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[00:00:04] You're listening here to PBN. Your path back to stability here.
[00:00:50] The mark of my success as a father is the increase in distance between us. You crawled off to explore, you ran book bag on to school. You disappeared beyond a closed door to a sleepover. Never take time for granted, my son.
[00:01:15] When in the arms of your father or as a father, yourself, with arms full of children. Know that these moments are more. Of all a man can do and can achieve, these fleeting moments are more. Feel every moment. Stop and observe the majesty, the oddity of life.
[00:01:44] Days passing like weary desert journeys burning sand underfoot. Years like the crisp waters of a draining oasis. We run, we run together to that great crosswalk of adulthood. I love and loathe that damned crosswalk where I shall let you go.
[00:02:09] Where I your father will watch this necessary distance grow between us. Though your mother and I will carry on in our love and our life, I'll always be waiting at that crosswalk. More fortunate than any man in history.
[00:02:29] Should you return through the mist, if only for a few hours, to tell me of your adventures. The distance PBN family. The distance is a poem that you'll only ever hear parts of. Because it's not yours. It's my son's birthday today.
[00:02:58] And this is a poem I actually wrote for both of them. I don't know when. Two years ago maybe something like that. The reason I read it to you, not only to celebrate the birthday, but the fact of the modified, created October 25th, 2021. Check that out.
[00:03:18] I should date my work rather than depend on other apparatuses to date it. You know, Debbie is knocking on my door and it's just one of those weird things. To be sitting here, Carter's birthday, tropical storm inbound. Which is not that uncommon for August.
[00:03:44] But it is a reminder of how I came to be in this world. Because it was, I mean if you're ever sitting around wondering, it is the responsibility of Hurricane Irene and my first born child that pushed me into prioritizing prepping in 2011.
[00:04:05] Prioritizing it and saying this is something that's got to go up the totem. Because I'm not prepared. I'm not the guy I want to be, you know? And massive, I had to take, I had to do massive things to change.
[00:04:22] You know? And you're looking at a, you're listening to rather a work in progress that has been going now for what, 10, 13 years. I found my way to the Prepper Podcast Radio Network PPRN.
[00:04:42] I started doing my own pre-recorded podcast over there, feeling my way into this community and learning from the people who listened, the few people who listened. And the rest is history as they say, folks. Now I'm sitting with you. Huh? I'm sitting with you, this momentous audience, right?
[00:05:08] I mean it's really hard to believe actually. I remember I used to bring up, I used to bring up like podcast stats, you know? And I'd look at them and I'd say, I don't know, 40, 40 listens total. Something like 30, sometimes less.
[00:05:33] I mean there were podcasts I did where 12 downloads. All that has changed so radically. Thanks to you out there, the listening audience. But the story I want to tell you today is not the one of me, you know? It's not my story.
[00:05:51] It is the overwhelming sort of inspiration I derive from life in general. And watching my kids, you know, the things I learned from watching my kids are crazy. This whole concept, this whole sort of situation that I'm explaining to you,
[00:06:12] the lead up to the title dystopia outsourced of today's PBM Daily News, has everything to do with me looking at my kids toy handcuffs. I was looking at Jake's toy handcuffs in the car this morning when we were headed off to school and he was playing with them.
[00:06:30] And I had two thoughts. The first thought was what it would be like, what kind of questions would be asked if a cop pulled up and saw a handcuffed kid in my passenger's side door, or seat rather.
[00:06:43] And the second one was how thin the metal that makes up those handcuffs is compared to when I was little. How light they are, how the alloys have changed. And I looked at my son and I looked at his world. This is his world, you know?
[00:07:02] What you're living in is your child's world. You know, it's just a... they'll hold on to this much longer than you. You are merely a preservation element at the moment. And I'm looking at him and thinking about his world and thinking about the thinning, the thinning of everything.
[00:07:29] The thinning of the metal, the thinning in the new growth wood as opposed to the dense, heavy old growth wood that we used to construct everything with. The thinning of cereal boxes, the thinning of the quantities of food or the packages, the deception of a dystopia outsourced fundamentally.
[00:07:52] Right? The deception of a dystopia outsourced is what we're living through. Costs are going up, the amount you get for your money is going down. The quality of things is... suffering. Mostly. Mostly. It is the dystopia of the outsourcing and sort of the lazy.
