The documentary, A Simpler Way — Crisis as Opportunity, was made in 2016 and takes us through the simple ways people have made tiny homes, shared gardens, and are finding innovative ways to live happily in a world which often seems to be hurtling towards disaster. They said this lifestyle is not about being self-sufficient but, rather, community-sufficient. You may live on a city lot and are able to grow all the vegetables you need by turning your yard into a garden (explained in detail by Joan Dye Gussow in This Organic Life - Confessions of a Suburban Homesteader), and your friend may have enough land to raise goats, another friend has a flock of chickens — well, you get the picture. We’re all in this together. It’s way past time to utilize our talents to supply our families and friends with what they need, and in return receive what we need. As we have learned in these studies: to give is to receive; to receive is to give. Perhaps when we can’t go to the big box stores an hour away, we’ll turn to our neighborhood stores to purchase what we need. Rather than get our salad fixings washed in bleach and sold in plastic containers, we’ll look to our local farmers who have built wind tunnels to grow these tender greens all year long. A friend tells me that Home Depot in Rogers had people lined up around the building, because they were only allowing 75 people in at a time. My goodness. Let’s ask ourselves if we really need to do things the way we’ve been doing them. It’s difficult to make shifts and release old habits, but it’s time for a new normal, don’t you think? We can do this.
"When the divine precepts are understood they unfold the foundation of fellowship in which one mind is not at war with another, but all have one Spirit, God, one intelligent source..." Mary Baker Eddy - Science & Health Page 276
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