I can't wait. Every weekday is pure torture. I am not cut out for office existence or being "part of the machine." I am happiest being outside, doing manual labor, but I've been squeezed into this office existence because you can't make a living doing honest outside labor any more.
My fervent prayer of Peak Oil is to bring down the pigs and make it so that outside work is again "a real job."
It was a big bait and switch.
We were all suckered into modern existence, and once the die was cast and there was no going back, they snatched away the benefits of modern existence from us and turned us into their slaves.
They are micromanaging our lives, but what's really amusing is
what a bad job they are doing of it!
They are really making a hash of it! I think it's because they are in a bubble and believe that the outside world doesnt' affect them.
Yet they insist on CONTROL CONTROL CONTROL!
With control comes responsibility. They are missing that big point.
It's going to be hell on earth for several years. This tortured office existence is going to seem like HEAVEN in comparison.
But it has to happen. It's a HELL we must endure, and try to survive.
People will be a lot nicer after it. Right now they are so full of their self importance. They fancy themselves aristocrats, or "little emperors."
I think that when TSHTF these very self important people will have little qualms about committing armed robbery and murder. They will trade their Armani suit robbery violent banditry in a blink of an eye.
That's right. Wall Street broker types will be making armed raids on farms or anyone they think has something they want. It's already part of their ethic, and that's why we are in this mess.
The elites have become a culture of criminal bandits, answerable to no law.
Of course this will mean civil war in the midst of starvation and chaos.
Thinking it through like this makes it way more scary than just fantasizing about not commuting any more.
By the way, for all you farmers out there, I highly recommend "One Straw Revolution" by Masanobu Fukuoka. Turns out you can grow 1000 pounds of grain on a quarter acre.