by FoolYap » Fri 09 Sep 2005, 22:36:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Barbara', 'B')ut yesterday I surrendered: the battle was lost. I decided I'll never ever talk to him again about PO.
Yesterday we were with friends, and he began to laugh on me, saying I want to buy a house, but don't want it here or there because of my paranoias and I'm always undecided. Everybody knew nothing about peakoil, so I looked dumb to them, wanting to buy a house but not knowing where or how.
I can't make any plan without his support and collaboration. I decided to drop everything: my garden, my storage, any little prep I made.
My family will be in danger after PO, but hey, it will be HIS fault.
My sympathies, Barbara. I'm fortunate in that while my dear wife doesn't seem to expect the passage of Peak Oil to cause anything worse than a belt-tightening, she takes seriously that <b>I</b> take it more seriously than that. Thus, we can talk about most any kind of preparation that I might be thinking of.
I don't think you can talk your husband into believing that this is coming. If he's not reading about it himself, then he's not ready to believe it, and especially is not wanting to believe it.
But that doesn't mean you can't make some preparations. If you don't mention "Peak Oil" ever again, couldn't you still have a garden? And can, and store food? If you told him that it was [1] your hobby, and [2] saved money and [3] would provide healthier food than what you could buy in the grocery store, would he still object to it? I'm guessing not.
My wife is smart enough -- smarter than me! in case anyone is thinking I don't think she's smart

-- to understand that when I talk about looking into solar-powered water well pumps, and that it'd be nice to not have to worry about not having water if the power's out, that I'm not just talking about losing power temporarily due to a storm, but maybe not having reliable power ever, or not having power at all. But she knows that there's benefits to having such a system now, because we have many trees in our very sparsely-populated town, and we do occasionally lose power when a storm drops trees on the lines. I just don't mention "Peak Oil" every time when talking about his kind of measure, because I don't want her to worry about my mental health.
Good luck. Please don't give up hope. I suggest just trying to concentrate on the kinds of preparations that can save you money now, or improve your lives now, and hope that your husband eventually comes around to your way of thinking.
By the way, I think what he did was seriously not nice. One should never air that kind of disagreement in public like that.
--Steve