by medicvet » Tue 08 Nov 2005, 21:29:47
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')eems like our only two options is to arm and defend our pile or sit idlely then raid. I say there is a third option, if TSHF we will need people of optimistic charicter to pull it together as Winston Churchill and the British did. Start planning to adapt and be ready to help others.
Thank you, Praire Mule, for reminding people that there IS more than two options to most scenarios, this one in particular! It WOULD take a fellow Okie to do it, too.

When I moved to Oklahoma from California in 2000 in a kind of 'reverse grapes of wrath' move (Mom was born in Durant, tho.), I spent my first winter here during the bad 'holiday ice storm' of 00/01 in a small town, and found that during a time of crisis, at least here anyways, people DO band together and try to find ways to help one another. I was very impressed. It was a big difference from when I was near enough to ground zero to be pretty shaken up by the Northridge quake, and lived in a city, but aside from my family, still felt alone. So I don't know if it is the state or being in a small town that made the difference, but either way, it did bring home how right my decision had been to move.
I am 39 years old, and like many others, grew up under the shadow of the bomb. The only 'education' I ever remember receiving while growing up that would come even close to teaching about peak oil was one of those 'schoolhouse rock' videos about energy.
My Dad had worked most of his life as a gas tester for a natural gas plant, and when that cartoon would come on, would just roll his eyes, and tell me that there was nothing to worry about, because there was plenty of oil, so I thought nothing further about it until this year, when another message board site I go to had a thread about peak oil, and I was so curious that I did some googling, and now here I am.
I am convinced that peak oil is very real, and that we are running out of time very quickly, and that the days of cheap affordable oil will be ending soon. I have had discussions with my Dad about this since I learned about this a few months ago, and am amazed sometimes at the paradox that is my Dad.
On the one hand, he says that yes, we will eventually run out of oil, but that time is many decades away, and not to worry about it. On the other hand, a year after I moved to OK, he did too, and now lives on a place with ten acres, three horses, and is planting dozens of fruit trees. When I ask him, he says that is his retirement to do as he sees fit, but I know it is more than that when he lets things slip, like asking how much food I have stored up, and letting me know he actually has a gun in the house, when he has never before in his life had a weapon, and is pretty liberal in most of his thinking. And when I try to figure out what is going on in his head, the only thing I can come up with is that he realizes how real the major change we are about to experience is, and yet he doesn't want to talk about it or even think about it at a certain level, I guess.
Now me, while I have PTSD symptoms, I do like to face my fears head on when I can, and when they are something I can actually DO something about like in this instance, then I do what I can, when I can. I do have some food stored up, some bleach, and plan on getting some large containers of water too. Next spring I plan on starting my first garden, and hopefully the shit won't hit the fan this coming year, because I have always had a 'black thumb', and only the fact that I finally managed to not only keep alive but have thriving an indoor plant, and the necessity of learning to grow my own food if needs be to live on have made me decide to give it a shot, but I would be mightily surprised if I got anything near the effort I am going to put into it this spring back out of this garden. But that's okay, the year after that I hopefully do better as I might have learned from some of my mistakes.
I'm also trying to educate myself as much as I can, both on peak oil, and on practical matters like how to be more self sufficient..not just gardening, but I want to learn how to make my own small traps, and even though I swore I would never do it again if I didn't have to (and there have been a few times I HAVE had too, like being in the presence of somene having a heart attack, at a hunting accident, and being first to drive by at a car wreck, stuff like that), being a medic is something I am, and again, will do what I can, when I can.
I can see a point possibly arising in the future when that might be more in demand than in has been since I got out of the Army, so part of my 'education' is also going to be getting caught up on any advances there have been in the past decade in first aid techniques, and also getting whatever medical supplies I can on hand as well. I already have a few boxes of bandages (long story, heh) and next is getting a lot of rubbing alcohol and hyrdrogen peroxide, as they are relatively cheap and I can get a lot of them for not a lot of money.
For me, doing what I can, when I can, and trying not to worry about the rest isn't just a motto, it's a lifestyle, and how I manage to cope, especially after the shock of realizing about peak oil, and the frustration of realizing how few people WANT to realize.
Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe.-H.G. Wells
The only basis for a nation’s prosperity is a religious regard for the rights of others. - ISOCRATES