Building the Foundations for the Resilience Resource Library (RRL)

This is a discussion essay to flesh out the basics for the Resilience Resource Library. The foundations are very important for the future stability of the structure--any structure.

I'll be lifting comments from various posters to build the "mission statement", a (hopefully) consensual definition of "resilience" and some suggestions for the working model of the Library.

This is not The Library. Please don't begin attaching resources here.

Without further ado...


What does Resilience mean?

From Gerrit:

Personal Resilience
These are things like personal skills, training, family, resources, ideas, DIY, low-tech, how-to, etc.

Could I use a rotary phone?
What's a sickle?
Could I power my garage and tools with solar?
Could I grow and pickle veggies?
Could I teach my kids about resilience?

Any topic is welcome. I'm as happy to discuss finding a wind-up watch as I am discussing off-grid solar. In all posts, folks could ask questions. We could place them on a list and folks could write up something if they know about it.

Local Resilience
These are things about our street, neighbours, street block, neighbourhood, and local community

What could we neighbourly friends do together to make things happen?
Could our neighbourhood/block create it's own renewable energy local grid?
Could we neighbours talk about a community garden plot?
Could we start a tool library?
Could the mostly-empty local church become a neighbourhood resilience centre during the week?
Could we teach neighbours on a regular basis somewhere nearby how to cook from scratch, can, pickle, grow, sew, etc?
What if we made and sold things for a resilience fund through a workers cooperative?
Suppose we organized a tree planting party in the neighbourhood/block?
Let's get the local library onside: order in resource books, hold skills training workshops there, etc?
Could we neigbours discuss how to buy food locally?

The sky is the limit. I try not to reinvent the wheel. The global model for local resilience is the Transition Network, which began in the town of Totnes, England. We could use their experiences and work to kick off discussions.

Those are the only two categories of resilience topics in which I am interested for this group. Topics about regional, state, federal resilience are irrelevant. Discussion of those topics belong in the OTs and comm-page posts. In these times, personal and local resilience are all that matters to us and our families and neighbours.

Two last thoughts
There is no point in teaching me how to spell neighbour properly: I was raised British colonial :=)
I'm not big on "sustainability" any more. Our climate, environment, and politics ensure that very little of human creation can be sustained anymore. Except those things within us: consciousness, resiliency, skills, learning, will, mind, caring, love. Within our personal control lies only resiliency: personal and local.

Administrative points

If you folks think we could proceed somewhat in this manner, we could figure out a common banner thingy to announce resilience posts.
My habit is to announce every post title with "Resilience:" blah, blah.
If we could use these post tags as a start (and please help figure out tags and search on the site):
resilience,
local resilience,
personal resilience,

Again from Gerrit:

Here's my rough definition:
Resilience covers all those practical, controllable things (skills, knowledge, training, practice, abilities, will, resourcefulness, etc.) within a person, or a small group of persons, that enables them to:
1) heal/recover faster - before events, or after setbacks, and/or
2) become more "elastic" - in that they return back to shape/form faster after setbacks.

The key is that resilience is about things within us or within our local group (family, neighbourhood).

For example, if you show me a good, practical, inexpensive way to grow potatoes and store them, then my family will be more resilient:
a) We learned new knowledge and skill (growing and storing potatoes);
b) We're freed from store-bought potatoes, so we don't eat poisonous chemicals and we have a bit more money in our pockets;
3) If this winter, potatoes are scarce in the supermarket, my family will have potatoes in storage.

Resilience is about us - personal skills etc. - and about our local neighbours/street block/neighbourhood.
We only have control over our selves and maybe our local groups. We have little control over our towns or cities or the national policy on fertilizer. Resilience is about things that we can control.

Let's take climate change as an example. I have zero control over climate change. So resilience is not about the Paris climate accords.
I do have some control over where and how I live. So, if I can, I should think about moving away from a development on a flood plain, or an isolated coastal community. But wherever I do live, I could do several things to become more resilient right where I am. I could learn to grow and pickle veggies to reduce my food bill, eat more healthy, get more exercise, meet neighbours who garden, make veggies last through winter. Those are skills I could learn that would make me more resilient in a number of good ways.

I do hope that helps. Resiliency is about practical things within that we can control, that would make us respond to life's difficulties better. Thanks for a great question eh :=)

Gerrit, may I suggest you and Martha (who is also very deeply committed to this adventure) tighten this up and post a "What Is Resilience?" essay whose link will go at the top of the Library page? (It's not my long suite)

It would be permanently linked to the top of the Library page.

