might be the best chance we have at avoiding the tipping point to climate change? I have just seen Age of Stupid, we don't have time for little steps anymore... The pace of change we're at now is too slow! I feel something incredibly radical should happen. That 'converting' people slowly to a greener lifestyle no longer seems effective. I do believe in grassroots methods but it isn't reaching a majority of people despite us trying to work co-operatively. Fact is the few people who act have CHOSEN to and the only way the rest will is sadly by not giving them a choice... And it should be done now whilst we have resources and time rather than at the very last second when it becomes much, much harder. I know it's very un-socialist of me...so please prove me wrong! This isn't what I would want but it feels necessary.
The Space is a project to enable community use of the Bristol Green Store in BS3, so it doesn't just sit there as an 'old style' retail space but is a vibrant, mixed use space meeting the needs of people living around us.
Individuals and community groups can set up new social enterprises, run workshops, hold meetings and generally make themselves known from here for free. So far we've had Transition BS3 (http://www.transitionbs3.org) , South Bristol LETS (website to follow), and the BS3 Community Smallholding (http://bit.ly/51VoNE) use The Space for meetings & discussions.
This month saw the launch of our first Freeskilling sessions - bike maintenance workshops. They are one-on-one for an hour, just you, the freeskiller & your bike. In the session you learn how to maintain & fix the basics of your bike (make adjustments, change brake pads, change cables etc). All you have to do is ring (07790 759748) or email (info@thespacebs3.org) to book a session. Check the website for availability (http://bristolgreenstore.co.uk/?page_id=320).
We'll be running a full Freeskilling programme in 2010, on topics ranging from hyperbolic crochet to forest gardening - we're going to learn all we can from Mark and the team, and we'd love to hear from you if you live locally and are up for sharing a practical skill, no matter how quirky!
I came across this quote today as if in readiness for your question;
In October 1989, the novelist Ken Kesey came to New York and spoke to The Reality Club. "As I've often told Ginsberg," he began, "you can't blame the President for the state of the country, it's always the poets' fault. You can't expect politicians to come up with a vision, they don't have it in them. Poets have to come up with the vision and they have to turn it on so it sparks and catches hold."
Hello, I'm sure your project will make a great difference in people's way of seeing things. That's what called my attetion in first place, when I read about your story.
How can a foreign journalist get an enterview for a newspaper? Are you talking to the press yet? I am Brazilian and would like to explain the idea of freeconomy in an article. Thank you very much.
I moved away from glastonbury about 2 years ago, just as the transition town was really getting off the ground, they seem to be doing really well. I do miss many things about glastonbury, the timebank was great, no money exchanged, just a share of skills and your time just went into the 'bank' tho you didnt really need the bank for it to work, it was just a case of asking for a skill and them finding someone willing to use their skills to help.... i think it helps people who feel they want something in return for what they do and also helps those of us who find it hard to ask for what they want, without feeling that we have to offer something immediately in return. The glastonbury/wells/street freecycle was pretty good too and i miss that hugely, wanteds were perfectly acceptable. Where i am now they limit the wanteds to 2 a month i think it is and when i challenged this it caused a right hoo haaa and much unrest with those that dont like 'freeloaders' and 'scroungers'!!!I get the impression if you give away loads on there and your name is seen often then you are more likely to be the person who is chosen when you want an offered.
As i said i moved 2 years ago and have been like a fish out of water here, but my weirdness and unconventional ways are starting to open some peoples eyes here and just by quietly going about my life i appear to be making a difference! |Having been a bit of a ranter and probably righteous I feel amazed that I can and do make a difference by just doing........... I knew as I was approaching my 40th birthday this year it was gona be a good year and i now do believe, life begins at 40. lol x
This isn't about local projects but I thought what it says very much to the point, though not new, it's something often forgotten. I wish I had written it but I didn't, I found it !
"....there is an energy source that is being sadly undervalued in today's world. the power of positive thought. positive "vibes" warm peoples' hearts, light up peoples' minds. positive thoughts and attitudes do not leave ecological disasters in their wake. positive thought energy is exponential in it's growth. the more you use it, the more that there is available to share. the depressive mindset that dominates the media (and then people's outlook due to the pervasive and persuasive nature of the media) is so counter-productive. we face challenges. great, bring them on! shared challenges mean shared solutions. people communicating with each other, putting to rest conditioned and historical differences once and for all. utopia might well be impossible but that is no excuse for defeatism. I keep abreast of current affairs but do not let them detract from the simple pleasures that give me joy... "
Sandie- that sounds loverly of you and the other family sharing! just how it should be!! Bit like me and baby clothes! I am the queen of collecting and distributing them, lol.
Mark... was sooooo looking forward to coming to the Freeconomy Festival, to meet you and Fergus too but unfortunately my 5 yr old is definetely not well and don't think she'll recover for Saturday... but about the other community projects we had a new shop open in town.. love it! It sell all local food and the shop keepers are absolutely loverly and the window is full of local projects and festival/party type things (need to print a freeconomy poster for them) so going to check out the St. Albans Transition town.