[00:08:19] Do you know what I'm saying? And this is the beauty of our current dystopia. Now it is dark and it is grim and it is exceptionally soul-burning because of the fact that we're being told everything's good. Everything's still very colorful and multicolored and... and... and... and...
[00:08:46] and new products dropping all the time and new things changing and new events in this and that and the other. The digital world has largely saved us from closely inspecting the material world and how radically it's changed and how radically the challenge is.
[00:09:09] But we're being told that it's not dystopian when you watch the thinning take place before your very eyes, the thinning. The thinning of everything. You know when you could argue that the great depression for as bad as it was...
[00:09:26] would be much worse if it were a hat worn by us. Because for our generation and the generations to be after us, we've only known the life of the fatty calf. It's all we've ever known. We never knew anything different. Most of us.
[00:09:44] I mean maybe you knew it for periods of time. But you always had the hope and the dream to cleave on to, right? You always had the idea that even if I'm growing up in a poor family,
[00:09:55] look at all the opportunity, look at all the food, you know what I mean? All I gotta do is get a job, make money and everything's available. There's no stopping me. I'm surrounded by this machine of greater, you know, access and access to see all that collapse.
[00:10:17] You know that's a lot. That's a lot because you've seen the kingdom, you know the potential. But the reason I call it dystopia of the outsourced or dystopia outsourced or an outsourced dystopia is because of that fact man.
[00:10:36] The moment you pull up out of the clouds of this situation is when you start doing things yourself again. And it really all kind of makes sense.
[00:10:51] Now you can't stop a lot of things that are happening around the world, but if you go to the store and you say to yourself these eggs suck. I can't believe that these eggs are so bad. You can affect that.
[00:11:03] If you buy a piece of furniture and it's trash, you can affect that, right? You buy a Adirondack chair and sit out with your wife and it breaks or the arm is, you know whatever. You can affect that.
[00:11:23] You are not powerless in the dystopia that is outsourced, right? You are far more capable of affecting this world. If what we are suffering from, at least from a materialistic standpoint is an outsourced dystopia then yeah.
[00:11:41] The next best course of action is for you to get hands on again. It is to become the source, right? Is to become the creator again. Again. See that's the key word in all this. It's the again.
[00:11:58] Because the again, become the creator again is a reminder of the fact that guess what? Not only are you capable of growing food, building furniture, blacksmithing fixtures for your own home, you know getting into the triwall and fixing things, patching things, building things, repairing things, creating things.
[00:12:22] Not only are you capable of all that like this is who and what you are. This is what you've come from. You've always come from this. Generations upon generations upon generations of people who have done exactly that. They didn't have an option. There was no option otherwise.
[00:12:45] So we find ourselves in this weird outsourced dystopia where we look around and the biggest, you know the biggest problem of all is that we think ourselves powerless.
[00:12:56] You know I go to the side, I don't get enough as much food as I used to from the, oh it's so terrible. I don't know what to do. I can't figure out what to do, all this stuff right?
[00:13:07] What the truth of the matter is man, you have so much power. You just have to get back to it. You just have to get back to doing the things that matter. And look I understand like you're talking to a guy who understands time to disconnect.
[00:13:27] I'm not out at the anvil every day. You know I've been so sparsely out at the anvil playing with metal this year. It's unbelievable.
[00:13:35] But you know there, a lot of that has to do, the amount of blacksmithing that I do, a lot of that has to do with the fact that I've achieved things on the anvil and felt to myself you know
[00:13:48] I've fixed things, I've done things, I've made things and I established this sort of base understanding of what it takes to heat metal and bend it into shape and cut it and those kinds of things. There's comfort in that man, you know what I mean?
[00:14:06] So there's no denying that we're living through an outsourced dystopia. It's one that we've created. It's one that we can get out of. Because of the fact that we can get back into the creation of things.
[00:14:24] All we did fundamentally was outsource everything about our lives to other companies and then they became these things called corporations that decided we want to grow forever.
[00:14:44] And the corporation organism decided it wanted to grow forever and in order to grow forever it had to build marketing arms and this arm and that arm and you know, branches within the corporate.
