Practical Prepping Podcast

Redneck Engineering and the Lost Art of Self Reliance

Mark & Krista Lawley Episode 561

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What if survival is not about expensive gear but about mindset? Redneck engineering proves that resilience comes from creativity, grit, and knowing how to use what is already in your hands. When things break or systems fail, practical self reliance becomes your greatest advantage.

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Redneck engineering is more than a stereotype. It is a mindset rooted in resourcefulness, adaptability, and practical problem solving. Originally, the term redneck referred to rural farmers in the Southern United States who worked long hours in the sun. Over time, the word evolved. Today it can describe someone who is plainspoken, hardworking, and self reliant. While sometimes used as an insult, many proudly embrace it as a symbol of resilience and ingenuity.

At its core, redneck engineering is about creating functional solutions when pre made gear is unavailable. It reflects the simple philosophy of fix it now with what you have. Whether building an improvised shelter from natural materials, stringing a tarp between trees with paracord, or repurposing contractor trash bags as moisture barriers, the focus is always on knowledge over gear.

This mindset also applies to home security. Simple upgrades like replacing short door screws with three inch wood screws can dramatically strengthen entry points. Wooden dowels in sliding door tracks, crossbars for doors, and strategic landscaping with thorny bushes can deter intruders without advertising that you are security conscious.

Many everyday items can serve multiple purposes. Paracord strands become fishing line or sewing thread. A stainless steel water bottle allows you to boil water over a fire. Even common household objects can be adapted in emergencies.

Our grandparents practiced these principles during the Great Depression. They planted gardens, preserved food, repaired clothing, and lived by the creed use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.

Redneck engineering is not about appearances. It is about competence. When you cultivate resourcefulness through practice, you build confidence and resilience for whatever comes next.

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SPEAKER_00

Today we explore the mindset behind Redneck Engineering, a philosophy built on grit, creativity, and using what you already have. From improvised shelters and fire starting to low-tech home security upgrades. This is about real-world resilience.

SPEAKER_01

Welcome to Practical Prepping. Today is July 6, 2026, and this is episode 561. This is the prepping podcast with no bunkers, no zombies, and no alien invasions. Just practical prepping, where we teach everyday people how to prepare for life's emergencies, disasters, and crises. And we're here to help you get prepared. I'm Krista.

SPEAKER_00

And I'm Mark. And if you'd like the expanded notes for this episode, go to practical prepping.info forward slash five six one. And let's talk about the word redneck.

SPEAKER_01

Makes me think of Jeff Foxworthy. You might be a redneck.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, yes. And we see ourselves in so many of those things. The term originally referred to rural white farmers, especially in the southern United States. And it likely comes from farmers working very long hours in the sun and developing a sunburned neck or a red neck.

SPEAKER_01

Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_00

And this dates back into the late 1800s.

SPEAKER_01

You know, today redneck often refers to somebody who lives in a rural area or has a working class background and is seen as plain spoken, practical, and self-reliant. And they enjoy outdoor activities like hunting and fishing, farming, camping, or truck culture.

SPEAKER_00

Now the word can be used as a pejorative, as an insult implying ignorance and backwardness. But the word's been reclaimed, and it's used humorously or proudly to mean resourceful, hardworking, and country-minded. So today we're talking about an introduction to redneck engineering.

SPEAKER_01

So practical.

SPEAKER_00

It's a philosophy. It's the ability to create functional survival solutions on the fly when pre-made gear is unavailable.

SPEAKER_01

I saw that with my dad. He grew up a farmer on a farm community and developed a lot of practical knowledge just using and utilizing the wood and the metal scraps and the wire and the fencing and whatever they had there on the farm to build whatever they needed.

SPEAKER_00

It's a survival mindset. It's characterized by the you gotta fix it now approach, utilizing whatever materials and resources are currently at hand.

SPEAKER_01

And it really does stress knowledge over the gear. And this skill set reinforces that fundamental prepper principle that the more you know, the less you have to carry.

SPEAKER_00

Now we're going to talk about some of the things that redneck engineering can really shine in. And some is in improvised shelter, using natural material for the construction of shelters. Survival involves knowing how to construct those temporary structures using forest resources like leafy branches, bamboo sticks, vines, all types of coverings that you can find in the forest.

