20080926

The Greater Depression - The Renaissance - Finding A Place

In 2000 when I quit my job and reoriented myself away from money and towards the gathering of skills: welding, sewing, building, growing food, many of my friends thought I was nuts. I did not make these changes with a doomy perspective. The epiphany that inspired me was one of a better world that followed a great collapse. So here we are. Some of my friends no longer think I'm nuts. The nearing end of oil and the collapse of the monetary system have set rapid change in motion. Oil had enabled us to fraction ourselves off from the natural world and build an artificial one on top of it, a poor and unsustainable mimic. Yet the natural world we started off with actually perpetuates life, it is life, needs no caretakers and naturally provides. We replaced it with a dependent machine. Without oil the machine grinds to a halt and leaves us where we started, with the only task we've ever been given, to live on earth. Our monetary system enabled greed to be the road to wealth. Wealth was not measured by generosity, creativity or love. When I look at what's dying I see things that never had life in the first place. The lifelessness of our way of living is just becoming more evident. But remember we are life, and life has always existed. And so I feel no reminiscence towards what's passing away now.

So I made my choice a few years ago. I left NYC for Truth or Consequences, NM, a tiny desert town that was never fully dependent on the national economy. Folks here have skills: welding, sewing, woodworking, canning, growing etc. The domestic economy is vibrant, in fact barter is more respected than the dollar which says so little of one's character. When a developer came here with big plans to "help us" I realized that he could not see that poverty is being redefined. While one in four American homes are empty, here in T or C we have a nearly full occupancy. He sees trailers and mobiles, "poor folks!" I see balance, living within one's means. This is wealth! This is a place that skirted through the great depression of the 1920's and 30's. Here locals grew food and stocked the supermarket for those who could not grow. That supermarket is still here.

In Truth or Consequences one must bring their work or create it here. You could say that it's a perfect place for folks who attend Burning
Man. Like the desert utopian experiment T or C is pioneering, it asks you what your made of and what your skills are. You can still buy a home here for $50k, taxes average at a couple hundred bucks a year. What's here? Whatever you bring here. Like Burning Man it asks you to manifest and share what matters most to you. This place highlights my own belief that in this time the maker is the revolutionary.

We'll all find our place soon enough. As we slide deeper into what's being now called the 'greater depression' I suggest we consider this collapse is also the renaissance in disguise. If your tempted to savor what was: money, consumerism and greed, consider how little life it contained. Mystics over the ages have told us that we fell from paradise, from the garden. Religious texts speak of man's fall into idolatry. These concepts need not be filed under religious thinking. When we built a world on top of one that was given to us and we thanked ourselves for it we parted ways with the natural world and we made gods of ourselves for the doing of it. What do we have to gain from this collapse? Only paradise and the rediscovery of our humanity. And perhaps wealth will finally move to the hands of those most capable of holding it, those who know how to live in the real world a world that teaches us through our ability to live in it that the health of the individual is dependent on the health of the whole. The above photo was taken by Moe Koenick.

16 comments:

gigi said...

AMEN!!!! Those who thought you were crazy for "dropping out" of society will be the very ones coming to ya for help!

gigi

jovial_cynic said...

welding, sewing, building, growing food... hahaha... you just described my entire life.

I'm doing it out in the suburbs, so I'm not as detached from the daily grind as you are, but I'm doing it because life skills are so much valuable to me than, for instance, being an insurance underwriter (my profession).

Good work. Great post.

Melissa said...

wow. may I share a link with others to your post? It is so true. I'm so glad I found your blog. I get so much out of it and I love what you guys are doing there. We need to do more of this, everywhere. wow. thank you so much for putting into words.

Mikey Sklar said...

feel free to share the link.

woz said...

Hey Mikey, I thought you left in 2005, not 2000 as in the opening statement. But that doesn't change the thrust of your posting - that the world's gone mad.

I still haven't given up my hope of getting to visit you soon, as well.

Warren

Mikey Sklar said...

Hey Warren,

You are pretty much right. I left Wall St. in January '06. Wendy wrote this post and it is focused on her own transformation from the commercial world into one made by hand.

Charlie said...

charliealnutUp here in the lee of the Coast Range an hour West of P-town Oarygun it's much like there in the land of lizards and amazing sunsets. What I appreciated was your confirmation that all will be ... no matter how it goes where the values we share don't seem to get much more than a snicker from those with a shine on their shoes. Thanks.

Charlie said...

Up here in the lee of the Coast Range an hour West of P-town Oarygun it's much like there in the land of lizards and amazing sunsets. What I appreciated was your confirmation that all will be ... no matter how it goes where the values we share don't seem to get much more than a snicker from those with a shine on their shoes. Thanks.

Kristine said...

Thanks for your article....its encouraging to think there are sane people looking at this economic turmoil as an opportunity to invest our time and energy into creating better communities.
Thanks

jorel314 said...

Excellent post. You've got yourself a new subscriber. Looking forward to more posts on self sufficiency.

Eightway said...

Bajeezus, could you have picked a worst part of NM to drop out into??? I applaud your ambitions and ideals (we are a few years behind you), but we just spent about 700 miles criss crossing NM, and fell in love with the place. However, we agreed that T or C was about the worst that NM could offer. Ok, maybe Espanola.

Also, remember Native Americans were chased out of nearby Chaco Canyon abt 500-600 yrs ago due to drought. How immune are you?

Paul said...

You've just been referenced on Lifehacker.com, so watch your hit-rate soar!

I only discovered Truth or Consequences whilst idlely looking at a map two days ago, so was struck by the coincidence of reading this facinating post. Thanks for your wise and thoughtful posting.

Stuart Noggle said...

Great point. Those of us in rural communities might already have the advantage. We've been DIY'ers for a long time!

Greg said...

This New Zealand DIYer living in Brittany, France found that to be a great post.

I'm off to feed the chickens and then to collect some apples for tonight's tarte aux pommes.

Cheers.

Michele said...

I spent the first 10 years taking care of my depression era in-laws. They taught us everything about being self-sufficient and we have passed that info on to our children. We were doing this long before(in the 1980's)it became popular. They and we may not be as self-sufficient as we once were but we have the life skills fall back on if needs be.

There are more and more blogs about simplifying and DIY then ever before. Sign of the times I guess, Good luck in you endeavors.

Hannes said...

Wise thoughts! Great post!