The Library page (proposed)


ResilienceLibrary3.jpg

Welcome to the c99p Resilience Resource Library

- A Compendium of Resilience Links, predominately web links, sources of books, documents, sources of tools, sources of like-minded communities and people.

What is Resilience? This is the FAQ

(hypertext link to Gerrit's manifesto)

How To Use This Library

Initiate a New Comment.
Add a title that describes the link that includes [RRL], (and as we proceed. a sub-category.)
Add the link in the body of the comment section.
Add a brief description of the link and/or resource. "Brief" means 25 words or less.

Should the poster [Contributor] of the link wish to elaborate on the link, [Contributor] initiates an essay based on the link outside of the Library, in the main forum, thereby facilitating discussion.

[Contributor] then titles the essay to include [RRL] in the title, and the title of the link to be discussed.

Should [Another Contributor] see the link and think a subsequent link is pertinent, [Subsequent Contributor] appends the link as a Reply with brief description, using the above format for New Comments.

This would have the effect of building Resource Trees--This is relevant to That--That is relevant to a Third Link, and so on, and so on. The developing discussion would no doubt reveal more links. Links should then be added to the Library where appropriate.

It is strongly recommended that Contributors not post videos, but links and descriptions of the videos instead. Videos take up a lot of room and significantly slow down load times. Thank you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Notes from The Librarians:

This is a library. Library Rules Apply. No talking.

The librarians are gentle and forbearing creatures, but they have been known to let go with their dustbrushes upside the heads of unruly attendants.

We are both blessed and daunted by the wealth of the writing talent on this site. Please use these links to discuss and further develop our shared goals without feeling you need to re-write "War and Peace" to do so. The most profound thoughts are often expressed in the simplest of terms. So don't let your fear of "writing" stop you from exploring your future.

Please enjoy yourselves and grow your appreciation of life through these resources.

Thank you -- The Librarians


[end of proposed Library page]

Topics for discussion:

Editing my sometimes tongue-in-cheek approach
Bolding/unbolding here and there (formatting in general)
Building a list of sub-categories to better group resources by type

Whatever comes to mind. This is a brainstorming thread.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

Martha, I'm not meaning to minimize your contribution to this effort by quoting Gerrit. It's just that the breadth of your writings on the subject so far are beyond my gathering capabilities. I hope this is just the beginning of building the core of the Resilience movement here.

And I hope I don't come as a pushy ass here. I'm afraid it comes naturally after so many years of being a boss.

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Haikukitty's picture

And I'd love to have some related forums where we can discuss the actual nitty-gritty of some of these skills. Obviously the library is not the place, but affiliated with it - would love for people to share their experiences of growing and preserving veggies, raising chickens, any relevant skill that people may want to learn and others already have mastered or explored.

For instance, I'm trying to grow veggies and some fruit out here and want to get more into permaculture on what little land I have but I am kind of lost as to how to begin. It seems like such an overwhelming task and I feel like I'm making it harder than it needs to be. It would be lovely to have some practical discussions where people can share some of their expertise in various areas.

Edited to add: Just saw there's a whole thread on this very thing that I somehow missed! The original Resilience group thread... Pay me no mind...

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Gerrit's picture

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

Haikukitty's picture

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Wow... I am amazed as to how organized you are! Thank you for this... It is clear that you are FAR more than the janitor (as you refer to yourself later in this thread).... Wink Well done!

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Alison Wunderland's picture

I almost hesitate to use that honorific for sounding sexist. I'm not. I'd much closer to a man-hating feminist. Were it up to me, I'd castrate most of the troublemakers and just keep a few around in zoos for breeding purposes. Also, my French uncle used to use it often in the most warm and gracious way. (I rarely get to say it but it reminds me of him.)

Since I have your attention for the moment, can you make a new graphic for the library built on the one up here now? What I have in mind is...

Resilience
[indent]Resource
[indent] [indent] Library

(Indent is one space)

TY
AB

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I tend to use "Sweetie" a lot... Wink

And how about something like this?

ResilienceLibrary.jpg
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Alison Wunderland's picture

We're almost there. (IMO) I have an artist-in-residence and she's my color expert. "Honey, I need to make this brown." "Put some blue in it." "What? OK."