SPEAKER_01

There's also the tarp and paracord method. This is where a basic shelter can be created by stringing paracord between two trees and draping a lightweight tarp over it to create a makeshift A-frame or a pup tent.

SPEAKER_00

And that's why we carry tarps in the car and also in our get home bags.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. You never know where you might have to spend the night out on the absolute grass.

SPEAKER_00

It's absolutely possible. But we can adapt everyday materials like contractor grade trash bags or different plastic sheeting and repurposing this as ground covers, moisture barriers, pack liners, even improvised thermal layers for warmth. And I've seen it used as rain gear.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, sure, absolutely. And talking about warmth, a redneck can come up with a heat solution because a lot of them carry a lighter or some kind of an instant fire, even if they don't smoke or what have you, they've got some way to light a fire.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I carry one in my ADC bag and I haven't I I quit smoking in the 80s.

SPEAKER_01

Sure, absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

But I still carry that lighter. And if he doesn't have one in his pocket, he at least has one or more in the truck.

SPEAKER_01

You know, and they have learned how to be very resourceful when it comes to fire starting because, like on a bright sunny day, they could use a simple magnifying glass to focus sunlight and put that on some tinder. I actually practiced this as an uneducated child back when I was a little kid. I took some newspaper out in the backyard and a magnifying glass, and I sure enough started a fire in the backyard. It was very small and very contained until the wind picked it up and went over the fence into the neighbor's yard. And that's a day for another story. Anyway, so you can use a magnifying glass. Found out you can also use a pair of eyeglasses to do the same thing to train that sunlight down into a pinpoint which is super hot and can ignite tinder or paper pretty quick.

SPEAKER_00

You can even use a bottle of water for this very same thing. Now there's some improvised water filtration and purification.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

A good old redneck will be able to build a two-liter bottle drip filter.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

And that's just simply inverting a two-liter bottle and layering it with sand with coarse natural charcoal, like you would get from a fire, not charcoal intended for grills. That stuff has chemical treatment on it, and it's not to be used for purifying water. And putting small gravel in there to remove sediment and debris.

SPEAKER_01

And it's really good to do a pre-filtering technique using a bandana or a handkerchief or a clean t-shirt, even a coffee filter helps to remove some of the chunky stuff from your sourced water before applying that final purification method.

SPEAKER_00

And there's some wild water boiling options. A good single-walled stainless steel water bottle, you can use that as a tool for boiling, and you cannot use an insulated water bottle. Like the double walled wall insulated, it will explode on you. But you can use the single wall for boiling and purifying water directly over an open fire.

SPEAKER_01

Let's talk about some redneck gear and tool adaptation. You know, those multi-use paracord strands, those inner strands of paracord, can be unraveled and used as high strength sewing thread if you have to repair some gear or an emergency fishing line. Even some improvised wound closure can be used with some of those little strings out of the strands of paracord.

SPEAKER_00

And a redneck engineer usually carries a knife of some sort.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

It's probably a folding blade clipped in a pocket, but it's possibly a small fixed blade on a belt. But he also has access to a long blade, probably in his or her truck. And yes, there's a lot of her rednecks running around with trucks. Where the line is dearly. But these will be tools like machetes, and they're for more than just clearing brush. They can be used to split small firewood, they can be used to construct shelters, they can be used to cut poles for a travoy or limbs for splints. All kinds of uses for those long blades, which are probably carried in the truck, possibly a shorter one in a backpack.

SPEAKER_01

I'd count on it. Oh, and also for the hardware utility, a redneck is going to have a package of zip ties, they're going to have duct tape. There's all kinds of redneck engineering fixes for everything from broken backpack straps to shoelaces or securing items one to the other.

SPEAKER_00

Now, redneck engineering is cultivating resources. It's about improving the process. Developing this skill requires proactivity looking for ways to improve our survival procedures and finding better uses for mundane items.

SPEAKER_01

Now we're going to talk about some improvised security and safety. But first, we're going to tell you that today's cup of coffee comes from Harold. Harold is a new supporter of our podcast and he bought a coffee membership. Harold, welcome to the family. We really do appreciate your support. And you too can go to practicalprepping.info slash support. And that's where you can show us some love by buying us a few cups of coffee or even a coffee membership. It's only five dollars a month for the membership, but it really helps us offset the expenses of our show. So please consider doing that at practicalprepping.info slash support. Now let's get back to the show.

