many may have missed 2021 interviews from Juan in which he mentioned that things have to get so bad, that they’re permanently seared into the memory of those that lived through it. the example he gave was the Great Depression, and how people who survived the depression always sought to save, repurpose, reuse, buy inexpensively, etc. this was long before anyone uttered the word inflation.

i’ve recently noticed my mother going out of her way to change how she shops, uses items (reusing freezer bags, tin foil, cling wrap), prepares food (bulk rice rather than the fancy boil in bag), saves paper “this would make a good firestarter” and generally approaches money and available resources.

the only way this all works is if the scars are so deep that the next generation learns, and their children learn, and so on. it can’t be transitory. it can’t be shrugged off. it has to be life changing. a bend in the universe.

Happy with Life...Faith in Our Lord God...Love being outside...Enjoy

In response 17Commentary 17C to his Publication

I lived thru my parents WWII depression. We grew a half acre garden. I was taught to respect, be thankful for what we had. I am so glad I was raised that way. I want nothing, I need nothing. What I have I owe it all to God. I won't tell you how poor we were cause it don't matter. As kids we didn't know we were poor. We had what we needed. My mom was the best cook ever. She taught me young how to cook - can everything. I really miss her. I am the youngest out of 7. I pushed her limits. She would call me every name until she got to mine, that is how mad I made her at times. She loved me a lot. The saying goes "you don't know what you have until you lose it"

i mean no disrespect by it, in fact, quite the opposite -- you lived through WWII? oh the stories i'm sure you have :) lost the last of my grandparents (born 1931) a year and a half ago... haven't had a real heartfelt discussion with a person over 60 since then. i've found that people who live through events and difficulties like that have so much more perspective, so much more to share.

life's what you make of it, we need so much less than we think. sure, material comforts are nice, but what you NEED is so much less... i found myself in a very dark place a few years ago (story withheld) and had nothing. 0. cried out for help, and thankfully it was there for me. but in those few months, with absolutely nothing, i felt so free, so light and happy. my smile stretched on for miles (still does) :)

In response connie wright to her Publication

Only people mentioned by @17Commentary in this post can reply

Happy with Life...Faith in Our Lord God...Love being outside...Enjoy

In response 17Commentary 17C to his Publication

You misunderstood me. I lived thru My Parents depression. I was taught about what they went thru & why it was important. I am only 71. I have seen many of my family come & go. I went thru the Viet Nam war-the Gulf war-the Iraq war & Afghanistan war. I am ready for Peace & Loving each other as thyself.

In response connie wright to her Publication

i did, my mistake :)

have an awesome night

(1) Show this thread