Dillon Voisin Oh yes it IS awesome live off grid today !! live close to God and nature now don't wait ! and don't be feminine . Bless you in Jesus name. P.S. men are supposed to be MEN. Amen
I’m 23 and my hometown was getting busier and busier, moved up to the lakes in haliburton and haven’t felt better. Don’t think it comes with age, my friend, I think your just feeling more restless the older your getting. Get your ass into the mountains before your too old and lazy for change, you won’t regret it.
@Chris Calzone Or you could save money and distance yourself from the environment which creates the problem... Do you think every person is obligated to live in a city?
The bigger the city the higher the levels of stress of its citizens. Which leads to a higher percentage of negative interactions and distrust of the people around you. Listening to Bjorn in this setting felt like having a meaningful conversation with a friend while camping.
I can tell you this from personal experience: being on a bus, and being squished between a stranger with body odor and a closed window - on a hot day - is torture.
@manfrombritain 😂That's terrible (but makes for a funny story). I used to ride public transportation to go to school in Germany, but now I ride my bike to work.
Thomas Jefferson warned Americans of consolidated power in big cities. He believed that virtue lied in more of an agrarian life style rather than urban environments.
Jefferson had a great quote, I forget the exact wording, but it goes something like "I was a warrior, so that my son may be a farmer, so that his son may be a poet"
I grew up in the country and always thought I liked the city. Until I moved to the city and realized that there were too many people. My brain just gets tired of dealing with all the irrational behavior.
Mark Marlatt you and me both, I grew up on a farm and always thought I’d love to move to the city. Once I finally moved out I regretted it almost instantly, it’s taken me 7 years to be able to get back to the countryside this year and I am quite happy to never step foot in a town again 😂 it’s the materialism that’s got to me.
@@thewessexbretwalda5865 my wife's job is still keeping me in the city but I have found that cycling has given me some sense of freedom when I can get away!
Yep. I grew up in a rural town similar to Mayberry. I thought I hated it. Now I live in a small town where there is a river valley less than a mile away. I can fish, kayak, hunt and at night I go into that valley and sit at a bank by a pond and watch the sky, listen to owls, jumping fish, feel the temperature change, watch the fog rise off the pond and river, smell decaying leaves, breathe fresh air, hear deer or anything else moving through the trees, and just wait for my pole to twitch. Best therapy money could never buy.
My mother told me Someday I will buy A galley with good oars Sail to distant shores Stand up on the prow Noble bark I steer Steady course to the haven Hew many foemen Hew many foemen
I live in a rural town and work in a city. On the way into the city I feel the anxiety build. And on the way home it sheds. There's a huge negative energy about cities.
3 weeks ago I went camping/hunting for the first time, 2.5 hours away from the city and 130km through a logging road away from the highway. I felt the same urge coming back after being gone for 4 days. I was crying at work in the morning just thinking of going back to the woods because of how terrible and stressful city life actually is! The Milky Way was absolutely beautiful!
I relate to all of you. It's the same for everyone. Leaving the mess and getting a taste of what life has to offer really wakes you up. Any time I go camping I rant to my wife about how I should just quit my job and build a shack in the woods.. unfortunately they tend to take your children when you do that.
The woodsman’s goals: improving skills in his work and building the qualities of his character. The city man’s goals: seeking to have others behold him in awe by flaunting the dumb things he has purchased.
I don't completely agree with you in your comment. There are woodsman type qualities in Some men such as myself. Who lives in the big city. Would I prefer the smaller city ? But I can't seem to be able to make a good enough living in the smaller city setting. So I do the best I can in the big city get out and away from it as often as I can. Until the time comes when I can finally retire.
@Gary Nelson respect in your suit, carefully groomed hipster beard exist, but it is not earned. city people give too much of a shit on superficialities, if you show up in your douchebag uniform and the BMW on the countryside - everyone will know youre a pretender, liar , bad character someone providing services no one really needs, and is even proud about it.
In LA the city is so economically competitive. However most of our movies are about poor people going on epic journeys to do something noble like starwars or lord of the rings. Why? Why are our heros poor and humnle but our actors and leaders are rich and not humble?
Watching this a year later during Covid and the U.S. elections, I'm SO GLAD I live in the country. It feels much safer here where people still have common sense. You are brave to broach this subject. Long live masculinity!
Yeah I'm used to living in smaller towns where the buildings rarely go higher then 2 stories and any time I go into a Big city with those TALL buildings and it's just depressing, homeless people everywhere, beggars hustlers knowing you aren't from there wanting money etc it just feels so empty
Embers Dawn not only that but living in a city is depressing and stressful because the way of life is to fast paced for many people, just a place of depressed/stressed people constantly stressing each other out.
"That's incredible .. Imagine seven million people all wanting to live together. Yeah, New York must be the friendliest place on earth." ~ Crocodile Dundee
As a young man my father lived in the wild of East Africa after he returned from WW2, suffering PTSD. After we moved to Johannesburg his depression increased and alcoholism took over. After we moved to the US, he was done. When he wasn't working he sat staring into space, often in the dark. He longed for the solitude of Africa, but he died a broken man. We are the same in that regard. I am only happy in the forest. I once spent 6 months camping alone in the deserts and mountains - I was at peace, finally, Now my time is spent passing time until death. I was not made for this life.
@@guidosarducci8850 i live in a large city(NYC) and when Hurricane sandy hit we lost power for quite some time. I got to see how everyone acted. Quite alarming. I on the other hand enjoyed it.