Make the font Bold.
Reduce the indent so that Resource falls under the "s" of Resilient.
Reduce the indent so that Library falls under the "s" of Resource.

Resilience
    Resource
        Library

Lastly, eyedrop the color that's just between the yellow and red of the flower. Favor the yellowish side., and use that for the text.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

the yellowish gold kind of washes out I think ... I did use a dark outline on the letters...but it isn't helping... perhaps a bigger font on the black one...

ResilienceLibrary2.jpg

I wonder how we delete unwanted graphics from the system?

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riverlover's picture

what if you change the lettering to Green? That may or may not be more legible...

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Alison Wunderland's picture

You're right. The yellow doesn't work.

How about... (Oh Gawd) going back to the black. Making the text a bit bigger, and emphasize "Library" by making it a couple of points bigger than Resilience and Resource.

Also, (You're going to kill me) go back to the original indentation you had. The banner style height was more focused.

Now I think I'll change my name and move to a small island where they don't have Internet.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

ResilienceLibrary3.jpg
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Alison Wunderland's picture

Disregard my comment above yours, Martha.

We've done Yeomen jobs here today. Huzzah!

We should give ourselves the rest of the day off.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Give rose

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Gerrit's picture

up, and pm it to Martha for her edit and additions. Then I'll post it below and you could put it back in.

Please bear with me; it may take several tries for me to get the hang of putting stuff into the library correctly :=)

I've been a library member all over the world for almost 50 years now, since I could first read. I love my Ouma for taking me as a toddler. Librarians rock and they rule. OK, I'll get to work.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

you understand, of course, the What is... needs to be a backgrounder for the Why and How for the library. (So it doesn't become a TL;DR on the front page of the library.)

I hope I haven't been too verbose with the How.

LOLing, I have no idea about the tech for getting the library pinned like an OT. I just thought since you post one a couple of times a week, you would know. Elsewhere, ???, you mention talking to JtC. I'm just the guy who sweeps the floors and goes to the basement, where all the scary spiders are, and re-lights the pilot light on the furnace.

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Gerrit's picture

how progress always happens.

I've edited the intro piece and I messaged it to Martha for her input. Then we'll send it back to you.

About the library pinning, too funny :=) I will ask JtC how that works. Long as you're willing to help us non-techies to input things properly into the library, we'll be fine.

Yes, with a bit of luck, JtC will let me know soon how to set up the group on the site.

Lots of progress real fast. Hooray for AB! Cheers mate,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

now that I've got a little spare time, what can I do to help. Would you like me to create a Resiliency page for you where every essay that has a resiliency tag will automatically post to the page to keep all of your work centralized?

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Alison Wunderland's picture

That would be a great help, I'm sure. What I'm trying to built is a comment-free (as much as possible) page that only accrues links.

Would it be possible to pin the Library page like an OT?

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I can create a page specific to the Resiliency Group that can be linked to from a sidebar menu. Any essays added to the page would need to have a "resiliency" tag for the page to pick it up. Any essay with that tag will automatically be added to the page. Links could be added via comments or the author of the initial essay could add the links manually as they are accrued. This would keep all your work centralized on one page with an easy to find link for folks to access it.

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Gerrit's picture

else do we need to do?

Could you show AB how to pin the Resilience Resource Library? (presently empty; pure as the driven snow)

Thanks a lot Johnny, we know you're busy.

BTW, I'm already using the new comment and essay thingies and they work great and make life much easier.

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

you need to tell me what your plans are and how you want to structure your group. I installed a group program a couple of weeks ago that didn't really work out very well but I can look into other programs if that's the direction you want to take.

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Gerrit's picture

described to AB above with a place to list and find our resilience-tagged posts and AB's resource library, I really don't think we need much else.

At top, groups were very structured with all kinds of rules and procedures. Meh. I'd like for anyone with knowledge to post on their topics. Anyone who is interested can comment. Maybe we need a few admins? AB, Martha, moi. Resilience topics don't provoke nastiness or arguments: use a phillips screw; no, you idiot, use duct tape; damn you all to hell, I'm leaving :=)

I think the group's needs are minimal. Given what we've said so far, I think we would be fine with what's here and the page you propose; no need for special software. You would know better, Johnny.

