by bodigami » Sat 31 May 2008, 23:01:51
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'T')hink about how YOU came to peak oil. Think about if someone else had tried to push you to it. Would you have resisted? It's something you should ask yourself
This is a BIG deal, and people really need to come to their own understanding of it. With that said, I find that my wife is coming around more and more to see what I see, but it has been a gradual process.
If you love your partner, respect their view of the world and the future. When it comes to the future, no one knows for sure what will happen. Just make your case in a clear and respectful way and don't go doomer on them. Doomer rants are a turnoff to others, no matter how much fun they are for you (unless you happen to be talking to another doomer, in which case it's great fun for both of you).
I have a theory about a person's predisposition to believe in doom scenarios, and it has to do with the years of a person's life between ages 5 and 10, along with the age of the parents.
My theory is that the economic climate during the time period between ages 5 and 10 will have about a 66% determinant effect on one's predisposition to believe in doom as an adult, and the remaining 33% is determined by the economic climate during the parents' childhood.
For me, the doom stars are in almost perfect alignment.
I was age 5-10 in 1975-1980, a truly depressing and doomalicious period.
My parents' childhood was the mid to late 1930s for my mother and the late 1930s to early 1940s for my dad, so they each had been exposed to lots of doomishness as kids as well.
Thus, I grew up with my parents passing along their experiences and perspectives while I was developing my own in similarly bleak economic conditions.
Thus, as an adult I am like a quickdraw doomer, and any prosperity kind of annoys me, because every bit of economic growth feels like a hole being dug deeper. I can't help being this way, it's just how I see things. The lucky (or maybe unlucky) thing is that I happen to be alive when this doomer sensibility is ver important to have, because I think that we are looking at a future that will be very challenging, and the people whose childhoods were after about 1985 and whose parents' childhoods were after about 1946 are going to have a LOT of cognitive dissonance to overcome.
Back to the OP, and considering my theory, the member's husband is 60 years old, which means he was age 5-10 in 1953-1958, some of the most prosperous times in our history. I'm not surprised he is resistant to doom scenarios. It wouldn't surprise me either if his parents were ages 5-10 in the 1920s, in which case he would have a double dip of rose colored thinking to overcome.
I think that a double dip of deluxe doom thinking will serve one well in coming years.
Try this theory out on people. If they seem to "get" the peak oil thing right off the bat, find out the years in which they were ages 5-10.
BigTex, IMO you're overanalyzing this... curiously with simplistic conclusions. I was 5 in the year 1991, my mother in ~1958 and my father at ~1959... to add to your data. BUT, my sister was 5 in 1992 and she is the total opposite of me as a doomer.