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Blogger will said...

Skills both practical and durable can be lifelong quests. There's irony in the fact that today we have more information, more and better tools than in the history of human kind - yet few people know or understand the common skills every school child knew a hundred years ago.

But the quest to understand and be solid with practical things is so rewarding ... and one can include techie things with how to shape wood into buckets or chairs - preserve summer's crops or sew blankets and weave cloth for shirts.

I hope you can do your dream.

July 27, 2009 at 8:02 AM

Blogger will said...

ps:
Look for the incredible books done by Eric Sloane.

July 27, 2009 at 8:04 AM

Blogger Maggie May said...

I just wrote a post about happiness in life, and part of what I talked about what the importance of hard, meaningful work in our everyday lives. I adored LIW books growing up, and in fact still have all my originals of the series. Marie Howe (the poet)wrote a column recently in Oprah magazine discussing how the books changed her viewpoint in parenting/life.

July 27, 2009 at 8:07 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think it is amazing that you are thinking about making changes and taking steps to do so. Mostly people complain about their little lot in life, blaming the government, neighbours, friends and families. Not many people are prepared to start the changes within themselves. GOOD LUCK TO YOU.

July 27, 2009 at 8:13 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Don't be to hard on yourself, just think Ma and Pa can't Google anything!

Sounds like your considering quite a challenge, I can barely stand my neighbors (not to mention the kids) most of the time. I don't think I could handle sharing a kitchen with another family...

July 27, 2009 at 10:31 AM

Blogger Liz Fulcher, The Fragrant Muse said...

Like rainysoul, I'm sure the Ingalls would have done anything to have many of our conveniences, especially Ma. There seems to be a pendulum effect to everything ~ we worked so hard to make life easy and now life is so easy we've forgotten how to work hard. Balance in all things.

July 27, 2009 at 11:30 AM

Blogger d smith kaich jones said...

There's an old Aboriginal saying that the more you know the less you need. Absolutely. When you say we I respectfully disagree. The people I know can do things, and can also google & blog & read & think & reason with everyone else. As for lifestyle changes - only if the gov't pries my a/c from my cold, dead hands. I wish you well on your endeavor, and if it is a dream, I hope you are happy. My goal is to learn to make fire without matches.

Debi

July 27, 2009 at 3:42 PM

Blogger kristine said...

wow, that is so inspiring! Great idea. I am working on climate change here at the moment - Belize is of course one of the countries thats already experiencing rising sea levels and we are trying to help them articulate good arguments together with the countries in the region before Copenhagen. I agree with you that what is needed is a real and comprehensive paradigm shift in the way we think. A change in the publiuc imagination on a par with the enlightenment - seriously.

I'm not tanning no hides though.

July 27, 2009 at 3:42 PM

Blogger jane said...

wow julochka this is friggin amazing (excuse my French) I´m off to the link to read more! besos! p.s. i had every little house book. maybe i should start reading them again...

July 27, 2009 at 5:03 PM

Blogger Kim: said...

I finished the Little House books when I was about 9 and I still think about them All The Time. And I usually think similarly to what you're saying here -- what a totally different worldview the folks of that era had, and how completely foreign it is to the way we live now.

On the other hand, Ma and Pa couldn't really stalk/admire talented gals in Denmark from the Shores of Silver Lake.

July 27, 2009 at 5:07 PM

Blogger Char said...

I admire you that you are even considering it.

July 27, 2009 at 5:33 PM

Blogger Bee said...

Wow. This is a really big topic, and I can't wait to talk it over with you IN PERSON.

More proof that we can communicate telepathically (or perhaps share some of the same mental wave-lengths): I have those same thoughts about Ma and Pa every single time I read a chapter from one of those books. We've lost so much basic knowledge so darn quickly. It's scary.

July 28, 2009 at 12:42 AM

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