My sister recently moved out of the city and into "the country" and her and the kids were amazed that they could see the stars. Isn't that sad? Can't even see the stars in the city because of all the light pollution
Drdeathskull I agree with you, I'm from northern michigan and I feel like cities are sheep factories. Recently went to Cincinnati Ohio, and homestead Florida and and wow...just wow. What a disgusting place. We went down to Florida keys when visiting and there wasn't a square inch that wasn't developed in some way.
I would go in the woods but they're burning up to hell right now in California. I need to get out of this place but I'm patient to looking for the opportunity
I grew up in a suburb, but had access to large tracks of woods all around us. My friends and I spent all our free time building forts, tree houses, played war, and made BMX trails for our home build bicycles. I learned many lessons there and developed loyalty with my friends. As we got older we were all heart broken to see our woods developed into subdivisions. It was like something magical was raped from our youth. Sad.
Cities are like machines, they're built a specific way for a specific purpose, they're a pretty cold environmet. It forces you to follow the system to keep the machine functioning.
When I watched the first episode of Stranger Things on Netflix. I had to google the kid that plays Mike. Literally could not tell if he was a girl or a boy. Will looks really feminine as well.
@@badgumby9544 at least some of that is likely due to selection bias on behalf of the casting & production crew... Which in turn is due to what they are exposed to in their urban existence.
Another great quote, "This country was a whole lot better when it was run by a bunch of old white guys". I don't who originally made that quote but in the USA it's the damned truth. I think it refers to the founding fathers.
That’s literally the problem with the migration as well. By this quote. The migrants come from hard times were they have to identify the group they are in in order to stay alive in their countries. Meanwhile western world is in good times but weak men. Where it’s peace and the development is waaay ahead the poor countries. So the cultural crash is not from the culture itself but the values as well. Where the. Quote fits in.
I see where he was coming from, but the problem is, it's lever long before they start imposing their corrupted ideologies and ideals on the rest of the county, then state, then country. I still think it would be better to cut the cancer out all together and have everyone living a better, more natural life.
Even if you have your forest, as long as you sit one remote corner of the world, too scared to leave and face the challenges, that lie beyond, you are a domesticated animal :)
@@Gyvulys Again with your ridiculous cartoon-view of the world were anyone not in a human bee-hive is living all alone with no human interaction. You HAVE to be a city-dwelling moron to say something that patently stupid. But it's fine, you keep deluding yourself in your safe-space, because you probably wouldn't survive a single day in the wild, being the ignorant child that you are.
Im a woman and I have always hated cities. I hate how noisy smelly and rushed it all is. I don't like to be on the go all the time. City life to me is pressure to be out doing something every day with lots of people. Traffick. Too many cars. Too many stores. And like you said, no personal space or private bubble of space. It's not healthy for people be inside our energetic auras all the time.
This year old woman couldn't have said it better. I avoid all cities. It is quite clear looking at the streed, sad city residents (male and female) that they are all miserable but don't realize it. I have never seen joy in a city.
Steve Fitch when I was a kid my mother put me on ADHD drugs and all sorts of downers to get me to “behave”. When my uncle got out of the service he lived with us for a while. He had me workout with him after school instead of starting on my homework (against what my mother wanted) and took me out hunting on weekends. I stopped getting into fights, my grades went up and I wasn’t depressed all the time. A lot of that was having a father figure, but connecting with nature and exercise was a big part as well. We’re not made for this world we created.
This is in fact true for me. I felt 'suffocated' when I was living in a city of 4 million, so I decided to move to a much smaller town close to rural farms. I stayed in that town for over a year and I don't want to move back. I love the open space and being closer to farms and nature. I'm now experimenting with organic farming.
@ademgreen6225 Cities having a higher population density doesn't mean the people are more similar. Cities usally have less peer pressure than small towns or villages.
I've thought of this sort of thing but it's more like humans will eventually evolve to be more acclimated to city life and its stresses. We're currently in this transitional phase since civilization evolves so much faster than our biology
You're right. Lived in the city my whole life and I'm definitely not one of those men. City= Functions on distrust Wild= Functions on trust. In the city everybody is out to rip you off, pull you down, shove you to the bottom of the pack. Everyone is constantly pitched against one another for jobs and clawing for the top. However out in the countryside, in the wild, for people to survive it's all about team work. Working together to fix houses to keep out the cold, hunt food to feed tge women and children, make clothes and chop wood for fire. If you took a person that acts like they do and put them into a tribal village....they'd be cast out to the wolves at spear point inside of a week. Masculine traits are a bunch of dude on a Longboat sailing the oceans and going on Viking or packing the carriages and going on Crusade. We natural ache to work towards a goal and strive to maintain brotherhood. The city on the other hand functions exactly like they female, vindictive, bitchy, backstabbbing and selfish and so men take on those traits also and would happily cast their brother out onto the cold streets if it meant they got to drive a BMW.
I 'get' what you are saying! I avoid cities like a plague. However, to point to an extreme example, the Taliban in Afghanistan are when masculinity expresses so 'rogue'!!
Joe Rogan had a guest on his podcast and they discussed that human beings might be in a different developmental stage after getting virtually unlimited food/resources. They compared it to the grasshoper changing into a locust. Same animal but different genes express themselves and the locust develops wings, becomes twice as big and gets ready to migrate over huge distances.