SPEAKER_00

Here we're talking about improvised security. Now this statement came from our book, Practical Prepping for Everyday People. Here's the statement. Improvised security focuses on utilizing common materials and clever strategies to protect your home and family when conventional systems are unavailable or insufficient.

SPEAKER_01

So we're going to start with hardening the residence. What do we mean by hardening the residence?

SPEAKER_00

Well, first place to start is door reinforcement.

SPEAKER_01

That is very important.

SPEAKER_00

Those door screws, those screws that hold the door into the door frame.

SPEAKER_01

Usually really teeny.

SPEAKER_00

Many of them are very short. Take those things out and replace those screws with three-inch or longer wood screws. Yes. Both the hinges and the striker plates. That way the door is anchored directly to the wall studs, and it makes it nearly impossible to kick in.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. And do this whether you own the home or even if you live in an apartment.

SPEAKER_00

We did this with our apartment when we first got married. We took those, especially that striker plate, we took that out and secured those with three-inch deck screws. Also, you can create some physical barriers. You can make some heavy-duty crossbars. Now we did this in my mother's basement, had a walkthrough door, and we put brackets on each side of the door, and we cut a two before to drop down into that. And there was no way to kick that door open. You had that two before with those brackets mounted into that frame with very large screws in there. Or you can cut a two before with a notch in one end and wedge that under a door handle and angle it into the floor to serve as a brace. Oh, sure. And that works on carpet. Works very well on carpet. Doesn't work on hardwood. So you have to do some other thing there. But it's a good way to keep that door from being breached.

SPEAKER_01

You can also have some window and some sliding door track security by using wooden dowels or like a mop handle or a metal bar and lie that down in the track of the sliding glass door or the window, and that prevents them from being pried open from the outside or, you know, slid over one side to the other. It'll stop it in its track.

SPEAKER_00

Now here's one of my favorite, and that is strategic landscaping deterrence.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, yes.

SPEAKER_00

You want to create a hostile environment for intruders. But you don't want to signal that the home is a prepper household. Sure. So you can plant thorny or sticky bushes such as roses, holly, or yucca plant directly under first floor windows, and it makes a painful physical deterrent for anybody trying to climb through that window.

SPEAKER_01

And speaking about landscaping, keep your shrubs trimmed low around the entrances. This way, it deters an intruder from hiding behind large tall hedgerows or trees or growth that might be near a door or a window. So make sure that the doors and windows can be easily seen from the street.

SPEAKER_00

Shadow casting. And this is simply positioning outdoor lights out in the yard pointing back at the house. Okay. This is not illuminating the yard, it's illuminating the house. But the purpose is that it causes an intruder to cast a large, noticeable shadow against the building that can be seen from the street.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Yeah. Well, let's talk about some improvised defensive tools. You know, a redneck is going to find many household objects that can be repurposed for defense, such as a baseball bat. Now, this is cool what you had shared here. I learned this. I never thought about this, the sock strategy. That's where you just place a sock over the end of the bat. So if an intruder tries to grab that, the sock will slide off, and then you can still have the bat in your hand, and now you can use the bat for where it's you can go back to work with your bat. Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

Some impact weapons.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, sure.

SPEAKER_00

Cast iron skillet.

SPEAKER_01

Boom.

SPEAKER_00

Now this worked in many old western stuff.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it it crack a skull.

SPEAKER_00

Grandma hit him in the back of the head with a cast iron skillet. And if you're fighting for your life or your family's life, hitting them in the back of the head with a cast iron skillet's a pretty good way to go. And don't try to just thump him, whack him.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah, make it mean it's something.

SPEAKER_00

How about a fire extinguisher? You can discharge the contents in their face.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

And then you can use that heavy canister as a club.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. All right. Well, all right. I see what you're I see where you're going.

SPEAKER_00

Some weights and chains.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, you know, the length of a bicycle chain with a lock. You know, that could be a pretty nasty striking weapon for somebody with.