I am 'full on' for focusing on all things local. This surely is the way to go.....
However, could global social networking (whilst it is still free) be the most dynamic tool that we have ever had at our disposal to instigate social change for the positive?
Part of me fears declaring its true value, lest it be taken from us, once truly recognized.
We literally have, at our fingertips, a powerful, peaceful weapon for change.
Perhaps, the last time such a revolution, in the sharing of information, occurred was with the invention of Johannes Gutenberg's printing press in the 1400's?
Let us not shy away from this amazing technology, but embrace it with outstretched fingers.
Hi Mark, i'm a new member joined today in our community. Iam from INDIA and an MBA graduate. Actually, what fascinates me is the idea that you have got of FREECONOMY, for its been the same idea or better we call it as aim to develop or to start step for a money free Society.What made me to think and have a thought over it is, during my graduation having seen all the problems in the local society..especially one thing happened. At Nerby town to my home, there happened a quarel between two persons for a matter of ten rupees, one person mudered the other to acquire that.How sad..we are living in this kind of society which is bindover by money,MONEY,MONEY..which we invented for our simplification of reaching our wants is now ruling the world. That too, every problem societal, personal..whatever it may be is linked with n around money, deleting all the love and the relatioships between human to human..cooperation. For money making its presence in world giving the means a "FORM", made humans more selfish afteral they found one means to hide apart greater than others to satisfy their wantss leading a competion , a cruel one destroying moral values between us..Corruption is reflection of same.This made me think about..if there is no money,then therewil be no corruption and made me think why cant we go with the ageold BARTER SYSTEM which was used when money was nowhere, with a beautiful co-operation. Ofcourse there occured problems in exchange of goods and they depending on demand and supply of same. It blocked my thought and made a ? n ,ind..how to overcome that? Why i'm saying all this to you is that how much i got fascinated when i came to know about your thought of FREECONOMY, the future one to make sure FUTURE is there for sure to future gen. with peace and love and never harmed earth. I came to know you only through an article about YOU and YOUR IDEALS in our local news weekly sunday magazine.Its gr8 and there wil be hurdles for sure to get succed to bring change in society,seems impossible for many, but the first Step has to be taken forward and you did it. We are here to make your step, into a march, followed by a Marathon all over the world..to have better of ourselves....
Me..as of now got a solution to my problem of barter system execution now. It is to plan for an exchange like STOCK EXCHANGE, both products and services. In my life further my everlasting aim of starting a money free society,atleast for the people of small village, has been boosted by meeting you and pool of friends havins same thoughts ready to share skills and space..Thnks...much more to go ...
I'm so delighted to find your website! I am sure everyone in my family will love your ideas, and plan to share it with them. I live in Alaska and teach anthropology (for a small amount of pay). We try very hard to figure out how to live with less money-oriented materialism, but I still feel caught up in the system too much. I found out that one of my former students, just ten miles away, is already a part of this network! I try hard to introduce all my classes to the possibilities of alternate economies, and the idea that every dollar is a vote. We look at a lot of world issues in terms of how our spending culture deeply affects people in other places. I will look to your website for help for good ideas, and will love sharing it with students.
I don't have a television but for those who do there is this. Message is getting out there ! Hooray !
"Throw Away Future: Tonight"
ITV1 Friday 27th November 2009 20:00pm - 20:30pm
Jonathan Maitland continues his 'living for free' series, and attempts to renovate a deserving family's home with discarded furniture. Following his campaign on food waste Jonny Maitland turns his attentions to furniture.
Every year we throw away 10 million bits of furniture and it's mostly destined for landfill. That's the equivalent of almost 30,000 pieces of furniture every day.
With landfill due to run out over the next decade, surely it's time to stop throwing it away and use some of that furniture again?
This week's 'living for free' challenge is to make-over a family's home using only furniture, fabrics and paints headed for landfill. Anything considered to be junk by its previous owners will be eligible material for the family's home make-over. With only one week to source the furniture and one week to re-decorate the whole house….
Freegle groups across the UK already facilitate the passing on of unwanted furniture, for free, to someone local that can re use that furniture, keeping untold discarded goods from landfill (and future incinerators). Freegle groups local to Brighton in Sussex worked with the production crew to procure furniture and all sorts of household goods that would have otherwise have been dumped at tips, but have instead have found a new home! Watch the show and see how easy it is to re-use someone else's junk and how good it can look.
The eco interior designer Oliver Heath agreed to take control of the design side of things, using his skills to give all the discarded objects a new lease of life. He is joined by a willing band of Sussex University product design students keen to put their skills to the test and find out more about sustainable living.
The ITV crew enlisted the help of local organisations and Freegle groups like ours dedicated to saving stuff from the tip. There are over 200 Freegle groups across the UK facilitating the re-use of unwanted furniture and in fact anything tangible and legal!