As I get older I find living in big cities exhausting. Funny how TH-cam gets me more than people in real life and recommended this video. Great content bro
😂🤣😂🤣 i cant fuckin stand it, my son got told, grow ya haircout properly or cut it all off, no more side shaved comb over serial killer look, INSANE how many kids in this town have the EXACT same hair cut, i never considered this place a city but, i amm going further country. Fuck society 🤣😂🤣
@@jackruotolo1257 not to mention that if we are to have so many buildings in the cities, they ought to be at least structurally and artistically pleasing, as opposed to the endless seas of ugly low to the ground fast food joints and gas stations we have now
@@marcusatiusvirilis7723 agreed. Cities once were an expression of a people in metaphysical terms in the art and really long lasting endurance. But now its consumer capitalist globalist mildest that is rootless with nothing but money and consuming in the end.
@@coleflores6323 I like your use of "metaphysical " to describe the situation. I believe E. Michael Jones has talked about the degeneration of architecture. Personally, I'm not a stickler for what the art is as long as it portrays something great.
I had an old boy tell me once, “ if I caint go outside on my porch and take a leak right there in the breeze without the cops rolling down the road 10 minutes later, the place ain’t for me.”
@@danielfrederick306 Thank you or the explanation. I work as a gardener in a moderate sized city but I always find a place to take a leak. (We can cut or let grow bushes you know).
I've grown up my whole life in the woods of Alaska. I live about half off the land, and about once a year have to make a trip to the city. It stresses me out everytime, like I'm a different person, troubles concentrating, chest pain... You are very right with your words, and I appreciate knowing there's someone else who feels as I do and all that I've known, we are slipping so fast from realizing what we are doing to the All Mother Earth and it makes me sad. Much appreciated and greatly respected words of wisdom my friend. From Alaska with peace and love.
I agree that city life is stressful, but for me it's 100% worth it. I moved from a rural area to a big city several years ago and never regreted it.I can't stand the monotonous drudgery of rural life: Two shops, five pubs, nothing to do, nowhere to go.
I suffer from something called 'emf sensitivity'. I only feel relief when out in the middle of nowhere with nothing but nature surrounding me. Many of us fail to understand the damage that this unnatural environment is doing to us.
I lived rural for 19 years. I am so happy that I am out. The people there all Gossip for everyone. You do 1 wrong thing and you get marked for your entire life. Next; Alcohol is like water there are so many abusive alcoholics around. Its an toxic Environment
I moved to London in 1995 until 2003. After the initial excitement it began to wear thin. The sense of overcrowding, claustrophobia, the bad manners, crime etc just got to me. Being stuck in traffic or walking through tunnels from train to train was awful. I planned an exit and now I live in a farmhouse in rural France. Heaven. And yes, I can urinate almost anywhere.....It's a French passion 😂
Everytime I watch your videos i feel calm. Thank you so much for doing what you do and please don't stop fighting for the old way of life..this new life is shite.
I've been thinking about moving from a city of 237000 population city to under 10000 population town lately myself. Mostly because of my school is there but also because of my own mental health eventhought I got forest nearby for quick get away healing but it's not always enough.
@@ToniSeppala696 I used to live in a 2,5m city and ended up heavily depressed for 3 years. After leaving to an around 1000 people village, I feel much better, though the necessity of visiting said city for education still exists, and transport gets annoying.
@@michawrona593 I wouldn't be able to think myself living that big city myself. My current city is big enough for me as large(r) city to live in. Althought it looks like that it's going to be bigger and bigger little by little. And I understand why you ended up depressed. Good to hear that you've been better after getting out of there. Hope it will be better by the day for you and no more depression.
@@ToniSeppala696 Thanks. I can at least hope that with current demographic trends of Europe, we could slowly move away from giant cities. Modernist citybuilding trends were a grave mistake.
@estelle patella chest hair does not make a man. Lots of men have no chest hair. You should say to you a man is one with chest hair that's more correctly stated
I agree its totally corrosive now living here. Camden has no heart or soul anymore. Traffic jams and a broken transport system. I'm looking to emigrate.
The cities have been taken from us. Our societies make men feminine and the city is just a high dose of society. We need cities. Why are our people being encouraged to run away and live in caves like animals?
@@Kristen242008 I like people but since i live in a rather smaller town in Sweden where we dont really have the big city issue. We have a great community and it doesn't feel like tons of people mashed together in one place. I can go and walk in the forest by myself and probably wont see more than maybe 1 or 2 people there but at the same time still be close to my friends and family at home. I think it's a perfect balance, and i dont want to be completely isolated from people but not have the big city thing so thats why i think smaller towns or villages are great instead.
I just found your channel recently. I am a woman but I also agree with you. People don't make friends as easily in the cities. I've since moved to a small town further away from the big cities. People are friendly and relaxed here. It's easier to build a community.
5 years ago I had to convince my family we needed to leave the city, we moved over 4000km away to the west coast of Canada and now live in a place called Halfmoon Bay British Columbia on the Sunshine Coast of Canada. Im now enjoying the quiet also, and feeling more alive then ever before.
@Jason K Egypt and Rome where thriving? Who? The 1 percenters like right now. Wasn't aware you are apart of that club. The club that believes everything they are told?
I never saw someone speak the truth in such a natural, spontaneous and frank way. I also love the woods or the 'mato' as they call it here in Brazil. In living in a city I always felt the confort zone problem you mentioned and always thoght the problem was with me but now I realize I'm not the only one.
