Executive Summary
- Why aligning your Knowing, Doing and Being is key to a resilient future
- Key takeaways from the recent 3-day annual PP seminar
- The importance of taking action in advance of crisis
- The 4 essential regenerative practices to start adopting right now
If you have not yet read Part 1: Time To Choose, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
So let’s say you’re on board with the idea that the world is headed in an unsustainable direction, and that you’d like to be both resilient and contributing to a better future. What can you do?
I usually shy away from being overly directive, preferring to arm folks with information and then let each reader figure out what to prioritize given their specific personal situation. The only exception to this is when I send out an Alert because I am personally taking action such as making major changes to my investmen portfolio, topping off the gas tanks (which I will do again if/when a war with Iran is undertaken by the regime change crowd in DC/Israel), pulling more cash from the bank, etc.
But the recent Peak Prosperity seminar that just took place in Sebastopol, CA from May 4-6, 2018 was a fantastic showcase of 'regenerative' options, many of which make sense for everyone.
People from all over told their stories and shared their practices ranging from gardening, to distilling, to building second homes/retreats in other countries. Smart, successful, and curious people reading the tea leaves and doing something about it.
As you are probably aware our model is this:
Knowing without doing is merely interesting, but possibly damaging if the knowing causes anxiety. The only way to correct the anxiety that forms in the gap between what you know and what you are doing is to take action(s). After all, you cannot unlearn something.
Simply knowing and doing are also insufficient in these times, when nothing short of a gigantic existential crisis is upon us all. Will humans make it? To many scientists and other careful observers, that remains an open question that darkens with every passing day where more business as usual (BAU) is pursued.