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PeakOil is You

THE Human Stress (es) Thread (merged)

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Re: 12 Ways to Stay on Top of Stress

Unread postby Newsseeker » Mon 30 Apr 2007, 08:32:39

This probably isn't a good idea and one which I am going to make an active effort to quit but a cigarette helps me. That and coffee. Please don't flame me for saying this.
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Re: 12 Ways to Stay on Top of Stress

Unread postby SevenTen » Mon 30 Apr 2007, 10:18:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Newsseeker', 'T')his probably isn't a good idea and one which I am going to make an active effort to quit but a cigarette helps me. That and coffee. Please don't flame me for saying this.

Ditto.

But we know it's bad, and need to quit eventually.

Won't it be nice to be able to fully deal with stress in a more beneficial way, than to reach for a cigarette, when TS actually HTF? Besides, all those cigarettes will be worth a hell of a lot of money to the people who haven't kicked the habit.

Smoking will turn into a LARGE liability in the coming years if you're a user. But if you're the supplier, or the mafia who takes a cut (if you're in government), it will work out better for you.
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Coping with the stress

Unread postby wisconsin_cur » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 08:09:48

Whether you are a hard core fast crach doomer or of long emergency/decline persuasion I think that we can agree that the future is going to very stressful on the majority of the people who are not the least bit prepared psycologicalty or materially. So I come across this story about a scuffle over a parking spot.

While it would have been comical to see (especially depending upon what the assulted woman was wearing) it bespeaks how many people will respond and it is not pretty.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Roy » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 09:19:57

I agree, it will not be pretty.

The innate sense of entitlement present in many of our fellow citizens has created a 'me first' mode of existence.

Hardly the type of behavior that will get us through tough times. I have no interest in living in or visiting densely populated areas because I get sick of the me first -fuck you attitude ever present in those areas.

I have little hope for the mass of Americans if there is some major disruption of our system and the status quo.

How do I cope? Limit my 'screen time' to about 2 hours per day, work outside alot, always trying to learn something new, focus on my kids, my garden, and my dogs.

Someone wrote on another thread "theres fuckall you can do about economic chaos" and that is a good way to put it.

I don't know what the future will bring although I suspect it will be quite a bit different than what we're currently doing. I just continue to learn and prepare as best I can.

If the status quo goes on for another 50 years (about as likely as me winning the lotto, and I don't play) then that means I can continue to live as I live now, which I like quite a bit.

If the status quo goes the way of the Dodo bird, all I can do is hope I"ve done enough to adapt and still be able to provide for my family.

My 2¢, which is becoming worth less with each passing day, or so it seems.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Ferretlover » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 10:30:54

Even for those who can see what is going to happen, this type of stress is one that has not been felt by the vast majority of people. Those who have or are living through war (bombs falling on their neighborhoods, armed groups shooting, etc) may be able to adapt to the coming crisis quicker, but we have all lived in socities dominated by what we were able to develop using fossil fuels and know no other way of life.
Analogy: Peak oil is like knowing that every other country is sending long range bombers loaded with nuclear bombs to strike us. Up until now we only knew the bombers were coming. Now, with the aid of binoculars, we can see the bombers approaching. A few of us are looking for bunkers, the rest are either picnicing on the hillside waiting for the show, thinking that they won't be affected, while the rest are shortly going to begin running around like the proverbial chicken with its head cut off...........

Jeezz, am I depressed or what??.....
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 14:26:17

I've never seen those sorts of squabbles in person, so I think they're rare. People are rarely rude to me in person, in fact, I can't recall the last time a person was rude, must be several years.


I've lived in the big city, too (Los Angeles), so I can't chalk it up to living a sheltered life in the country.


I think people will tend to become passive and sit around waiting for help, as was the general response after Katrina. Fighting and looting was rare.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 15:10:53

It's going to be really bad in the first world that's for sure.

I think the way to go is to keep a low profile and maintain surplusses of essentials.

The general public is already stressed and has a faint idea of what's coming. When the unavoidable reality kicks in severe stress will certainly follow. That combined with marginal state of health and finance will make for a lot of weak, sick and dead people rather quickly. It may become too overwhelming for most people to adapt to.

I think the saying is apt that you don't have to outrun the bear you just have to outrun the other people. IMO you'll be miles ahead of the people if you can lay low, live off surplusses and venture out to restock when the time is right. I think avoiding a very stressed out general public may be the best path and it's quite possible you may not have to avoid them all too long before they expire. Then again, we don't exactly know the nature of the bear we're going to be dealing with.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby jupiters_release » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 16:08:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '
')I think people will tend to become passive and sit around waiting for help, as was the general response after Katrina. Fighting and looting was rare.


Passive? Would active be attempting to swim out of a city through toxic sludge if you were stuck on a rooftop of a flooded neighborhood? The people who had access to clear unaffected roads, including the 50,000 held at the Convention Center and Superdome, were not allowed to walk out of the city. I think many peakoilers subconsciously try to downplay what martial law really is and how it will be used once TSHTF.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 16:17:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'T')hat combined with marginal state of health and finance will make for a lot of weak, sick and dead people rather quickly.



