by Ryan » Wed 30 Mar 2005, 09:53:59
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Nano', 'A')fter much confusion, terror, woe and sadness, the only solution to peak oil, for the poor individual, is now crystal clear in my mind.
It's pretty much what the enlightened Matt Savinar recommends:
1. Convince your friends and family (be a leader!)
2. Keep a positive attitude (be courageous!)
3. Prepare to work hard (be strong and industrious!)
4. Understand that one person will perish, but a group of persons could very well survive! (Community is everything!)
5. Make a plan (Do not waste time/energy)
No need to dispair, just to be VERY MINDFULL! There is still some time and there are still multiple options. Both will decline rapidly
I agree completely. I'm starting to take action after slowly building up my own awareness over the last couple months. #1 can be difficult but you have to realize it takes time for people to go through their own process. My family is hearing about it at least - which is more than most at this point. I was talking to a guy at work about it yesterday. At one point he said, 'You're telling me this when I've got a daughter about to go off to college.' But he did end up deciding to read Party's Over. Progress.
Those in the city can make changes. Rooftop gardens, balcony/porch gardens, work with the local community if there is even a empty paved lot that can be taken over and planted with containers/raised beds. Even without peak oil as a threat people in those situations have done similar things. Maybe it doesn't seem like much but figure every bit helps. As prices at the store and gas prices go up people will be more interested in gardening as well. Any city parks should eventually be converted into community gardens, along with school grounds or other similar spaces.
Check out low-cost alternatives for power like
otherpower.com. Many people are quick to point out that there is no alternative energy that can replace oil. That's both true and false. We can't run what we're doing now. Fine. But it can easily provide enough energy for necessities. Particularly if you do it yourself instead of buying the turbines. Some of the designs call for using car parts - should have plenty of those!
Go into business for yourself now with something that will scale well into a post-peak world. Useful crafts and low-energy manufacturing. Take shoes - who is going to make them? With what? Bikes? Or wind generators? The site listed above talks about building them yourself. Build and use
solar ovens for cooking. Set up systems to
capture rainwater
Read books about what people are doing now:
This Organic Life: Confessions of a Suburban Homesteader by Joan Dye Gussow
Extreme Simplicity: Homesteading in the City by Christopher Nyerges, Dolores Nyerges
or sites:
Path to Freedom
It'll be hard and there isn't any sure path to success but if you start now you'll be better off than many folks.