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journal/Archive/Vision/Vision.md
Thaddeus Hughes 608c43a71f init
2025-10-09 20:43:40 -05:00

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> Unless the Lord buildeth a house, in vain the laborer toileth.
LORD, what do you want to build my life into? I know that you'll be tearing things down. Direct me on how to rebuild the rubble and perfect it.
# Mission
### Build up a way of living with the Gospel at its core.
##### Rediscover and rekindle the lifestyle of my forefathers, with my eyes fixed on God.
## [[The Get-Out-Of-NH Punchlist]]
# Aspects
The farm provides for the family, who resides in the house, as a part of a community. The workshop helps build it all, but is sustained by them in turn. All require each other.
This is primarily for my family. But it's open. It could need some workers. It definitely is open for guests to see what things should be like; to understand God's order.
## [[Family]]
## [[Farmstead]]
## [[House]]
## [[Community]]
## [[Workshop Co-Op]]
### Some idyllic prose
We arise to the sound of the rooster - though slowly. It's time to say a quick morning offerring and head off to check the animals; bring in the eggs. Milk the cows in the cool of the morning.
# Understandings
- Man is put on this earth to till and keep; to nurture things into the best version of themselves: a harmonious offering for God.
- Work is formative and good. As we shape the world, we shape ourselves and our relationship to the world. To not work is to flirt with mental disorder.
- Modern, globalized, industrial work is ill-suited to the development of an individual man: it alienates him, it dulls him, it turns him from love. We have built a techno-economic apparatus that forces people to do labor that they don't want to do.
- Good work is _for_ something. Good work is harmonious, not violent. It has a why. It is character-forming. It is not acting like a machine for compensation.
- True freedom is the freedom to not need, and the freedom to actually choose, and in particular, to choose virtuously.
- We do not have to live the way that the modern technological norms suggest - we _can_ opt out. Small-scale farming is controversial because it is possible.
- A sign of a healthy life is where the elders have something to give the youth.
- Endless growth is not a good goal - generation is.
- Fleeing and running are not good.
- All improvements should be in the form of inspiration and invitation, not imposition.
### Things to learn
- Hand tool proficiency
- Planes
- Chisels
- Drawknives
- Sharpening
- Pyrography
- Writing (inspirational argumentation)
- Permaculture design
- Structural / building design
- Canning and fermentation
- Liturgy of the Hours / Rosary / Deepened prayer life
### How are you going to learn these things?
- Follow iBreviary, and say the rosary daily, including the mysteries
- 2 hours a day doing woodwork or pyrography
- 1 hour each day civil engineering study
- 1 hour each day agricultural study
- 1 hour each day catechetical study
### High-level "Do-List"
- Get book list for farmsteading
- Permaculture
- EIWTDII - finish it
- Understand what property we have
- Ask mom: what to do about LC LLC?
- High-Level Question: when do I leave, who do I tell, when, etc.?
- Should I talk to Terry, and if so, how and what about?
- When / how do I tell:
- Jackson and Justin
- Lectio
- Makerspace
- Fr. Tom
- ... I guess tell that it's happening immediately.
- Lord, when do I leave? Mahrajan, sooner, later? Talk to dad, I guess..
- How do I want to integrate when I get back? Should I have an "outside" job?
- Pros: more mingling. More funds to slush around (I guess).
- Cons: breeds dependency. Less time to build up the 'stead.
- Narrow path: Part-time at a smaller place that will genuinely form those connections / serendipity needed. (Articulate this a bit better so your Grandpa and parents can help you)
### Prayers
- When do I leave?
- Please, find me good work / a good way of reintegrating.