How will weak, sick, and dead people react violently, which seems to be what people here are arguing...that people will react violently.


How do weak, sick, and dead people react violently? Is it likely they will, or will they sit passively like the weak and sick people of Katrina? (who, jupitersrelease, were passive from heat and dehydration, not because of martial law).
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 16:55:17

Here, I'll give a non-Katrina example:

After the Northridge earthquake, violent crime rates in Los Angeles went way down. People were so afraid they wouldn't even go back in their homes, but instead camped out in parks. There was relatively little looting and no rioting. People were under severe stress (fear) and concerned with survival issues such as food, water, and shelter.

In this case there was no martial law beyond a dusk-to-dawn curfew.


Contrasted with the behavior during the Rodney King riots in which people looted even nonsensical items such as potted plants and beanbag chairs, because they could get away with it due to the general chaos, and because they were angry and excited.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Pops » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 18:52:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'H')ere, I'll give a non-Katrina example:

Just to interject my little experience, I was in Ventura to move casework from a jewelry store and sleeping in a hotel the night of the Northridge quake.

We had already fuelled up and were ready to go in the morning and happened to have a few cash dollars to buy a packaged pastry at one of the few stores that were open.

It was pretty strange to see folks down there walking or waiting in line for the gas pumps or the ATM or the open sign to light up. Everyone looked equally dazed without their 4-wheel cocoons.

And interestingly they all acted like people instead of the finger-flipping ragers the had been cutting me off the commute prior.

Needles to say we booked out and headed up 101.

It was lights out all the way to Santa Maria.


I guess it is the difference between suddenly finding oneself abandoned on a desert isle, (natural disaster) and slowly realizing your continent is becoming a desert island (ghetto).

I guess it’s a matter of timing the boiling of the frog-pot. A little to fast and the frogs join together and survive, a little to slow and they just get pissed and make a big mess.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Jellric » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 19:16:32

Having lived through Katrina my belief is that people will react fairly non-violently overall if they have confidence help will eventually come. Now people were hot, tired and pissed but they didn't go apeshit in my neck of the woods. Even though they were in a chaotic situation they knew there was an outside world which would bring help.

With peak oil, people will slowly come to the realization that help ain't coming. That is when TS officially HTF.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby wisconsin_cur » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 19:21:36

I can't remember the name of the phenomenon but there is a studied difference between how people react to a sudden state of stress: A (theatre catching fire or earthquake) and one that develops more slowly (a civil war, peak oil). In the first they tend to react like good citizens, no pushing or shoving etc... The exit the scene carefully, they camp in parks and crime goes down. In the second they ethnically clense their rivals etc... there is something to be said for the effect of shock on the mental state. Once the shock is past, however, people can behave badly.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby billp » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 20:18:17

You might want to listen, not read, The Road by Cormac McCarthy about what might happen.

Too many BS words to read, but a fun listen on THE ROAD.

We hope the feds are not coping with the stress we are trying to administer.

And settle soon.

regards
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Pops » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 20:47:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'h')ow people react to a sudden state of stress:

...and one that develops more slowly...

Yea, cur, those are my thoughts too.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby POAlex » Tue 17 Jul 2007, 22:49:14

This question brings to mind the Israelites wandering the desert, yet the LORD took care of them. You may disagree, but as a believer, this is what sustains me.

"Cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved." (Psalm 55:11)
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby wisconsin_cur » Wed 18 Jul 2007, 02:52:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('POAlex', 'T')his question brings to mind the Israelites wandering the desert, yet the LORD took care of them. You may disagree, but as a believer, this is what sustains me.

"Cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved." (Psalm 55:11)


Disclaimer: I say this as one who is also "a believer"

Everytime I hear this line (keeping in mind I live in Wisconsin)... "do you keep supplies just in case of a 3 day blizzard?" So far everyone has said "yes"... "So," I respond, "you don't trust God to provide for you during a 3 day snowstorm but you do trust him to some how negate the consequences of our own waste of the earth's resources?"

No good retort yet.
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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby aldente » Wed 18 Jul 2007, 04:01:30

Just recently we had a water outage here and it is astonishing how fast dishes pile up, toothbrushes run dry and most extreme how fast the water closet becomes useless (luckily we have a back yard).

The WC is the symbol of our civilization, let's face it, more pivotal to the populations so called 'dignity' and more important than anything else in the day to day vanity. Didn't they talk about a toilet aversion in the recent Paris Hilton case, never mind I brought that up...

She as well as we are just ONE flush away....


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Re: Coping with the stress

Unread postby Doly » Wed 18 Jul 2007, 07:01:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('albente', 'h')ow fast the water closet becomes useless (luckily we have a back yard).


That's why collecting rainwater to flush the toilet is such a great idea.
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