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

what word would you like to use for the tag? You can also go back and re-tag your past essays so they'll show up on your page. It shouldn't take too long to create the page, let me know what tag you want to use and I'll try to get it up tonight.

I might suggest to have a master essay that is stickied to keep at the top of the list to use for the library of links that you want to include.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

We're still working on comment (entry) labels that go ahead of the titles that doesn't become too complicated.

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Gerrit's picture

master essay as we speak.

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

and here's what I think is the best solution for what you have planned.

As stated before I can create a page for your group and link to it from a menu. We can sticky a master essay (Library) to the top of the page that can include whatever you want such as an introduction to the group, group members and whatever else you would like. But here's the best part: I can give multiple editing permissions to this master essay so members of your choice can include their own library or have a master library of links or any combination thereof, that would be up to you. You wouldn't need an individual admin to add content, all editors would have the ability to edit the master essay.

Beneath the master essay you can have all of your Resiliency essays listed in chronological order for easy access.

Does that sound like it will work for you?

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Gerrit's picture

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
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riverlover's picture

can edit tags, like TUs or group admins OT? Sometimes tags are hard to come up with, and historically (like 6 months later...) newer tags might be useful.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

use a phillips screw; no, you idiot, use duct tape; damn you all to hell, I'm leaving :=)

ROFL

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

(Music City) Mollie, C99P & Daily Kos
elinkarlsson@WordPress


"The obstacle is the path."--Zen Proverb
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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

Gerrit's picture

buziful and we love it already :=)

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

Alison Wunderland's picture

For starters, let's own Resilience and RRL as tags for pertinent essays.

Next, we need to begin building a list of categories that library entries can be grouped by. I'm in the dark on this, but I'll try:

Gardening
Agriculture (Agri)
Food
Tools
How-To
People
Orgs

The point of these categories is for (e.i.) food links to flow contiguously from the initial Food entry, building a "Food Tree".

(For example purposes)

An entry titled: [Food] Growing Radishes

Any categories we decide on would be added to the Library "essay" below the "Notes from the Librarians" the same way tags are. (You can't tag comments.)

Am I making any sense? I'm beat.

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Gerrit's picture

the resiliency tags under the two main categories - personal and local? For example:

under Personal would go your tags

  • how-to (DIY, Instructables, plans, guides, websites, books,),
  • gardening (annual cycle; structures - greenhouses, sheds, plots, orchards, fields, rows; fixtures - fencing, cloches, rows, planters; planning, seeds, growing, harvesting, post-harvest, processing, storing)
  • tools (hand, power, jigs, air, electrical, wood, metal, hardware, stores,)
  • food (sources, cooking, recipes, meal plans, health, hygiene, canning, pickling, fermenting, drying, freezing, pantries, cold storage,)

Under Local, would go tags like your
people, orgs, and so forth. I have lots of ideas for this, bu my brain is pretty fried too :=) I'll add more tomorrow.

I hope this helps! TY mate,

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Alison Wunderland's picture

Also, I'm thinking of the instructions becoming too bewildering. If we want to grow the group, the ante has to be reasonable.

"Want to add an entry? Pick one: Earth, Fire, Air, Water."

Unless... we want to add another "essay" link to the library page to explain all the permutations of your and Martha's differentiation system.

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dance you monster's picture

. . . at some of these categories.

Horticulture includes gardening for food for us but also forestry (for food or timber or habitat or carbon capture) or attracting wildlife and beneficial organisms or simple enjoyment of a richer life. There are also various categories and degrees of horticulture. And then there are the animals we grow for food or labor. It may be best to organize this under Food and Non-Food, depending on what other skills and knowledge each encompasses.

Building would include the greenhouses and fences you cite but also barns and houses and public spaces and land-forming. It includes multiple methods: balloon-frame, timber, straw-bale, earthen, stone masonry. It includes the tools and the skills to develop or improve in their use. It also might encompass affiliated systems such as electric or plumbing, though those might better fit under other headings: Energy and Water.

Water, 'cuz we need it and it'll be rarer. This would cover water sources and their preservation, the means to bring that water to its sustainable use and re-use, heating and cooling of that water for various uses, etc. It would overlap other categories, too, as we consider hydroelectric power or the things that grow in water that we eat or use.

Energy runs in many directions because it touches what's fundamental: what runs. You'd see the different sources of energy, the relative efficiencies and drawbacks they entail, the steps to take to reduce usage, which also overlaps building systems and designs.

