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the journal

How to Convince Your Partner to Leave the City
off grid living

How to Convince Your Partner to Leave the City

  How to Convince Your Partner to Leave the City The hardest part of going off-grid isn't the land, the money, or the skills. It's navigating the fact that you share your life with someone ...

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The Newsletter

The Newsletter

Newsletter — Unplug, Unwind, Reconnect A newsletter from the wilderness What if your inbox felt likea letter from the woods? Real stories, early access to every video and...

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The City-to-Wilderness Roadmap: A Beginner's Complete Guide to Leaving Urban Life Behind

The City-to-Wilderness Roadmap: A Beginner's Complete Guide to Leaving Urban Life Behind

My Self Reliance  ·  Start Here The City-to-Wilderness Roadmap A Beginner's Complete Guide to Leaving Urban Life Behind 01 Mindset 02 Skills 03 Land 04 Build 05 Sustain S Shawn James My S...

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Article: Unplug, Unwind, Reconnect with what Matters

my self reliance

Unplug, Unwind, Reconnect with what Matters

Self reliance is often mistaken for isolation, but in the deep woods of the forest, I’ve learned it is actually a form of radical connection. It isn’t about turning your back on the world; it’s about standing on your own two feet so firmly that you can finally hear what the world is trying to tell you.

When I first picked up a broadaxe to notch the logs for the cabin, I wasn't just building a shelter. I was dismantling a dependency. Most of us live in a state of digital fragility. We rely on invisible grids for our warmth, global supply chains for our food, and glowing screens for our validation. When those systems falter, we realize how little we actually know about the mechanics of our own survival. To be self-reliant is to reclaim that knowledge. It is the quiet, steady work of bridging the gap between a need and its fulfillment.

There is a specific kind of honesty found in manual labor. You cannot lie to a log. If your dovetail joint is sloppy, the house will let the cold in. If you don't stack your wood before the first snow, the fire will go out. In the wilderness, the consequences of your actions are immediate and indisputable. This accountability is the foundation of self reliance. It forces a man to slow down, to respect the grain of the wood, and to understand that time is not something to be hacked or optimized, but something to be lived.

People often ask me if I get lonely out here with only Cali for company. The truth is, the silent forest is where I found my clarity. In the city, the noise is so constant that we lose our own frequency. We become echoes of other people’s opinions and anxieties. But when you are miles from the nearest road, responsible for your own water, your own heat, and your own safety, the internal noise begins to settle. You stop performing for an audience and start existing for a purpose.

True self-reliance is found in the ritual of the mundane. It’s in the seasoning of a cast iron skillet, the brewing of pine needle tea, and the sharpening of a tool. These acts are small, but they are sovereign. They represent a life where your hands are in direct contact with your reality.

As I look out the cabin window at the treeline, I realize that I am not conquering the wild. I am simply learning its language. Self reliance is the humility to realize that we are part of a greater ecosystem, and the strength to ensure we aren't a burden to it. It is the peace that comes from knowing that, no matter what happens to the grid, the sun will rise, the forest will provide, and I have the tools and the will to meet the day.

3 comments

Hello, Mr James. As disabled U.S. Marine, I love watching your videos. And I am so damn jealous of your life style. I wish that I could do that too. But, alas, I am stuck with being “interned” in The People’s Socialist Democracy of Communist Kalifornia. Interned by my wife who still loves kalifornia. I’ld much rather be in the mountains of Montana. But I digress. I enjoy watching your videos, I’ve learned a lot from them. Things that I knew and things that I didn’t. Keep up the good work. And stand your ground!

Scott Bendon

I love watching since first cabin learn alot from you yet i left nh back to rochester ny I do alot landscaping house im at by hand tools helps my spirit but love the woods god bless you dog cali your family .always melody

melody l barker

Im Luciano from Neuquén province Patagonia in Argentina and enjoy your videos at YouTube. Thanks for to share us about your story live.

Luciano

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Sourdough Bread Recipe
sourdough

Sourdough Bread Recipe

  SOURDOUGH  BREAD FROM SCRATCH  Make the starter Makes 4 cups What You Need IngredientsAll-purpose or whole wheat flourWater, preferably filtered Equipment2-quart glass or plastic container (not ...

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