Friday, October 18, 2013

The Walking Dead, Cell Phones, and Resiliency


The Walking Dead has started the season off with the theme of resiliency. IGN stated it nicely, ““Can we come back from the things we’ve done?” Can we recover from the mistakes we’ve made or are we doomed to ever be haunted by them, endlessly paying the piper? Well, we certainly cannot come back from our missteps until we stop repeating them.
In this zombie apocalyptic setting, the survivors are now considering whether they have lost their humanityAs a writer, a homesteader, a teacher and a mother, I wonder about these same concepts. Is there a point after which a person is changed forever? What happens to people when they face challenges, stresses, trauma? As a writer, I love imagining hero/heroine stories and writing about how a character can and will overcome. As a homesteader, there are always things that go wrong, but if you are going to grow your own food and preserve it, then you have to be committed and that requires a certain level of just gutting it out, trying again, working through and never giving up. As a teacher, student failure was the biggest crisis I faced. Too often, their culture worked against them so even when they had an innate sense of self-determination and an incredible strength of spirit, their life circumstances kept hitting them until it was no surprise when some began to drop out of school, if not physically then emotionally. As a mother I worried how to teach my children that regardless of what life handed them to never give up, to never surrender, and now as a grandmother, I face the same concerns, but in a world full of far more challenges than I could have ever imagined.
Given the reality of the environment, the economy, our leadership, and our culture, it is no big surprise that talking about and teaching resiliency is so fashionable. An internet search on resiliency pulls up everything from students to children to adults to business to websites to communities and more, including dogs and cats. From my perspective, the focus on resiliency is good news for everyone, unless you are watching the cat insisting on staying in the dryer, which actually isn’t an example of being resilient, but of being a cat. In every other instance, the more we teach resiliency, the more we learn to be resilient, the more we build our businesses and develop our communities so they are resilient, the better off we all will be.
So what is resilience? In a nutshell, it’s a person’a ability to handle stress and adversity, it is coping in such a way that the person comes back to a normal way of functioning, and it is growing so the person may actually function better after that adversity. It is a process and not a personality trait. Resilience can be fostered by families, schools, communities, and social policies, all of which are considered “protective factors” that help a person handle exposure to risk.  
If you’re having trouble conceptualizing what resiliency looks like, watch Louis C.K. explain why he doesn’t give his children a cell phone. It’s a lesson in resiliency,  which came to me via In the moment. It’s all about going against the culture, thinking for yourself, facing reality, learning empathy, being yourself, and feeling all your feelings, which is pretty much all a zombie is not. So I guess if we didn’t have cell phones, we could cancel the apocalypse. The bigger issue is whether we would be able to come back from being that connected all the time. Living in the present would be pretty radical, but it would be resilient.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Prepping for a Government Shutdown



Everyone has a wake up call. Mine came years ago as a federal worker who was shut out for 21 days during the last Congressional brou ha ha. My husband and I both worked for the same federal agency and loved it. I worked in IT and at that time we were implementing new technologies. I was fortunate enough to be a software trainer in a workforce of older learners faced with certain change. It was a rare situation in which I was able to combine my love of technology, my passion to learn new things, and my joy of teaching. It was challenging as my co-workers weren’t so sure about these changes, but with a lot of compassion, nurturing, and effort to understand how they felt, we all grew to love our new computers. So when we were shut down, everyone was shocked. When it looked like we weren’t going to get paid for a month or ever, my husband and I were panicked. It was unprecedented and completely unexpected. 

When we did return and were paid, my husband and I faced a new reality. 
We realized that it didn’t matter whether you did your job or not. If a Congressman was in a snit, you could be without a job, a salary, and benefits like medical insurance without a moment’s notice. Rather than go back to work and ease into a sense of complacency, we came up with a plan. We both got advanced degrees. My husband took assignments that meant he was away from home for about two years to further his career. We started stocking up on things like toothpaste, shampoo, and food. I started gardening after a 5-year hiatus. Climate change, global warming, and economic meltdown were never part of our conversation or our planning. We were doing things more like our grandparents did when they explained how they survived during the Depression. 

