WHY I WROTE
MY BOOKS:
EXTREME
SIMPLICITY: Homesteading in the City
[Note: You can get an autographed copy of this at the store at www.ChristopherNyerges.com]
"Extreme
Simplicity: Homesteading in the City" is perhaps my favorite of the books
I have written because it is like a personal diary of how my wife Dolores and I
worked towards our goal of "living lightly on the earth," even though
we had a small budget and lived in a small suburban Los Angeles home.
We were
doing what our Appalachian friend used to describe as "living country in
the city." We pursued all aspects
of self-reliance, and wrote about it. Starting as soon as we moved in to our
new home in 1986, we began task by task with limited income. We used our front lawn to grow food, we recycled our wash water,
collected rain water, had chickens, a duck, bees, and a pig, had solar water
heating and solar electricity, a wood stove, and we planted fruit trees and
food everywhere.
We describe
our efforts to do "integral gardening" on every bit of usable land,
to produce food (for people and wildlife), medicines, fragrance, shade, and
useful tools. We describe the details of what it meant to raise earthworms,
chickens, rabbits, bees, a goose, a pig, and our dogs in their typical suburban
back yard.
We took the
reader along their journey to installing a wood fireplace, solar water heating,
and a solar electric system.
Though there is much "how to" in
this book, it is full of personal stories and rich reading of the learning they
experienced along the way. There is a section on recycling, and a unique
section about the economics of self-reliance.
It’s worth
noting that this is not a book we planned on writing. In 2000, we were called
by the Mother Earth News magazine to write an article about our meaning of
"alternate health" methods, and we wrote about the methods that could
be called "new age" and could be called Hypocratean. We were on the cover, and a book publisher
contacted us to see if we could turn that health article into a book. We said
yes. But when we submitted the manuscript to the publisher, they said, hmm, not
exactly what we were looking for. [That
book, Integral Health, will be published eventually]. So they asked us if we
could just write about how we live, which we did, and it became Extreme
Simplicity.
Extreme
Simplicity, first published in October of 2002, will be re-released from
another publisher in August of 2013. It
will be available wherever books are sold, from Amazon, and from the School of
Self-Reliance, Box 41834, Eagle Rock, CA 90041; or www.ChristopherNyerges.com.
HERE ARE
SOME SELECTED EXCERPTS
WHEN RAMAH
DIED
When Ramah
actually died, Christopher was holding her head in his hands. She cried out a
loud farewell as she died. He doesn't like to admit it, but Christopher cried
most of the day.
A dear
friend of our visited us that afternoon, and we spent the next seven hours
discussing death, canine friends, and Ramah. Our friend had brought along a
"Dear Abby" article about a boy who had wanted a priest to help him
hold a funeral for a dog. The priest agreed. The boy asked Abby if there were
dogs in heaven. It was quite an interesting article and made us realize that we
weren't the only ones who had such a close relationship with our dog....
Christopher
carried Ramah to a spot in our "Island orchard." He had dug a large
hole in a spot where he felt that a tree might grow. Christopher carefully
buried her with her favorite bedding - his old sleeping bag - and then he
planted an avocado tree over her. It all seemed so right, so proper. Dogs are
not the same as humans, yet our attachments and feelings can be intense.
A week after
we buried our dog, we had a memorial gathering where we invited some close
friends to remember Ramah....
In telling
the story of Ramah, we have gone full circle, from describing here as a close
friend - a member of the family - to acknowledging how her body now fertilizes
an orchard tree. Where possible, we choose to let our animals fulfill their
whole lives right here, on our little urban homestead. Even in death they play
their role, promoting more life. Such "complete cycles" are something
that many more people took for granted a hundred and more years ago, when most
folks lived in rural environments. Today, by our passive choices, we seem to
have lost this understanding.
WOOD
FIREPLACE
Our
freestanding fireplace has completely transformed our home. We would strongly
encourage anyone without one already to seriously consider installing one. On
very cold nights, we had been using those small electric heaters that really
drive up your electric bill. The fireplace made the house really feel like a
home, and we now are uncertain how we got along without it.
In our case,
the transition to wood heating was fairly easy, because we had plenty of
firewood readily available. We were actually doing a neighbor a favor by
cleaning up and carting off large amounts of dead and fallen wood from his
property. Our first season of firewood came entirely from our weekly cleaning
of his yard, just for the cost of our labor. How's that for a win-win
situation?
TIME AND THE
QUALITY OF LIFE
Many people
today believe that they're spending all their time working, yet with very
little in return. Unfortunately, such realizations may come too late to be
remedied.
We think
that the Amish people have the right idea when they keep their schools and work
close to home. They don't have to go a long way to a job, thereby avoiding
wasted time and energy, unnecessary expenses, and disconnection from their
community. They can protect their families from undesirable influence, and
there is the added bonus of having youngsters nearby where they can learn a
trade from an early age. The Amish are firmly committed to valuing
"quality of life" over all the stuff that our modern society deems
important or indispensable - car, home entertainment system, fancy clothes,
foods bought for "convenience" and prestige rather than fresh garden
flavor and nutritional value.
4 MAGIC WAYS
TO IMPROVE YOUR FINANCIAL SITUATION
Once, during
a period of homelessness before we were married, Christopher was engulfed in
thoughts of "poor me" and "I'm destitute," and he could
scarcely see a way out of the darkness. Dolores provided him with a simple set
of practical tools that anyone can use if only they choose to do so. Here are
four "magic" ways to improve your financial situation:
1. Never waste anything.
2. Continually improve your personal
honesty.
3. Leave every situation or circumstance
better than you found it.
4. Tithe to the church (or organization)
of your choice.
We know that
these are genuine practical solutions. We have heard people say that they
cannot make these efforts - such as tithing, or improving an environment -
because "we are poor." Our perspective is that they have their
reasoning backwards. They are poor because they do not engage themselves in the
world in these ways. Logical thinking leads to erroneous conclusions when the
premise is false.
3 STEPS TO
HOUSEHOLD ENERGY EFFICIENCY
1. You can
do without some electrical devices.
This will
probably involve changing your behavior, for instance, thinking twice before
switching on an electrical tool or appliance when a non-electric alternative
will work just as well or better.
2. You can
learn to use your existing devices more efficiently.
This step, too, requires changes in habit,
but once you've understood the extra expenses caused by inefficiency and waste,
you'll feel good about it - plus you'll save money by practicing efficiency.
3. You can
purchase new appliances that render your household inherently more energy
efficient.
This step requires initial outlays of money,
and in some cases higher short-term expenses, but with certain especially
wasteful appliances, the best way to save energy and money is to immediately
replace the old, wasteful model.
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