Hi Mark
I find what you are doing is admirable - I wish I had the courage to do the same. That said I must give you a word of warning with regards to your choice of toilet paper. In studies in Australia a high incidence of anal cancer was found in areas of the outback. The cause was traced to the use of newspaper being used as a substitute for more "traditional" types of loo roll.
Moneylessness might come about in one way or another. One person at a time starting with Mark is one possible way, but seems unlikely. Another way is one product at a time becoming free, starting with clean water perhaps, then a food item and so on until everything is free. Food and water are already free to those who are given them in emergencies and disasters, but someone has to pay, just like someone paid for Mark's caravan when it was new and many of the things I salvage, like food and clothes and many other things, but I pay for vehicles to go get the stuff.
***
The conclusion I have come to is that to make everything free in the sense of not using money or barter is to change the world one project at a time. A project can be a small local affair run on a shoe string, or a network of many such projects. A network would have more of the wherewithal to bring about rapid change but would cost a lot of money to set it up with everything it requires.
***
Logic, therefore, dictates that if all we can reasonably do is to set up local groups, that is what we should do in the hope of creating a network from them at a later stage. The Freeconomy groups are not really groups at all at this stage so don't fit the bill. Maybe we should vote to change it so that the list of members is worldwide not just up to ten miles. Will Mark allow it? Do all members want it? Would it make a difference?
***
Maybe the present members are mostly sympathisers rather than activists. What would make them into activists when their lives are already full with their studying if they are students or work if they are employed? Money would seem to be the answer. Bit of a dilemma then!
***
How can we pay ourselves for being moneyless? And yet we need to pay our bills. We cannot all do as Mark is doing. Those who disagree, go ahead, I'm sure Mark will welcome you to his fold, but will it change the world as we know it? I don't think so. I don't like to pull rank but I had decided that moneylessness was the way to go long before Mark was born, and I've been working on how to square this circle for almost fifty years. I live a part moneyless existence already but the food and clothes etc I get for free were made or grown and sold for money at some point.
***
To get away from money altogether it is necessary to own (have exclusive access to) the means of production of everything you consume, and contribute all the necessary labour. This could work if a large and diverse network of groups had enough land to grow all the food they eat and all the fuel they need for heat and light and power. This is my aim and I hope it is yours too. I have explained this to Mark and would like his comments, but it is the rest of the readers I am mainly talking to.
***
If any one of you wants to help get this network up and running then I suggest we do it together. I will be starting a local group here in Wales UK, near Swansea, and I'll co-operate with others around the globe. I would like about 25 of you to come here to Wales to form the core group. How about it? Are you too busy, too indispensable, too scared, too poor, too disbelieving, too ill, too old? If you would like to take part but from a distance, that's okay. If you are too poor we can have a whip round to raise money for your fare. Just make it known that you like what I am offering and say what you can contribute. If not us, who? If not now, when?
Robert - You can change your radious of up to 25 miles or for the rest of the members not just in this country but world wide you can come onto the forum bit of the site. I think Mark is just trying to really get us thinking more locally.
I don't think many of us can just live moneyless like that, well I cetainly can't lol... there's students, workers and... mothers... having children is a mighty expensive business... clothes can be handed down... shoes, unfortunately can't, lol. But it doesn't mean we just sit back on our back sides saying "awww... good bloke, that mark" whilst watching our plasma tvs and what ever else, lol. He inspires in even the smallest and simplest of ways
Living moneyless is totally possible, if you had the knowledge and local support, Mark's good friend Fergus the cute forager.... ( you might have seen him as the road kill chef) he was going to do a year on only wild food, wild food is FREE food... unfortunately he did it alone so when his back gave out he couldn't keep up with the foraging AND all the other things he had to do in his everyday life... which is a great shame! Which the same kind of knowledge of wild food like Fergus has I think it would be possible, unfortunately I am nooooo where near as good as him... really stuggling getting to know my mushrooms, lol... As for clothes... totally possible without AAAAAANY money involved... again it's a matter of knowledge... but unfortunately this knowledge is lost, like I KNOW it is possible to make stinging nettles into clothe... by spinning and knitting up or weaving but I've searched and searched but not been able to figure out HOW.. the only information I had was that in the ancient times they spun them... but no mention of HOW!! Same as I KNOW that corn can be spun into thread to knit with and is REEEEALLY expensive and fashionable... but altho I know it's made of corn... couldn't tell you how!!. And if all else fails... as a child I used to walk along the footpaths of my town, collecting the wool that was caught in the barbs of the fence when the sheep had passed. Also... back to the food situation... you can grow your own... I do... tho not as much as I could as I'm still learning what grows best in my soil... note to self... give up on the tomatoes... not even as if I like tomatoes, pmsl.
as for joining you, nope, not scared... would love it, not disbelieving either ... or ill... or old (altho I do feel it sometimes, pmsl) But it's a completely different kettle of fish when you have young children!
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