SPEAKER_00

Even if somebody tries to block it, I mean that that thing's gonna break bone. Oh gosh. A sock filled with pennies or heavy rocks in it. All of these can be swung with significant force to stop a threat.

SPEAKER_01

Now tell us about tactical pens.

SPEAKER_00

Well, really any sturdy metal pen will do, but it's a pen designed to be able to use for self-defense, and it's used for stabbing your attacker in a last ditch defensive scenario.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

And talking about those tactical pins, have you seen the proof Vanguard tactical pen?

SPEAKER_01

I have seen it. Tell us about it.

SPEAKER_00

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SPEAKER_01

Now let's talk about some concealment and decoys. To conceal things in plain sight, this is to deter nosy visitors or opportunistic thieves.

SPEAKER_00

You can use diversion safes. These are empty, cleaned out containers of everyday products. Can be shampoo bottles, lotion containers, fake hairspray cans to hide cash keys or small jewelry. My first mother-in-law had what looked like a can of hairspray that sat on her dresser, but you unscrewed the bottom of it, and it was a little safe in there. It was just a way to conceal things out in the open. You can also put it in a coffee can under the bathroom sink.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

People don't think to look there.

SPEAKER_01

I wouldn't think to look for coffee in the bathroom. That's true.

SPEAKER_00

No, or you can use any kind of a can or any kind of a container there.

SPEAKER_01

I know what you're saying.

SPEAKER_00

Put it under the bathroom sink. That's not a place that burglars usually look.

SPEAKER_01

Now, here's one that you've seen in the movies and TV shows. And it really works. And a hollowed-out book. And that's where you cut a compartment into the pages of an old hardcover book, and it allows it to sit on a shelf unnoticed among the other books when you're storing items. And a lot of times you can conceal guns or cash or jewelry or whatever's valuable, a treasure map or whatever you've got can be in that hollowed-out book.

SPEAKER_00

You can also use misleading labels. Totes that are labeled with boring titles, like baby clothes or Christmas decorations.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

These deter thieves looking for high-value gear or items throughout your house. These are great for storing in the attic, storing in the garage. You can put your gear in there and have some type of a misleading label.

SPEAKER_01

So you wouldn't want to label it valuable silver and gold collection.

SPEAKER_00

You wouldn't really even want to put things like camping gear or prepping gear, but label it in something that some nosy neighbor or some thief is really not going to be interested in.

SPEAKER_01

Think about the security routine and the mindset. You know, an effective security relies just as much on habit as it does on the physical tools. For example, you might establish yourself a 9 p.m. routine, a nightly habit of physically checking and double locking all the doors and the windows, vehicle doors, even if it's inside your locked garage, because it makes your residence a much harder target. Also, you could think about gray man awareness. So avoid displaying high-ticket item boxes like large TV boxes or large PlayStation boxes sitting out at the curb next to your garbage can because you're basically advertising to anybody that drives by that you've now got a very expensive PlayStation and an expensive TV all up in your house. Yep. Tear those cardboard boxes up and turn them inside out and tear them into smaller pieces, put them in the recycle, and that way nobody knows that you've got the expensive stuff there.

SPEAKER_00

Now I really like the two-person rule. This is used in a lot of different circumstances, but in a crisis, you can use a buddy system and one person's watching the other's back during outdoor task. It can be while cooking or chopping wood or making fire or loading a vehicle. One person is watching the other one's back. It's also something good to do if you're meeting someone off of Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace in a different location other than your house. You're meeting in a parking lot. It's good to take that other person and don't stand just side by side. Split apart just a little ways so that you kind of have a 45 degree angle on this person that you're meeting. But one is doing business and the other one is over there with Overwatch, is basically what's going on.

SPEAKER_01

Now we're going to look at lessons from the Great Depression, particularly some of our redneck ancestors who are our family members we love very dearly. But we want to ask you this question, friends. Do you learn from our podcast? Do you get new ideas for your prepping? In other words, do you receive value from the Practical Prepping Podcast? And would you help us by giving back a little? That's value for value. So please go to practicalprepping.info slash support and you'll find several ways you can help support our show. Now, let's get back to the podcast.