It wasn’t until we both began to experience health problems and connected it to our home environment that we started researching, identifying and concluding that we needed to be more aggressive in being prepared. I admit that we weren’t very strategic, and truthfully, all our plans were based on the assumption that life would continue in a fairly orderly way until we were old, really old, like ancient-- 80-90 years old. 

Since I love all things gardening and homesteading, our focus was along that line, which fit for the problem we faced-- climate change and pollution. Recent information about the climate has forced us to yet again assess. With this latest government shutdown, we are rethinking even the strategy we developed last month. It looks like the creating, recreating and implementing cycle of planning will be the focus of our lives and the theme of all my stories for awhile.

I’ve asked a good friend of mine who preps based on an impending economic collapse what she thinks the likelihood is of this being the moment in history that shakes us all awake. She isn’t willing to peer into her crystal ball and make that prediction; however, it is evident that the problems in Congress aren’t merely about affordable healthcare. This is a fight between ideologies in which both sides believe the state of the economy is a moral and ethical issue that must be addressed in a religious way. 

Once you use that worldview, then it becomes clear that the Republicans on the far right are merely adhering to the tenants of Milton Friedman, “Only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes the politically inevitable.” I think shutting down the government and defaulting on our debt is pretty shocking and will absolutely precipitate a global financial crisis. I’m also pretty sure they have a plan for what to do when they create this crisis. Here are a few videos that provide a glimpse of a plan and what it would potentially look like when all is said and done.

Friedman on Libertarianism-- This is long, but worth watching for the overview.
Note that in regards to pollution, under the Bush administration, some corporations are exempt under the law for certain pollutants. It is also important to remember that the government is charged with prosecuting cases of environmental degradation, which is after the fact.  Once degradation occurs, it can be catastrophic regardless of how much money the offender has to ultimately pay, as in the case of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.  In regards to medical malpractice, tort laws have changed and there are now limits on how much anyone can get. Defense works if soldiers and police are protecting the citizens of the country as a public service and not as mercenaries. In a report published by the Combat Studies Institute Press, in 2005 Deborah Kidwell’s study found that using private contractors in the military created problems that “increase the risk to US personnel and can induce budget overruns rather than savings, disrupt civil-military relations, and have detrimental consequences for the American economy and society.” Download the report here.  Private police forces are required to protect the person or people who hired them, which is much different than protecting and serving the community as a public servant and can result in unexpected consequences. Finally, it should go without saying based on history that if you privatize a prison, you will end up with more prisoners housed in potentially substandard conditions for much longer sentences and for less reason.

The current debate over healthcare is the call to arms for ideologues who are fighting the free market war. Affordable healthcare administered through the government is akin to being immoral, according to them. Here’s Friedman speaking about curing American health care.  It is also important to understand his ideas on greed

Hong Kong is an example of what a free market would look like. Here he describes Hong KongThe government of Hong Kong has had to step in to combat air pollution. Most recently, they passed a law that prevents someone from “forcing” tourists to shop during the holidays. Oddly enough, sales are down.

I believe that every person has the right to choose. That’s what freedom and democracy are about. Unfortunately, that isn’t what’s going on in Congress today. A small contingent of adherents to a totally free market are drawing a line in the sand and insisting the rest of the government and the people it represents do what they want. Bill Moyers says it succinctly.

As for me, I would prefer another path for the economy, one reflected in the following TED talk by Tim Jackson.  Obviously, the disciples of Friedman are not representing my views. The question then is whether other members of Congress and people who don’t ascribe to a completely free market approach to the economy will protest. With no assurance that they will or if they do, they will be successful given the fact that the military and police force are “private,” my reality has been placed in checkmate. We will continue to plan and prepare for the inevitable challenges of climate change, but with this new economic development, it will be with a sense of urgency and a calm resolve