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- #711
Wow! Such a cool story. To read.I can't imagine it would have been easy to live that way, but I could probably question you for a lifetime to learn more and more about what it was like to just "be you."![]()
It's all in how you approach it. I was and am a very laid back, content person and I don't chafe at restraints and authority like most because I was raised under an authoritarian father. My brothers and sisters really hated moving there and working that place, but I can truly say, though it was uncomfortable in a lot of ways, it was the most educational and significant part of my life. It fashioned who I became later by showing me what a person can do without if they really have to, what hard work can build, and how to get along with people in tight living conditions~or else. It really spawned in me a love for a minimalist and spartan kind of life as I can see the true beauty and efficiency of it and everyone else just thinks it shows a lack of money.
It was a turning point in how I saw life and it made me tougher than most of my peers and that has lingered to this day~I can't seem to foster up any sympathy for folks who complain a lot. I seem to live outside of the general perspective on life and what is the norm and so cannot really relate to how the other 99.9% of people live nowadays, but can relate immediately to how the old country folks lived back in the day. I can live without things that others cannot seem to live without and I'm truly happy doing so, though others would look at my life and think me deprived. It's sort of funny, because I look at them and think, "Man, I would hate to live their life!".