You're definitely not the only one. I live in England and I hate our cities, they're dirty, crack heads all over the place, always noisy with people yelling, car horns raging all the time, things are way too expensive. I would rather live as far away from cities as I can in our rural areas.
Man are you right, I haven't properly seen the stars since I was a little kid living over in Eastern Washington in the early 90's. Back when the world was a little more beautiful than it is now...
Light pollution sucks. Ever been miles away from a city but still see the glow of light over it? I suggest visiting the country side to see stars. Edit: autocorrect plus my own personal fail.
I'm visiting New York right now. I'm working here for a month. My wife stayed in Europe. It's so crowded, yet I haven't felt so isolated in a long time. In bars people are competing about being the most energetic and loud. I'm not loud so I don't have a chance there even if I'd try. I felt sad about it and I thought something is wrong about me. This video helped me to see things from different perspective
This is why I'm hesitating to go abroad. I live in a small country with little business opportunities. I want to work on interesting problems, which means going abroad is my only option. But living abroad is suicide to me. I lived for a year in the UK. I was celibate the whole time, I hated the food and didn't seriously connect with anyone. All I had were shallow relationships that ended once the door was closed.
About a year ago I moved from a big city, where I'd spent most of my life, to a small town where I can walk for fifteen minutes and be on the moors. Initially, I felt very lonely, but over time I realised that I made the right decision. When I have to go back to the city I feel very claustrophobic and can't wait to get back home.
The shackles of modern society restrict men even more than women, with the result of taking away their character, strength and their pride of accomplishing something through their own abilities. Everyday it saddens me to see, how being a pathfinder is frowned upon today. Thank you for another great and straight to the point video, keep it up and wish you the best!
You know, thank you. I'm from Northern Canada. I'm in a unique situation where we are in a forested city. What you spoke of in regards to feeling congested or short of breath even applies in a city of only 100,000 people. There is something that happens to the energy a man or woman produces when they are confined to the structure of a city. They start to change negatively. It's almost as if they are producing static from a television. The anxiety radiates from them as they live fast paced lives, hearts racing, no time to think. You see it sucking the life out of their faces. It's a disease in a way. To experience life in a flurry that can cause you so much damage. I really do agree with you. It is not healthy to live in densely populated places. When you say that you can breathe, I know it runs much deeper than just filling your lungs. You return to peace when you can simply sustain yourself in a wooded area. Things move slower. You do too. Your lifes rhythm returns to a slow and steady pace, and you reconnect with what life actually is. I am terribly sorry for people who have never experienced that. I feel grief in a way that people could be blinded by city life. I couldn't imagine living without the smell of muskeg and pine trees on my clothes. Or the smell of wet WILD grass, and not some overzealously kept lawn in a city. It goes even deeper than just manhood. City life steals your humanity from you.
I really relate, I'm female but I closely empathise with you. I grew up in rural Australia on land, so peaceful, quite, it is it's own world ... Now I have moved to the capital city, very big, but also very small when compared to much larger places like new york, shanghai. Yet, it makes you feels so trapped, short breathed. You cant escape the thousands that walk and talk and the closest to peace is probably your bathroom when you go to the toilet...funny that.
I'm in NZ and grew up in the country; I live near the beach but work in the city, I could NEVER live there lol I hope you find your way back to nature, peace and solitude someday :)
Now i understand why i don't like to talk to phone in front of others. I need my privacy. I like it. Thats why i have a limit amount of time in which i can operate with others. If i go beyond that limit i get angry.. i like to do things my own. I appreciate help but i prefer to resolve things alone. Its hard to explain. People don't understand how to behave correctly. They don't respect limits. They help and seconds after they are giving orders, making decisions... are you helping me or giving me orders?. Thats why i get mad...
@@holymegadave I have the same thing. I don't want to talk or use my phone much when people are sitting next to me on the subway or bus. I feel pretty unconfortable.
@Melanie Willard i dont feel anger with few people (i prefer small groups). I only get angry when i need to stay long periods of time surrounded with others without having my moment of peace. I often realize people behave different in big groups, they tend to follow.. the level of stupidity increases.
City feminezes men, yes. With these: -> Porn -> Music -> Alcohol, cigarettes (drugs effects testosteron) -> Food -> less movement, less physics, no workout or training -> being passive (watching tv, movies, funny videos) -> Men dont have real idols like back in the days -> Media effects our behaviour and our mind... repeating is the key here These are just a few
One repeating pattern that really hurts mental health is this - you go to work, where you sit at one place, ass glued to chair for 9 or more hours, with the only breaks being toilet and lunch. Then you return home and lay in bed watching tv, youtube or reels. Rinse and repeat for 5 or of you're seriously unlucky, 6 times each week. Then when you start to feel sad due to this bleak, grey environment, people suggest going to therapy. What they do not realize is that the damage caused by sitting in one small, bleak, fluorescent lit cabin can not be repaired by visiting another small, bleak, florescent lit cabin every weekend. Our mental health suffers, and physical health gets worse too. We end up being skinny all over the body, but develop pot bellies, likely caused by sitting around all day, and not getting any physical activity. Its sickening.
@@devanshvatsal4128 SO TRUE. YOu have to know it and do the right things to avoid this trap. Hope you being well my friend, i took it like you said for 1-2 years.
Since I've started watching your channel I've made sure to find time occasionally to explore nature until I am intimately familiar with it. I know what kind of trees, bushes, rocks, dirt and animals I will find when I go for a hike. Everyone should connect to the land and nature in general. It helps keep you... grounded.