There are also ephemeral elements, less easy to name in bold font, of a resilient life: what we feel, what we need (the arts, ideas, etc.), what we overlay upon the physical plan of a resilient society to make it worth the effort.

And there is governance, to ensure that problems that arise are solved and the whole system functions to everyone's benefit and security.

I love this idea of the site's having such a library for reference by any visitor. And I have lots of sources to add, once we get our overall library system in place. I've been collecting in this regard for many years.

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They are part of the cycle of life, too, and, properly managed, can contribute to plant health and sequestering carbon in the soil, diversify your diet and wardrobe, or even serve as trade goods. They're scalable - mainly chickens and rabbits - but you can keep a small flock of sheep in rural areas for wool, milk, and meat. Plus, I think they're all irresistible (except vicious roosters).

There are certainly challenges with living creatures, but it keeps the blood circulating.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I have my own library set up thusly...

Earth

Food - Production, Preservation, and Presentation (i.e. cooking/recipes) - This can be MORE than gardening as this is about all food...such as Aquaponics which is the growing of food plants WITH fish, or the growing, harvesting, and use of herbs/spices in cooking.

A subset of Food is Medicinal - Which would be herbs/spices used in natural healing...etc.

Another subset would be soil enhancement/improvement. Study of worms, etc.

Air

Wind power and/or ventilation systems.

Fire

Solar things are under the heading of "With the Power of the Sun".... and I put everything having to do with solar stuff there. From power to passive hot water heating and solar cooking, etc.

Water

Hydroelectric, etc.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

I could write this into the master (pinned) essay that explains the Library.

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Gerrit's picture

local and personal. They delimit the only two types of resilience:

  • you and your family and property = personal = individual
  • you and your friends and neighbours and local community = local = community

Everything in resilience flows either from/towards the individual or to the local community. All resiliency projects are easily classified between these two categories. Think of food.
You either deal with food your self (seed, grow, harvest, process, preserve)
or you deal with it with friends, neighbours, and community (food bank, community gardens, join a CSA, run a CSA, teach cooking skills, buy local, eat local, etc.)

I'd appreciate it if we would try to see all resilience topics and tags through this lens. It works real easy. What do you and Martha think?

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importer's picture

I come from an old family. They could do most everything themselves. Aside from growing food, we would need people who can sew, cook, preserve food, know what is edible and what's not. Raising chickens or keeping a milk cow, there's a lot to know. Keeping horses, how bad is it going to get? Butchering is another occupation that is disappearing, how to cut the meat, how to preserve it. One of my uncles was a blacksmith. He could make almost anything from a piece of metal. He also worked with leather, making aprons, harness, whatever. Another uncle was a carpenter, he could build almost anything. When they had to fix the docks in Seattle, they called him, because he was one of the last guys alive who knew how to work with heavy timber. He chuckled that, while the engineers were trying to work out what was needed, he figured it all out on the back of a lunch sack. Electricians, plumbers - a neighborhood would have to have people with talent in these areas. Fixing a car, old ones are easier, new ones suck. Engineers, architects, there are a lot of areas of expertise that could and should be included in any resiliency plan. Just some food for thought.

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Gerrit's picture

are too abstract to help guide folks. The link between medicine and earth is not so obvious to me :=)

I can place a medicine question faster if my first options are personal and local:
personal - how to grow, process and use natural meds? what should be in my emergency medical kit? Is ibuprophin safe?
local - how best could our village attract doctors, doulas, nurse-doctors, etc? How best does our town obtain clinical meds? How does our neighbourhood help seniors get to medical help?

For resiliency, the first question is "For whom?"
For me and mine = personal.
For our block/neighbourhood/village = local.
What do you think?

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Alison Wunderland's picture

And I see your perspective. Let's work on this and the other inputs tomorrow. I'm going to write a brief summary of today's progress and post it at the end of the thread.

From here, I see us polishing the product. We've come amazingly far in one day.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

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Gerrit's picture

making the HMCS Resiliency more seaworthy. We need someone soon to smash the champers bottle to christen and launch her :=) Ready, Aye, Ready! Graphic please...

