Editor’s Introductory Note: This essay describes a SurvivalBlog reader’s thoughts on the nature of survival and the meme of survivalism, from the perspective of the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashana. This was celebrated just one week ago. Rosh Hashana is a holiday, but a serious one. It is a time of introspection and renewal of faith. L’Shana Tovah Tiketevu! – JWR
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What does it mean to ‘survive?. There are different levels of survival for human beings. And even those ‘levels’ are subtle–based on how we perceive notions of survival. For more than 15 years I’ve oscillated between binges of reading survival information and blogs, and then at times ignoring it as my attention to the ‘survival’ community waxed and waned. Obviously, the levels at which survival can be perceived are influenced by our perception biases. Each individual experiences different biases at different times, moods, periods of their life, with respect to the different groups they belong to, and even with respect to the very medium of communication they are using to think and express their sentiments. Someone in the woods talking to a buddy about survivalism is likely to talk and think in very different terms than that same person, 12 hours later, when they are reading and then typing on the Internet.
From a young age, I was exposed to much ‘survival’ literature as it related to real-life stories about my grandparents fleeing Europe, as well as the stories of those who didn’t ‘make it out’. I also grew up on the communalist survival stories of how those who survived the war, then went on to thrive by continuing to fight and build their own worlds. These stories of my own personal bubble were a type of survivalism, but there are so many bubbles– theworld can be seen as a composite of nested bubbles, some expansive, some distinct, others even vaguely defined, some too remote to be seen, but above all, unknowingly interconnected.Continue reading“Thoughts on Survival at Rosh Hashana, by Ze’ev”