SPEAKER_00

And here we're talking about survival lessons from the Great Depression that our redneck ancestors put into place and the smart ones do today.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, our parents lived through the Great Depression.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and our grandparents and great-grandparents were, we could say, the original preppers, even though it goes back many, many years before that. Oh, sure. It's a lifestyle, not just a label. They were preppers before that term was even established.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that really wouldn't have made any sense to them because everyone they knew prepared in some way to carry on their life because it was convenient, available, and smart.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell And they just referred to their practices as plain old common sense or just life.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus Their primary motivation was self-sufficiency. They wanted to ensure that their family remained fed, housed, and clothed through long winters when nothing was growing. So they had to master their food security and their food independence.

SPEAKER_00

During World War II and even World War I, they planted victory gardens. Over 20 million gardens were planted in the U.S. alone, and that produced nine million tons of food. And it reduced the reliance on the fragile commercial supply chain.

SPEAKER_01

Something we need to get back to.

SPEAKER_00

We need to get back to today.

SPEAKER_01

And because they had gardens that produced an abundance of food, they learned the art of preservation. They called it putting it up or canning it. They used water bath methods, pressure canning methods, salt curing, sugar curing, smoking meats, sun. Drying fruits and vegetables. And they utilize these root cellars. And my grandmother actually had a bona fide outdoor entrance root cellar. And I used to go down into that root cellar and gather up jars of peaches or green beans or whatever she asked me to get.

SPEAKER_00

My grandmother had one under the house. And you could you could actually access it in long before me through a staircase down through the floor in the kitchen.

SPEAKER_01

How about that?

SPEAKER_00

Or you could go under the house and go down that way. But there were just jars and jars and jars on benches down there that she had put up during the fall to carry them through the winter.

SPEAKER_01

Well, you know, another reason why is because it maintained an effective temperature in that particular root cellar. So whether it was a very hot summer or a very cold winter, that root cellar maintained temperature and had also helped preserve temperature.

SPEAKER_00

And it needed no electricity to do that.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

They also had a frugal mindset.

SPEAKER_01

Yep.

SPEAKER_00

The depression era creed was use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.

SPEAKER_01

Pretty easy to remember.

SPEAKER_00

And it was a reminder to maximize every resource that we had. They practiced a mindset of waste not.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, waste not, want not.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Scraps were never thrown away, whether that was fabric scraps that got used for quilts or food scraps became compost or animal feed. Even the flower sacks that they were purchasing uh flour to bake with, they became repurposed into clothing.

SPEAKER_00

The Bemis Bag Company recognized that flower sacks were being used for ladies' dresses and for children's clothing. So they began to put out their bags were higher quality cotton and they added decorative prints to their flower bags. Their flower sacks. Florals, polka dots, gingham style patterns, and they became very, very popular. And it wasn't that long before a lot of other bag companies began to do the very same thing. So this was a matter of repurposing those flower sacks into clothing.

SPEAKER_01

Also brilliant marketing on the manufacturer's part.

SPEAKER_00

And saved a lot of money on the user's part. You had to buy flour anyway.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

So why not buy it in the sack that you could use as a better dress than just the plain old rough cotton?

SPEAKER_01

Well, they did believe in financial resilience because paying in cash, that was the standard, you know, even as late as the 1980s and early 90s, when I was in business in a mall, I met customers who did not have a bank account. They did not use a check. They were paid by check from their job. And then they would go to a grocery store or convenience store and have their whole paycheck cashed out. And from there, they would go and pay all their utilities in person in cash. Cash was king. Just between you and me, friends, I hope that we always have cash in our economy because that is there's a lot of freedom and liberty where cash is involved. Yes. If we ever lose being able to pay for things in cash, we are now subject to no liberty when it comes to being able to spend. That's that's a whole different podcast.

SPEAKER_00

It also helped families stay mindful of their budget and it helped them avoid the hamster wheel of debt.

SPEAKER_01

Right. You know, when you spend cash, it's spent. Well, that's true, and that's a hard lesson we're all having to learn.