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riverlover's picture

Bees. Pollinators (all of them). It's a subset of agriculture but also community because bees don't stay home. I used to keep bees. 2 hives, 2 owners. Honey supers were processed by someone else, translating to more community. I have a FB friend in Quebec who would fit right in here, I will give him an invite to c99p.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Raggedy Ann's picture

Raggedy Andy and I have solar and wind, we have raised chickens, cows, pigs, had horses, have a garden, have a garlic crop that we are hoping to turn into a one acre cash crop in the future, want to become more self sufficient, should I go on????? Perhaps I can get RAndy involved. Don't know if he'll want that as his user name - I have always used it to describe my partner, but I could let it go, LOL!

Thanks, JtC, for your willingness to create a space for this. Very exciting times at c99p - I'm so happy to be one of the many. :0)

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

shaharazade's picture

Lately resiliency and community local and on line have become my main interests. We need to share and learn to nurture and sustain each other and the planet in this crazy world. I like the categorize suggested by Martha, Gerrit and all of you.

I am a little confused about the no comment part. So would the resistance resource essays in the library be stand alone with no comments in other words just reference material or links for people to look up? Whatever the format I'm happy to contribute and use such a great library for living as conscientiously and as being as resilient as possible these days .

I'm an knowledgeable organic gardener who has grown food, herbs including medicinal and native plant's for 26 years on a 150x50 sq. ft yard. I love dirt, I dig it, and all things that build great organic soil, worms Right now I'm trying to find a source of pesticide, herbicide free, horse manure close to the city. I found the best source of information was the county's Dept of Agriculture who have a page where people with manure can connect with people who need it. I'm also big on nutrition, and cooking and eating healthy.

What a community this is becoming, c99% too seems to be growing organically. Thanks all you resilient people. This is just so cool.

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shaharazade's picture

Lately resiliency and community local and on line have become my main interests. We need to share and learn to nurture and sustain each other and the planet in this crazy world. I like the categorize suggested by Martha, Gerrit and all of you.

I am a little confused about the no comment part. So would the resistance resource essays in the library be stand alone with no comments in other words just reference material or links for people to look up? Whatever the format I'm happy to contribute and use such a great library for living as conscientiously and as being as resilient as possible these days .

I'm an knowledgeable organic gardener who has grown food, herbs including medicinal and native plant's for 26 years on a 150x50 sq. ft yard. I love dirt, I dig it, and all things that build great organic soil, composting worms and natural pest control like companion planting planting to attract attracting bees and beneficial insect etc.

Right now I'm trying to find a source of pesticide, herbicide free, horse manure close to the city. I found the best source of information was the county's Dept of Agriculture who have a page where people with manure can connect with people who need it. I'm also big on nutrition, and cooking and eating healthy.

What a community this is becoming, c99% too seems to be growing organically. Thanks all you resilient people. This is just so cool. This...'Within our personal control lies only resiliency: personal and local.' sounds wonderful.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

I can finally talk about things I actually know a bit about.

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shaharazade's picture

I'm half sick of fighting shadow phantoms around. Talk about pragmatic. I'm a pretty literal person if you can't eat, sleep under it, wear it, ride it, appreciate it's beauty and help people and the planet thrive under it what good is it. My friends tell me I'm materially challenged as I'm a terrible cappie but it just makes no sense to me.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

We have a tentative working model of what the Library's front page will look like. Thanks, AB

We have a model in progress of the Group's Mission Statement. Not that I've actually ever read one. Never worked in an office in my life. I'm just punting. Thanks, Gerrit.

We have a beautiful new banner. SEE: all the way back up the page Thanks, Martha.

We have an enthusiastic endorsement, and mucho travailles from JtC for the Resilience Group's new home. Thanks, Johnny.

We have will The Library as the anchor sticky "essay" for the Resilience Group. Thanks again, Johnny.

We have fresh input to digest and details to sort out for tomorrow. Thanks, everyone who is joining in for the building of the Resilience Group.

Outstanding!


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Lenzabi's picture

I will likely be getting moved next year or so. This will be a good resource if I get a home loan from the government, and make the place resilient and livable along with helping the neighbors get the same idea.

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So long, and thanks for all the fish

Alison Wunderland's picture

Would you guys like to continue to refine the library page, or do you need some time off?

I see JtC made the Resilience Group page. And that there are already a lot of Resilience essays there. That's so neat.

What I've been thinking overnight, I get a lot of my best ideas when I'm asleep, would be to distill these comment categories and display them near the bottom as a graphic. It gets frustrating trying to display categories, then sub-categories with just the limited choices of text and formatting.

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