We are going to talk today about what happens when your project, your homestead, your business — whatever you are building — hits the point where it can’t grow unless you step into leadership. Not louder. Not bossier. Just clearer.
And what it costs when you avoid that moment.
We’ll also cover our usual Monday segments.
Featured Event
Monthly Meetup at Basecamp Lodge
Saturday, 12pm–3pm
Potluck + Seed Exchange (bring seeds if you’ve got them)
RSVP here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1246004124202741
Bring a dish. Bring seeds. Bring yourself.
Sponsors
Sponsor 1: StrongRootsResources.com
Sponsor 2: AgoristTaxAdvice.com
Tales from the Prepper Pantry
- Considering a community lard pig buy – Kune Kunes available
- Breaking the bad habit of buying vegetables at the store — diving back into freezer and canned goods
- Seeking wet cat food by the pallet — anyone?
- Gardens getting up and running
- Recipe Favorite: Dutch Oven Chicken Root Bake
Forage Update
- Watercress
- Dandelion
- Stinging Nettle
- Dead Nettle
- Chickweed
- Comfrey
Everything is waking up.
Frugality Tip
Buying at the right time of year makes a big difference.
Before the Super Bowl: buy a TV on sale.
After the Super Bowl: buy the returned open-box TVs on clearance.
Last year we snagged a small smart TV originally priced at $125 for $37. Brand new. Open box.
Check your local clearance sections for open-box returns. Often brand new.
Happy savings, y’all.
Operation Independence
Turkey Tail season is upon us.
There may be real opportunity there. We’re going to find out.
Main Topic of the Day
From Personality-Driven to Framework-Driven
Yesterday I sat down and drilled into every project and business I run.
Income-generating.
Money-costing.
Even things like helping when someone in the community is ill — and yes, we should mention the Jeffrey Dheeres fundraiser.
Everything fit into three buckets:
- Nicole Sauce centered
- Holler Homestead centered
- Weird outliers
The outliers go on the chopping block first.
But the bigger realization was this:
I have been avoiding a leadership vacuum.
I kept waiting for consensus.
Waiting for another leader to step forward.
Waiting for clarity to magically appear.
And while I waited, I tried to just do more myself.
That cost me peace.
It led to burnout.
It stalled momentum.
Here’s the lesson:
If I don’t accept my role as leader — meaning I walk in front instead of pushing from behind — we stay in one place.
Not because people aren’t good. Not because they don’t care.
Because without structure, everything becomes personality-driven.
And personality-driven systems stall when the personality gets tired.
What we’re building now at Holler Homestead is a framework.
- Basecamp Lodge is functional.
- Classes are being scheduled (like the March 14 bacon class).
- The basement classroom is moving forward.
- Homestead systems are being documented.
- The buying club is poised for its first test.
- We’re looking at additional acreage.
Long-term vision:
Expanded land.
Commons effort.
Cabins for temporary stays.
People coming to experience regenerative community, food, skill-building, and reset.
Membership options for non-residents.
Not a massive intentional community.
An example.
Something that can be learned from and replicated elsewhere.
And here’s the key:
Structure allows generosity.
When more people in the community have needs, chaos doesn’t scale — structure does.
If you don’t build framework, your generosity burns you out.
If you build framework, your generosity becomes sustainable.
So here’s the question for you:
Where are you avoiding stepping into leadership?
Where are you burning out because you won’t build structure?
Is your project personality-driven when it needs to become framework-driven?
Sometimes growth doesn’t require more effort.
It requires clarity.
And someone willing to walk in front.