Monday, June 29, 2020

Structuring your life for surviving these times of Coronavirus

There are basically two ways to view this:

One is "Eat drink and be merry for tomorrow we die" which is basically the ancient Viking way of thinking where your death has already been fated and nothing can change.

Then there is the 2nd way of thinking about all this where you realize you have Free Will and don't have to necessarily die in these times.

But, in order to structure your lives for survival you have to believe in Free Will and believe you can actually survive the next 10 years here on earth with Coronavirus. But, you also have to realize that coronavirus just like AIDS and Flu will always be with us (potentially).

So, how do you structure your life for survival in these times?

I think it somewhat depends upon your financial means and psychological and physical health. So, the structure might look different to some degree for each person. For example, if you have enough money for even food for the next year you could put all your stuff in storage and move out of your house and go camping for a year in wilderness places and you might be better off doing this than working at a job that exposes you to coronavirus every day at your work.

If you are actually serious about surviving all this what I just wrote above in the previous paragraph is absolutely true.

But, that doesn't mean you won't get pneumonia camping out for a year and die anyway. It all depends upon the person and what their health and life experiences are.

Another way to go is to move to a remote location away from everyone in a cabin somewhere. But, not everyone is psychologically suited to remote living either.

So, engineering your physical and psychological survival through the next 10 years and engineering survival for all members of your family including yourself is definitely an engineering feat.

Not thinking you have to engineer your survival is to be very very ignorant and because of this people who do not engineer their survival likely have only a 50-50 chance of survival if they are over 30 to 40 years of age during the next 10 years or so.

And this is true not only here in the U.S. but also worldwide.

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