Great, but I hope you realize there is always more to learn in nature, which really goes for everywhere. I live in the woods, a mile from my nearest neighbor, and every day is an education.
Stop and look and listen to them . Watch how they move in the wind. Listen to the sounds of their creaking branches in the wind. Listen to the sound of the leaves quaking in the breeze. You will feel rejuvenated and you will notice the difference between the sounds and movements of the different types of trees. Good luck.
I've lived out in the backwoods, smack-dab in the middle of nowhere, all my life and the older I've gotten the more grateful I've become to live where I live. If I have a problem, I fix it, if I need to be alone, I hop a fence or two and I might as well be on the other side of the moon. Cities seem to suck the life out of people, especially men.
I live in the outback of the bavarian Alps close to Switzerland, always wanted to move to Munich in my teens. Now i am 20 and grateful to live in peace and happiness. I was born here and I will live and die here.
I’m in a small city of 100,000+ in the US and I think I agree with you. I can’t walk down my block without seeing something terrible. No exaggeration. The police don’t even really come here for the riff-raff and when they do, they don’t do anything to help. Like they’re afraid to be offensive to people or something. It’s messed up and disgusts me.
Someone shot off THEIR back porch.. and put dang 22 caliber round in OUR horse barn. I think they livin' a bit too close ya think? Re think your statement son
I was thinking the same Al. I went to a hot spring way out in the Idaho woods. Our guide said that native Americans had built up the pool more than a hundred years ago. Truly a sacred place.
I'm currently working in London Bridge and having to deal with miserable people all day long. Using public transport every day to go to work drains me, the people and the city life drains me, worst of all, I also live in Central London and that also drains me. I'm stuck here because my parents think this sort of lifestyle is a good way to live. Now I'm thinking of my escape because I care about the future generation. No way would I want my future family to go through the same BS as I have. City life has definitely made me feminine, now it's time to become a REAL MAN.
Those awful miserable people. Hang on a minute. Isn't it you who's miserable? Sounds a lot like psychological projection, what you're saying. Poor you having a job, having options, but no vulnerability, jus scorn for those sorrowful people. They're not even cruel or mean to you, just 'miserable' you say.
I'm a powerlifter and every year I have a de-loading month where I go to my dad's village and help out with the farming, I keep all my devices away except a simple dial phone, it is simply the most refreshing time of the year where I can just escape from all the noise and happenings of the city and retreat into this warm place of a simple humble being. This has helped me greatly in life and help put things into perspective.
Sell you're easily replaced belongings, gas up the car, and drive. It is easier than you might think. You will wonder why it took you so long. In three days you can be anywhere in America. Three days. 72 hours. Think about it.
This happened to me and because of the out of this world house prices I was still a renter. This gave me the freedom to move further north and I have seen a huge increase in my mood and my family have blossomed
I've lived in a big immigrant-ridden city for seven years. Probably not coincidentally, that was when I developed depression. I hate going out. I get lost all the time. My only escape is in dreams, when I return to my golden childhood home, over and over again. I read about a man who house-sat a cottage in Wales. He didn't speak to anyone for a year or two. He lost his sense of identity, his sense of himself, which is reinforced by constant interaction with other people. Without that interaction, he just...disappeared. He become a quiet void, a prism for the earth and sky and the singing of the birds echoing in the mountains. When I read that, it suddenly elucidated a poem I'd loved for years, but never understood until then: The birds have vanished from the sky the last clouds drain away we sit together, the mountain and me until only the mountain remains I want that more than anything. I fantasise about the apocalypse happening, leaving me the only person for a thousand mile radius.
you should go there if you are able to, I went in the autumn of 2018, it was everything I imagined, avoid cardiff obviously, but Aberystwyth is tolerable for brief periods, its sort of a cute version of our current year English metropolitan areas, you start seeing all the big brands pop up and the liberal student types but it feels like its being drowned by the surrounding nation. I live along the HS2 route not far from Oxford, I suppose it would be considered a relatively rural area for England but... when I got back here the difference was shocking, all the stress seemed to come back and going through the little wooded areas ( old railway line ) we have at the edge of town I didn't get the same sense at all. I would go again if I could but I refuse to drive as I don't want to get sucked into the rat race litigation mentality. I don't think my parents want to leave this part of the country so i'm stuck here, but I would leave without hesitation if I could.
Cities are psychologically damaging to everyone, including women. People need their personal space and freedom to feel happy. Studies have shown cities have the highest incidence of crime, depression, and especially suicide. And from personal experience, people in cities seem very on edge compared with people living in nature or smaller communities. We didn’t evolve to live shoulder to shoulder with millions of people. And it effects our society as a whole socially and emotionally for the worse.
Ive spent a lot of time doing home deliveries both in the city and out and let me tell you. EASILY the most uptight, on edge people I ever came across were in smaller towns. They worry about EVERYTHING. Immigrants taking their shit, brown people scaring them, the government, people in general. They just can't keep themselves from complaining about everything, real or imagined. People in the city are just people. They come in all types. Out in the country? Uptight as hell, and scary too.
One of my family members grew up in a village, and they are full of fear, hate, low wisdom etc. You may be right man, living in nature cut off from everyone feels so peaceful, but it can make you hatefull towards everything different too, if you dont have a brain that is. Most people i know, including almost all of the people who grew up in villages, seem to have no brain.
