It’s been a roller coaster of emotions not gonna lie lol. My company is shutting down operations at the end of the year so I have to find new employment. Probably going to leave the beer industry and try to join a union or something idk yet. I am forklift certified and in beer I work with pipes, chemicals and water all the time so I might look into plumbing or waste water. I don’t want to bar tend again but I can do that for a bit while I find something permanent.
Then yesterday we found out that my wife is pregnant. I am so excited and kinda scared all at once. Yesterday I was just on edge all day. Only way I can describe it is the final moments right before kickoff in football or the whistle blowing to start a wrestling match. I wrestled in high school and college and played football in high school. If you have done competitive sports you know what I am talking about. That feeling but all day.
Hit the gym and then killed the last beers in my fridge. Gonna go out with the guys at work one last time in December but other than that I am gonna be sober during my wife’s pregnancy.
Also since the Charlie Kirk assassination the fog of war has been very dense and sometimes I don’t know what to believe.
So it’s probably best if I step back anyways unless something huge happens.
I will be making a post for vaccine information in a couple of months cause my wife is not red pilled on it and that’s the thing that terrifies me the most. I don’t want that poison or any of these freak big pharma doctors and nurses near my child.
God bless and Christ is King.
You can do small scale farming. Not everyone does stuff that requires million dollar combines/tractors/etc...
Look into things like microgreens and gourmet type items for high end restaurants if you're close enough to market to them. Even things like flower farming can make crazy money, especially for the amount of money it takes getting into it. Farmers market stuff, especially "heirloom" varieties do very well. Having varieties that are interesting, like white or red or purple carrots, blue potatoes, yellow tomatoes, etc... can really bring in good money. Even selling honey can be a good side line for income (and it will make sure your gardens are well pollinated).
Check out things like Urban Homestead or Suburban Homestead. It's amazing how much you can produce in small plots of land, doing things like square foot gardening or vertical gardening.
Source of knowledge for the above: My dad's family have been farmers in MS since the late 1700s. Everything from cotton to soybeans to dairies to sunflowers to pretty much anything else. Some of them have those million dollar combines and thousands of acres of land and some of them have an acre or two of heirloom veggies and micro greens. And that's the only thing anyone talks about at holidays and family dinners. Who is growing what, where, and for how much.
Whatever you end up doing, I wish you the very best of luck and a happy and healthy family.