[00:15:00] And all of it requires funding. It's just sort of the same idea as watching your government grow out of control.
[00:15:06] Because every one of these things that they add onto their corporation has to be paid for and then a lot of these corporations never saw the government getting in there.
[00:15:16] They never in a million years probably fathomed the government would get in there and tell them what to pay their employees on top of it. So now you have this idea of forever growth.
[00:15:26] We want to get bigger every year, we want our bonuses bigger every year, we want our salaries bigger every year. You're the consumer. You're outside of all this conversation and you're watching your products, whatever they are, your t-shirts, whatever it is.
[00:15:43] You're watching all of your products change significantly before your very eyes and they're telling you inflation and they're telling you this thing and that thing and they're telling you this is the reason.
[00:15:53] That's the reason. And you realize we're just deeply entrenched in an outsourced dystopia where the cereal boxes are thinner and the steaks aren't right and the chicken looks strange and the eggs are pale and sad and everything is weird.
[00:16:17] Nothing seems like it's worth what you pay for it. And the things that do, the things that are cheap and affordable, they're even worse. And I really do think it has everything to do with taking back as much as you can and making as much as you can.
[00:16:41] Now of course the catch 22 to you guys, a lot of you guys out there listening is, one of the tricky things that happened and I don't think it was on purpose.
[00:16:52] It was one of the tricky things. As we began to outsource our entire life to mass production, China, corporations, so on. As we started to do that, we also started to invest our greatest asset of all.
[00:17:10] We started to invest our time and once you invest enough of your time into another man's business then you don't have time. You're trapped outsourcing your life. You're trapped outsourcing everything that you need because you've created this life now where whatever the circumstances are, we got to work.
[00:17:37] We got to dedicate eight to ten hours a day to that. That has to happen.
[00:17:40] We got bills, we got debts, we got things and now we find ourselves in a situation where it's much harder to start talking about I'm going to make the bread and the eggs and the pasta and I'm going to make the pies and I'm going to make the soap and I'm going to hammer, you know, make my own nails and I'm going to, right?
[00:18:00] You get to that point where it's like how and then add, you know, fold in the distractions. You fold in the Instagrams and the Pinterest and the YouTube and the prep broadcasting networks and you fold all these distractions into your life and you go, oh my God, you know, I have an hour a day.
[00:18:19] I have an hour a day fundamentally to catch my breath and think about what a failure I am for not doing all these things myself. So it's almost unfair, you know, and it may call for a reworking of your life.
[00:18:35] It may call for a rescheduling of things in your life but, you know, what I'm not looking to solve this for you right now.
[00:18:42] I'm just looking to tell you that we're undeniably living through an age that is an outsourced dystopia, you know. We've handed everything, all the creativity, we've handled everything, handed everything over to other people and we're not happy with the results fundamentally.
[00:19:05] And while that is terrifying and annoying and scary and all that, well, it's also great news. It's great news because it means you can figure out how to get it back. You can figure out how to get it back.
[00:19:20] You can figure out how to change your life, maybe do it collectively with some people, maybe collectively with your family, whatever, and build the life that you want.
[00:19:30] Now that's where people get overwhelmed and they start saying, I don't have time for that. Well you've got time for one thing. You've got time for one simple thing this week, whatever that is.
[00:19:40] Right? You've got time to sit down this weekend and mix together some essential oils with some salt water and some baking soda and create the homemade mouthwash. You've got time to do that. I've done that many times.
[00:20:04] Make your own mouthwash. It's one thing that you can do to say to yourself, oh, by doing this, because I already have baking soda, I already have water, I already have essential oils, most of you do.
[00:20:15] Salt. I don't know if that's everything I might be missing an ingredient. How much money did you just save? You know what I mean? How much money did you just save? What's it go for?
[00:20:26] My family, we have met. We don't make our own mouthwash. I've done it in the past and used it out of sheer convenience. Let's just see what it costs. It's not a thing I go out and buy.
[00:20:44] Now that would be wild, holy. Well here's an example. This TheraBreath Oral Rinse is what my wife often buys. 473 ml later, so it's a big bottle of $53.
[00:21:00] TheraBreath, let's see what a little bottle costs. 11 bucks, 12 bucks, two pack for 25. So you can see how things add up, right? And you can see the power in your two hands.