Again, not demolishing with opinion, as i said you have a point, however i havent seen anyone wise enough brought up within a village. Most people were either too narrow minded or abusive/fearful to cover themselves. Again, cities have their disadvantages as well, as displayed in the video.
YES! He's talking about mental health issues caused by cities that are NOT inherintly an issue of sex or gender. cities are designed for productivity, for capitalism, for many working class people shoved together for a profiting upper class. the issues of masculinity and femininity is oppressive because capitalism isn't very good at handling the differences of sex and gender in a way that makes it not oppressive. thats why we have a patriarchy f.ex., not because it's natural but because it's unnatural, undemocratic, unjustified
I live in Germany, in a small village with forest all around it and only 60 people on the countryside, the older I get ( currantly 28) the more I admire my life, the more I see how precious my luck is to be born here... and being able to stay here. We make firewood every year, we grow so much vegetables, that we run a little store for the peaple around and I love to camp in our woods year round, and nobody is looking strange at you, because you are having a piss somewhere. I bought a house with no neighbour's around and will live here till I go on the biggest travel there is. Thanks for your videos, very very inspiring and calming
And neither men or women become the other. Masculinity is not truly gone in men. Femininity not truly gone in women. I'm talking about real men and women. Born with XY or XX chromosomes. That trans craziness is only body mutilation.
@Johannes Liechtenauer Johannes Liechtenauer I tried explaining how bad it is now, imagine how it will be in 20,30,40 years, for our children. Most people say "oh it will be their problem". Pretty fucked up mindset in my eyes. Our European tradtions\genes will not live on from people like that. So yea, most of the time why even bother
@@inkythinker you can get out my dear, it is literally a matter of making a decision and acting on it. The rest will follow! (And ignore that sad wanker in the comments, lol).
Indeed, I spend my childhood and teen years practicing living in the woods with my cousins making camps and bases and would spend all day out there, now sadly I am confined to city life with my job and life that I haven’t been out to the woods in so long, I really need to again but working two jobs just doesn’t leave much time for it
When you only hear yourself breathe and the breeze in the threes branches.... So quiet. So still and wonderful. Fuck you just reminded me that ive been in this city for too long
The idea that this guy has failed to adapt to the evolved world such that he is compelled to go and live in the bush(like a caveman) is a sign that he has failed to evolve. He is the specie that ends up becoming extinct. Acting like a cavemen does not make you "more of a man", what makes you more of a man is having a penis(period). What you fashion your life being becomes your choice,but a true survivor adapts to his "new" environment and makes the most of it,that is what separated us from the simians. Having self awareness and control is what makes one an exceptional human being regardless of gender.
@@vforvendetta60 Uh. To make a point ur not wrong, how ever men do like to be free and city life dose get to be Alot. As for men well their are people who like him are forced out cause they lived a life of space and many freedoms. From his perspective he has a point that city life isn't real for him. It dosent me he can't adapt. It means he is not used to the restriction. That we grew up in. U live the way he did and come back to they city and u realise that he dose make a few point that are agreeable. I wish I could live out in the wild. To have freedom like that
@@loriedsonemma-o3318 It shows a weakness of mind when you choose to personally attack a person with an opposing opinion without addressing the points raised(ad-hominem)
@@cosmic_gate476 well we live a present where powerful forces are literally trying to destroy humanity and they're closer to success than they've ever been in all of history so yeah dude I can only speak for myself I'll take the spear and the beast
@@cosmic_gate476 we are in a society so numb and comfy that the idea of facing the elements is just inhuman when in fact we are not living to our potential physically nor psychologically. At some time western culture will face a crisis where goinf back to a more natural way of life will be our only choice as a species
@mister clean again, imagining that period to be like modern humans camping in the wilderness is a flaw indeed. You forgot about the part where humans thought and acted completely differently - the foundation for morality and the social contract didn't exist. Wanna guess what every ounce of human development came from? Abstraction and mass cooperation networks with other humans - i.e. towns, cities, organizations and rules. If you seriously want to find the answer to what it would be like to go even a few hundred years back in time and live in human settlements there, read City in History by Lewis Mumford. Tough book, but if you understand it you will be blessed with a shit ton of knowledge
True statement, I've been through terrible shit and I chose to use the bad times as a area to grow and toughen up, and also realizing the reality that life isn't just some field of flowers, it's pain, hardship, and even death in a lot of places.
@@Avatinfernus weak is a mindset. The inability to deal with real conflict, be it physical or mental is weakness. Indecisiveness, lack of confidence, worrying about everything, etc...all traits of weakness. These are also traits of depression. Whether or not it matters is going to be up to the individual.
Avatinfernus No offense but your "food for thought" is undercooked and pretty rancid bud. When men "get weak" physically, emotionally, and mentally the ramifications are extensive, multileveled and can range from neutral to grandiose and even dire. Historically, and in more modernist time periods, this has always been true above a tribal/communal level. In this day and age across the Earth; particularly among and/or across nations, polities, and regions like the industrialized 'West' and 'Developing Countries' like China, Nigeria, and India; many cultural, socio-political, familial, economic, medical, etc.....problems and issues are like they are in part due to (modern)Human male "weakness"(read: fragility, cowardice and incompetence). A good example of the aforementioned being the worsening status of entrenched 'Western' governmental corruption. Even just on a personal level, if boys and men are "weak" they're almost automatically trusted less, de-valued and deemed unattractive. While its okay to be physically average and mentally more sensitive, It's almost never good being "weak". If you are in need of some excellent sources just ask.
