This is the second post of a series of six. If you have not read the first post, you can read it: https://scorum.com/en-us/other/@elohim4/man-nomadis-vs-man-stabilis-first-parte
Undoubtedly, nomadism and permanence are two completely different lifestyles, and we in modern society have a fixed abode, we work to gain what is necessary to feed us, perhaps we do not understand what a "primitive style" life means.
Personally I lived for ten years, first in caravans and then in campers, I was partly sedentary and partly wanderer, I did not have a house or an apartment, I was therefore a little gypsy, both in spirit and also from a residential point of view , but still I was in the "ranks" from a point of view of food self-sufficiency.
So to fill "the belly" I worked like everyone and I went to the supermarket like my other kind.
So I've never done "the primitive" in the true sense of the word, occasionally if I find spontaneous fruit I take advantage of it, but I'm not self-sufficient, sometimes I have to go to the supermarket.
However I believe that in me there is a part that still wonders:
"Have we earned us to trade freedom in exchange for the need to work?"
I remember a period when I was a volunteer woofer in Tenerife, about two years ago in a sort of cohousing, and I came to know a lot of "alternative people".
The city where I was called El Medano, where a small hippie community survives to this day.
SOURCE:
An area famous all over the world for hippies
http://blog.zingarate.com/diarioditenerife/nonostante-le-denunce-gli-hippie-tornano-la-caleta-adeje/
Many of these people live a semi-nomadic lifestyle, they remain in some cases a few days, before leaving for other destinations, others remain there for weeks, months or even years.
They live not far from the beach, in a place that is called "barranco"
CAMINANDO en el BARRANCO De EL MEDANO. TENERIFE
Without having too many claims everyone gets along better.
End of the second part
Comments