[00:21:19] The power in your two hands. You can make the bread this weekend. And with bread and things like that are those ones where you say it's just cheaper to do it, to buy it. It might even be better.
[00:21:29] And for a while it probably will be better. For a while your bread might suck compared to the cheaper, easier thing you can buy at the store. But see when you learn to make bread, you're not just learning to make bread. That's what you have to understand.
[00:21:47] Like if you're thinking like I can just buy sandwich bread for $249, cheap, you know, whatever. You're not just learning to make bread. You're learning to work with yeast risen dough that can be manipulated any number of ways to create a ton of different things, right?
[00:22:07] Your yeast risen dough can be bread. Your yeast risen dough can be added tons of olive oil too and become pizza dough, right? Your yeast risen bread can be, you can add more sugar to it and you can turn it into cinnamon rolls.
[00:22:24] You can braid it, not to mention like the variety of breads you can make. You can braid it. You can roll it into baguettes. You can build it into like a bowl style loaf. You could do all kinds of stuff man.
[00:22:43] And here's the finale, okay? Here's the finale for those of you out there listening in this condition. The finale is you're sitting around feeling the burdens of life, particularly, you know, if you're struggling. You're feeling the burdens of life. You're feeling the lack of meaning in life.
[00:23:10] You're feeling the lack of satisfaction and a variety of things that you do. You know, one thing about the digital stuff that I've learned over the years in it myself, watching children in it, watching my wife, you know, participate in a lot of that kind of stuff.
[00:23:30] It wears off. Like it's one of the first things to wear off. The joyousness of the digital stimulation, be it video games or YouTube video, whatever it is, right? Whatever it is that you're into and spending a lot of your Pinterest, Instagram, all that kind of stuff.
[00:23:51] At first it's great. It's exciting. It's wonderful, you know? But very short period of time, you just get completely bored of everything and you see everything. That's the crazy part. Like you see so much. Like you can get excited about a thing and just see.
[00:24:08] I put YouTube on my phone sometimes and I don't want to listen to anybody talk. I turn it off, I put BBN on. I'm serious. It's so... I get to that point.
[00:24:21] So if we're searching for digital satisfaction and not finding it, the real true satisfaction is almost always waiting in your fingertips. It's almost always waiting in your hands to create, you know, to go out into the world to explore.
[00:24:38] To go out and to lift and to carry and to struggle and to work. These things... they're a different reward system. I have no doubt about it.
[00:24:48] I don't know the science but I'm telling you right now, you make bread and it's a very different reward system than winning a round of call of duty.
[00:24:56] You know? You build a greenhouse out in your backyard from scratch. It's a very different reward system than winning a video game or finding a cool video or listening to a political commentary that's funny and that's a zinger.
[00:25:14] I want to thank Jacob for showing me what he showed me this morning without even meaning to show it to me. Because we are living in outsourced dystopia, folks. And it's veiled.
[00:25:36] But the truth of the matter is you can work your way out of it. We all can. That's why I've been telling you for years without even knowing the full extent of what I've been telling you that the path to self-reliance and independence.
[00:25:48] BBN, your path back to stability is the way. It's Thursday night folks. Toolman, don't miss him. We may not hear from Dandy. He's a very busy man these days. But the Toolman will be on. Alright? Enjoy the shows folks. Visit pbnfamily.com and play around.
[00:26:12] Oh! We got a new family gear uploading today for our members. We're going to be reviewing a small piece of gear that is likely one of the most effective pieces of gear you can have to save your life.
[00:26:32] Truly! Alright? I'll talk to you guys soon. Please support the sponsors alright? See ya. Are you prepared to be the family doctor in a disaster or emergency? This is the Intrepid Commander and I'm holding the Preppers Medical Handbook by William W. Forge M.D.
[00:26:52] In this great book you'll learn how to prepare for medical care off the grid. You'll learn about assessment and stabilization. You'll even deal with things like bioterrorism response, radiation and how to build the off-grid medical kit at home.
[00:27:07] Look, 2020 taught us a lot about the limitations of our medical infrastructure in America. Get the Preppers Medical Handbook today at Amazon.com. Again that's the Preppers Medical Handbook by William W. Forge M.D.