Just came across your channel , was because of the recent COVID-19 , Coronavirus pandemic. Glad I checked you out and like the channel, I’ve always had a admiration for Vikings and their history as well as a general love for the outdoors and being able to survive in the environment you live in. As I watched this episode I thought at first how sad that you have to feel like that about cities, I’m sure there are good ones , but at the heart you are right. Most big cities are corrupt and have a bad side they prey on outsiders and the less fortunate people. Was recently in NYC with my family and you definitely need to have your head on a swivel at times but for the most part you mind your business and keep moving. A crazy different atmosphere and one that’s nice to visit once in awhile but that’s about it. Thanks for your time and sharing. Till the next.
The older I get the more I think living alone in the mountains doesnt sound so bad...
Dillon Voisin Oh yes it IS awesome live off grid today !! live close to God and nature now don't wait ! and don't be feminine . Bless you in Jesus name. P.S. men are supposed to be MEN. Amen
I’m 23 and my hometown was getting busier and busier, moved up to the lakes in haliburton and haven’t felt better. Don’t think it comes with age, my friend, I think your just feeling more restless the older your getting. Get your ass into the mountains before your too old and lazy for change, you won’t regret it.
I feel you brother. Unfortunately, I feel you a lot
I'm pretty young and I want a farm or some shit
amen
U forgot the part about how everyone is afraid of everything for no reason so there is almost 0 social interaction outside work or school.
How about social media 💻😓
@Johnny AppleStead commenting on youtube videos is equivalent to social media
thfenton Say, you don't miss a thing ! Bless you in Jesus Holy Healing name , Amen
I never saw so many paranoid people in a place like London and trust me I've been in many places around the world.
and tinder and whatsapp and instagram...
When he said "I can breathe here," I felt that.
Now with all these big California wildfires the ensentive to go sit on a tail gate by a fire is dwindling
Yes, because he doesn't have to shower amd brush his teeth
@Chris Calzone I do. It's called high-functioning autism.
@Chris Calzone
Or you could save money and distance yourself from the environment which creates the problem... Do you think every person is obligated to live in a city?
@@CowboyVittles obviously he does. He thinks not wanting to live in a city is an anxiety disorder.
The bigger the city the higher the levels of stress of its citizens. Which leads to a higher percentage of negative interactions and distrust of the people around you. Listening to Bjorn in this setting felt like having a meaningful conversation with a friend while camping.
I feel about the same. Good memories of sitting out near the campfire
I can tell you this from personal experience: being on a bus, and being squished between a stranger with body odor and a closed window - on a hot day - is torture.
manfrombritain another good reason y i cycle my bike instead of taking a bus.
@manfrombritain 😂That's terrible (but makes for a funny story). I used to ride public transportation to go to school in Germany, but now I ride my bike to work.
Caleb Crawford City life 🤮
if that is torture to you then in asia it hell to you
@@ZhangLee. There's always someone whose got it worse.
Thomas Jefferson warned Americans of consolidated power in big cities. He believed that virtue lied in more of an agrarian life style rather than urban environments.
So did Henry Ford!
Jefferson had a great quote, I forget the exact wording, but it goes something like "I was a warrior, so that my son may be a farmer, so that his son may be a poet"
@mudslingermason Yes exactly. My fear is they will succeed in doing away with the E C.
mudslingermason yes, that’s exactly correct. Their genius and foresight is so apparent now.
mudslingermason very true!!!!
I grew up in the country and always thought I liked the city. Until I moved to the city and realized that there were too many people. My brain just gets tired of dealing with all the irrational behavior.
Mark Marlatt you and me both, I grew up on a farm and always thought I’d love to move to the city. Once I finally moved out I regretted it almost instantly, it’s taken me 7 years to be able to get back to the countryside this year and I am quite happy to never step foot in a town again 😂 it’s the materialism that’s got to me.
@@thewessexbretwalda5865 my wife's job is still keeping me in the city but I have found that cycling has given me some sense of freedom when I can get away!
YES!
Yep. I grew up in a rural town similar to Mayberry. I thought I hated it. Now I live in a small town where there is a river valley less than a mile away. I can fish, kayak, hunt and at night I go into that valley and sit at a bank by a pond and watch the sky, listen to owls, jumping fish, feel the temperature change, watch the fog rise off the pond and river, smell decaying leaves, breathe fresh air, hear deer or anything else moving through the trees, and just wait for my pole to twitch. Best therapy money could never buy.
What city mark
My mother told me when I was very young I could be anything I wanted to be when I grew up.. I chose to be a man!
Lots of feminists did the same thing.
My mother told me
Someday I will buy
A galley with good oars
Sail to distant shores
Stand up on the prow
Noble bark I steer
Steady course to the haven
Hew many foemen
Hew many foemen
Nice!
these transformers did the same 😂😂
@@CowboyRobot2000 unless there a male feminist.
I live in a rural town and work in a city. On the way into the city I feel the anxiety build. And on the way home it sheds. There's a huge negative energy about cities.
I know exactly what u mean.
Same here. I work in Portland and commute 70 minutes to my 20 acres in the Cascade Mountains.
It’s all those damn bums
3 weeks ago I went camping/hunting for the first time, 2.5 hours away from the city and 130km through a logging road away from the highway. I felt the same urge coming back after being gone for 4 days. I was crying at work in the morning just thinking of going back to the woods because of how terrible and stressful city life actually is! The Milky Way was absolutely beautiful!