SPEAKER_00

Really, and I can remember on Friday afternoon my dad owned a service station in the 60s and 70s, and Friday afternoons he had to have a lot more cash on hand because he cashed a lot of paychecks for people that traded with him throughout the week. Our redneck ancestors also had technical self-reliance and trade skills. Sure. They were multi-skilled labor, especially around the farm. You had to be a mechanic, an engineer, a blacksmith, a carpenter. You had to fix whatever broke.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. If it was a hand-drawn plow or some kind of a tractor engine, you're the tinkerer. You're the one that's having to fix it. And there's also traditional craftsmanship. A lot of times the ladies were learning how to do sewing, knitting. Some of them even built furniture. A lot of the women learned how to use the hand tools and the saws and the hammers. They did leather work, they did tanning. Items were repaired rather than replaced. And you clothes were handed down from the first child to the twelfth child.

SPEAKER_00

Those clothes were going to be made to work until they got used up or worn out.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And there was a lot of earth wisdom. My grandmother was particularly gifted at being able to identify plants and herbs that she could form into a poultice or a tincture or a type of a tea. And she had a lot of folks from her neighborhood, in her rural farm neighborhood, they would seek her out when they were ailing because she had the skills and the know-how to use her earth wisdom with her herbal remedies to treat illness. Because, you know, a doctor was a little in short supply. There wasn't necessarily a doctor within 50 miles of where she was living, and you had to do your own doctrine.

SPEAKER_00

And had to wait on him to come around. We used to talk about circuit riding preachers. Well, there were circum circuit riding doctors, and my great-grandfather was an old horse and buggy doctor, and he made his rounds in that buggy. So you may not get the doctor coming by for a week or two, and you may not be able to go into his office. And these folks could use garden plants or they could find plants in the wild, even in the yard, things that we look at as weeds that were often used to make these herbal remedies. They also understood the strength of neighborhood community.

SPEAKER_01

You know, the rural groups of people, they knew each other. A lot of them were family members, maybe even distant family members, but they were neighbors and they had to share and collaborate in large tasks. They would have community gardens where one might have a better cornfield and the other one might have a better bean field. So they'd do some trades and they would work each other's gardens. They would swap labor. They would plow a field. You even see this going on even in today's agronomy, the agriculture economy, where they'll pool their resources and they'll buy a big combine. And they'll buy one combine and five farms will be able to use it because it's all belongs to them.

SPEAKER_00

And they might plow a field in exchange for a portion of the resulting crops. Oh, sure. I can remember my uncle plowed the gardens for several people. He had the tractor. I mean, he worked a small working farm. And he would go down the road or over the hill and he would plow someone's back garden. Yeah. And it might be that they paid him in crops when the crops came in.

SPEAKER_01

Sure.

SPEAKER_00

Not everybody had a lot of money to be able to hire things like that done. So there had to be a lot of money. You can't eat money, but there had to be a lot of bartering and trading going on there.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, sure.

SPEAKER_00

Skills and goods served as the primary currency.

SPEAKER_01

My grandfather did a lot of blacksmithing for a lot of the people because he had the skill, the know-how, and the resources to do it. And he also made sure that there were several widows in the area, too, that they couldn't do a lot of heavy lifting on some things. And so these rural rednecks, these strong Americans, would gather together and they would look after each other. It was a community spirit.

SPEAKER_00

And it was a shared purpose. Yes. They had a spirit of patriotism and national unity. It provided the emotional support needed to survive long-term crises. Sure, of course. The depression was a long-term crisis. But now there's some takeaways we have for you today. We want to apply that old wisdom to the modern world.

SPEAKER_01

It's kind of like a training your mindset. You can reduce your anxiety by adopting the adaptability and the resilience of our ancestors, our beloved redneck ancestors, who focused on the solutions rather than dwelling on their problem.

SPEAKER_00

And that's a big problem today. We tend to focus on our problems rather than the solution. Solution focused. Number two, we want to pass the torch. It's important that we teach age-appropriate survival skills to younger generations so that this knowledge of self-reliance is not lost to technology.

SPEAKER_01

Well, there's a big amen on that.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, these kids today they know how to operate computers, they know how to play computer games, but they wouldn't have the first idea about survival skills. We have one friend that teaches his daughter so many survival skills, and she is preschool. She's preschool, and she's learning to do things that she'll need down the road.

SPEAKER_01

Building good character for her children.

SPEAKER_00

We do appreciate you being here today. We appreciate you taking your time. And as Krista always says, Stuff happens.

SPEAKER_01

Stay prepared.

SPEAKER_00

And we'll see you next time.