by pedalling_faster » Tue 27 Nov 2007, 11:39:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Fredrik', 'H')ow can you raise them to cope with hardships, lack of entertainment, cold and darkness, and to expect (at best) a lifetime of hard work?
a lot of what we call "hardships", people in other countries
consider delicacies.
in a condition of food shortages, a worm infested apple
might be useful food. so might organs from a deer that's
just been brought down.
but for people who grew up in America in the second
half of the 20th century, both of those options seem
like extreme hardships. at best we could eat a little
bit, and there's a fair chance it wouldn't stay down.
teaching children to chow down on food that is
healthy (free of food poisoning) but gross by Baby
Boomer standards - that's a definite survival skill.
"Dad, i turned over a quarter acre of our south
plot today. i am SO HUNGRY."
"here, son. have an extra helping of deer liver,
cooked in our solar oven. there's a bushel of
Gravenstein apples in the basement."
"do they have worms ?"
"some of them might."
"oh, Goodie. om, Dad, why are you and Mom
sitting in the back room eating MRE's and Pop-tarts ?"
"so there will be more real food for you, Son !"
"wow, i really am lucky to have such parents."