“Uomo nomadis” vs “Uomo stabilis second parte”
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
“Uomo nomadis” vs “Uomo stabilis second parte”
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
“Uomo nomadis” vs “Uomo stabilis second parte”
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
More posts are coming soon. Write your own!