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5 tips for making do with the right now

Posted Nov 15 2007, 10:16 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Linsey Knerl at partner blog Wise Bread.

My family has lived in the same house for two years, but we neither rent it nor own it. It is part of a family farming corporation with an uncertain future. We don’t know if we will be here another 10 years, or if we will need to move next spring. It seems silly to invest too much in it without it being a permanent home, but, at the same time, we really want to make it our own.

It seems easy to hold your breath and wait for situations in life to become clear, determined and permanent. But what will you be missing in the meantime? Here are five steps that can help you live life while waiting to see just where it may go.

Know that you are not alone. How many other honorable professions and lifestyles are temporary, nomadic, or without careful material plans? Plenty. Just ask any missionary family, military spouse, or theater troupe how it feels never to know what the next move may hold for them. Time spent at a single location may be just a few days or could last several years. You will never see performance falter as a result of the unknown, however. The show must always go on.

The important things will go with you. So what if you wallpaper the kitchen in your rental home and have to move soon after. You get to take your kids, the dog and all your memories with you. Don’t place too much importance on the material, and you’ll find that the fullest part of your life can be crammed easily into a minivan and the shortest of U-hauls.

The best-laid plans are universal. You may not know how much you will make next year (or even if your chosen industry will have jobs for you.) A guesstimation of what it takes to survive, along with adequate savings, can get you pretty far in uncertain times. (For more information, review Julie Rains' suggestions for saving three to six months of living expenses.)

You can count on yourself. While it isn’t feasible to hang all your hopes on your employer, your mutual funds, or even your friends, you can usually find enough gumption to stick out any situation. Invest in yourself by taking care of your body, getting enough sleep, and eating well. You’re in it for the long haul.

You gotta have faith. When frustration mounts, and it seems that everything is hanging by a thread, your personal faith can play a big role in keeping your chin up until better days. Finding a support group within a church or the community just might be the ticket to some peace of mind. Giving up some of the worry to a higher power can free up your energy for getting on with the business of life.

Other articles of interest at Wise Bread:

Everything you need to know about unclaimed property

The cost of giving baby a bad name

Get those omega-3s without paying mega prices

Comments

 

Family farming indeed has an uncertain future for anyone with even one animal on their place. NAIS (The National Animal Identification System), is a program the USDA is forcing on those who own even one chicken or any other farm animal. Many are being signed up without their knowledge or permission.  Most are still in the dark about what NAIS is and how it will affect them.  (USDA currently says NAIS is "voluntary" on the federal level but is pushing $$$ to the states to make it mandatory on the state level or as long as everyone volunteers they will not make it mandatory ?!?!?!?)

Under NAIS if someone owns even one farm animal, even a pet pot belly pig in suburbia or a parakeet on the 20th floor in downtown Houston highrise that person MUST

1.  register their  premises, (the wording of the NAIS document clouds the title to the property)

2. microchip all critters at their cost including the purchase of wands, readers, software, etc

3.  report all their animals movements off property, births, deaths to a database,  

4. then risk losing them to depopulation if disease is suspected in a 6 mile radius! (140 sq. miles of animals can be wiped out~)

Currently, only sex offenders/child molesters are tagged tracked and register their premises.  Animal owners will be tracked closer than illegals!  

Protection from disease is why we are told NAIS is needed, but the real reason is for the benefit of big agriculture/factory farms so they can sell meat globally.  They do not have to tag/ track individual critters.  They get ONE lot number for each animal group.  Their costs will be small compared to the small farmer/rancher. See nonais.org for more info.

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