I used to think self-sufficiency meant having everything dialed in.
You grow the food.
You fix the things.
You don’t rely on anyone.
You’ve “figured it out.”
That’s what I thought.
Then I ran over something with my snowblower.
Again.
Now for anyone new here — my snowblower isn’t one of those fancy standalone ones. It’s mounted on the front of my lawn tractor. Which means when something goes wrong, it’s not just a quick flip-it-over fix. It’s a whole production.
And if you’ve followed me long enough, you know I have a talent for running over things.
Foam slide.
Snow shovel.
Driveway marker pole (that one snapped shear pins).
Garden hose with the lawnmower.
Sprinkler.
I’m basically a walking safety demonstration.
Anyway, this particular day I hear that sound.
That metal-on-metal “well that’s not good” sound.
I shut it down. Climb off. Look underneath. Sure enough — shear pin gone.
And I just stood there.
Not mad. Not surprised. Just thinking:
“Alright. What’s the fix?”
And that’s when it really clicked for me.
Self-sufficiency isn’t about not breaking things.
It’s about not panicking when you do.
The Lie We All Buy Into
There’s this idea online that self-sufficiency means:
• Growing 100% of your food
• Living off-grid
• Never going to town
• Making everything from scratch
• Rejecting all modern conveniences
That sounds nice.
But that’s not what it actually looks like.
What it actually looks like is:
Something breaks.
You figure it out.
Something else breaks.
You figure that out too.
That’s it.
That’s the whole lifestyle.
It’s Just One Problem After Another
You think the hard part is growing a garden.
It’s not.
The hard part is:
• Late frost
• Too much rain
• Not enough rain
• Deer
• Bugs
• Soil that decides it doesn’t feel like cooperating this year
You think heating with wood is romantic.
Until you’re stacking in July swatting mosquitoes and wondering why you thought this was a good idea.
You think raising chickens is simple.
Until something finds a weakness in the coop and reminds you that nature doesn’t care about your Pinterest aesthetic.
Over time, you stop thinking:
“I hope nothing goes wrong.”
And you start thinking:
“What’s the next problem going to be?”
And weirdly… that’s freeing.
Because once you expect problems, they stop feeling like failures.
They’re just part of it.
Even the “Modern Stuff” Is Problem Solving
People sometimes assume because I live rural I reject modern stuff.
Nope.
If something solves a problem, I’ll use it.
Case in point: printing.
I print a lot more than I ever thought I would.
Recipe cards.
Blog drafts.
Emergency sheets.
Stuff for the kids.
Shipping labels.
And now canvas prints for the frames I’ve been building.
There is nothing more annoying than running out of ink when the nearest store is a two-hour drive.
So I signed up for HP Instant Ink.
Not because it’s trendy.
Because it solves a problem.
Ink shows up automatically.
I can print full-page color canvas stuff and not stress about cartridges drying up.
It costs the same whether I print light text or full-page color.
That’s not “anti self-sufficient.”
That’s efficient.
If something reduces friction in my life, I’ll take it.
Same with tools. Same with software. Same with anything.
The goal isn’t to suffer for the aesthetic.
The goal is to remove unnecessary problems so you can handle the real ones.
The Forager’s Notebook Was Born From the Same Thing
People sometimes assume my Forager’s Notebook is a plant ID book.
It’s not.
It’s a log book.
Because I got tired of forgetting things.
Where did I find that patch of chanterelles?
Was it early August or late July?
Was it dry that year?
Did the berries hit peak before the long weekend or after?
You think you’ll remember.
You won’t.
After a few seasons, it all blurs together.
So instead of pretending I had some magical memory, I built a system.
A place to log:
Location.
Conditions.
Notes.
What worked.
What didn’t.
That’s not glamorous.
It’s problem solving.
Future-me doesn’t have to start from scratch every year.
Self-sufficiency isn’t about knowing everything.
It’s about building systems so you don’t keep relearning the same lessons.
The Shift That Changes Everything
There was a time when something breaking felt like proof I wasn’t cut out for this.
Now?
Something breaking just means I’m about to learn something.
I don’t get as frustrated.
I don’t spiral.
I just think:
“Okay. What’s step one?”
Sometimes step one is YouTube.
Sometimes it’s trial and error.
Sometimes it’s duct tape.
Sometimes it’s ordering a part and waiting.
But I’m not scared of it anymore.
And that’s the real independence.
Not isolation.
Not perfection.
Competence.
It Applies to Business Too
Rainy River Homesteaders didn’t just magically work.
It’s been:
Ad testing.
Pricing mistakes.
Printing experiments.
Shipping math.
Website glitches.
Trying things that flopped.
Every single piece of it has been problem solving.
Same skill.
Different setting.
You don’t need to be fearless.
You just need to be willing to sit with a problem long enough to figure it out.
What Self-Sufficiency Actually Feels Like
It’s quieter than people expect.
It’s not heroic.
It’s not dramatic.
It’s just steady.
You run over something.
You fix it.
You miscalculate something.
You adjust.
You forget something.
You build a system.
You don’t quit because it’s inconvenient.
That’s it.
That’s the whole secret.
The day I broke that shear pin on the snowblower, I didn’t feel tough.
I didn’t feel rugged.
I felt mildly annoyed and slightly stupid.
But I also felt capable.
And I’d rather feel capable than comfortable.
Because comfortable disappears the second something breaks.
Capable sticks around.
And around here… something is always breaking.