I relate to all of you. It's the same for everyone. Leaving the mess and getting a taste of what life has to offer really wakes you up. Any time I go camping I rant to my wife about how I should just quit my job and build a shack in the woods.. unfortunately they tend to take your children when you do that.
"No man should live somewhere he cant urinate wherever he wants to"
You've clearly never been to San Francisco
Or Los Angeles
@Jin Lee or India
Or in Paris
or Asunción, Paraguay XDDD
@@Euphytos oh man...I never been there, I can't believe it's like that, they make it look so romantic and beautiful on TV 🤷🏿♀️
The woodsman’s goals: improving skills in his work and building the qualities of his character.
The city man’s goals: seeking to have others behold him in awe by flaunting the dumb things he has
purchased.
I don't completely agree with you in your comment. There are woodsman type qualities in Some men such as myself. Who lives in the big city. Would I prefer the smaller city ? But I can't seem to be able to make a good enough living in the smaller city setting. So I do the best I can in the big city get out and away from it as often as I can. Until the time comes when I can finally retire.
@@mesquiteguy121 I made a blanket statement satirically-I know there are grey areas and exceptions to just about anything.
agreed. in average this holds true. exceptions exist on both ends of course
@Gary Nelson respect in your suit, carefully groomed hipster beard exist, but it is not earned.
city people give too much of a shit on superficialities, if you show up in your douchebag uniform and the BMW on the countryside - everyone will know youre a pretender, liar , bad character someone providing services no one really needs, and is even proud about it.
In LA the city is so economically competitive. However most of our movies are about poor people going on epic journeys to do something noble like starwars or lord of the rings. Why? Why are our heros poor and humnle but our actors and leaders are rich and not humble?
Watching this a year later during Covid and the U.S. elections, I'm SO GLAD I live in the country. It feels much safer here where people still have common sense. You are brave to broach this subject. Long live masculinity!
Cities are often the loneliest places. Kind of ironic
Yeah I'm used to living in smaller towns where the buildings rarely go higher then 2 stories and any time I go into a Big city with those TALL buildings and it's just depressing, homeless people everywhere, beggars hustlers knowing you aren't from there wanting money etc it just feels so empty
Embers Dawn not only that but living in a city is depressing and stressful because the way of life is to fast paced for many people, just a place of depressed/stressed people constantly stressing each other out.
Then again, the "villages" are even lonelier. I know both (live in a village close to a metropolis)
that's not completely true, i play poker so i can be sportsman like and social as well as making a side living
@@StefanReich I agree: In a village you definitely need allies, otherwise life gets very frosty.
No Man should live in a place where he can't urinate wherever he wants to.
That's Wisdom to live by
Roger that!!! 👍
They could just let us piss in a drain lol but nooooooooo
@@Macheako think of the children or not no dont
We need that on a shirt
In Chicago that doesn't stop anyone. People do just that.
"That's incredible .. Imagine seven million people all wanting to live together.
Yeah, New York must be the friendliest place on earth."
~ Crocodile Dundee
Nice
hahahah i just watched this
New York city is terrible. Im there right now
Hahaha u hit nail in head.
Ade Fegan not any more! May 2020 😟
As a young man my father lived in the wild of East Africa after he returned from WW2, suffering PTSD. After we moved to Johannesburg his depression increased and alcoholism took over. After we moved to the US, he was done. When he wasn't working he sat staring into space, often in the dark. He longed for the solitude of Africa, but he died a broken man.
We are the same in that regard. I am only happy in the forest. I once spent 6 months camping alone in the deserts and mountains - I was at peace, finally, Now my time is spent passing time until death. I was not made for this life.
Same as I feel. Not made for this life. But there are possibilities even for us !
"Cities are where men go to devour one another..." Thomas Jefferson
Very wise words.
I've always hated cities, especially big cities, I feel like I;m suffocating
The men who choose to live in cities could not survive outside of it. Let them come out to the country and try to devour a real man.
@@guidosarducci8850 i live in a large city(NYC) and when Hurricane sandy hit we lost power for quite some time. I got to see how everyone acted. Quite alarming. I on the other hand enjoyed it.
Yea because its not like tribes were always at war *sarcasm*
"when man gets away from nature, his heart gets stone cold"
Consistent Mindzet True!
My sister recently moved out of the city and into "the country" and her and the kids were amazed that they could see the stars. Isn't that sad? Can't even see the stars in the city because of all the light pollution
That’s exactly how Steve Austin grew up.
citys make men especially me hate people. I like being in the country
Drdeathskull I agree with you, I'm from northern michigan and I feel like cities are sheep factories. Recently went to Cincinnati Ohio, and homestead Florida and and wow...just wow. What a disgusting place. We went down to Florida keys when visiting and there wasn't a square inch that wasn't developed in some way.
Go to the woods to loose your mind and find your soul. Unplugging from the matrix is always good
@RiAnne Hawley Theres always one who just can't resist trying to shit on someone else's belief system Congratulations dumb bell you win a cookie
@RiAnne Hawley Soul can not be defined with words
I would go in the woods but they're burning up to hell right now in California. I need to get out of this place but I'm patient to looking for the opportunity
Eric Rosbottom you fed him you energy with that, should have left him or politely informed him.
I grew up in a suburb, but had access to large tracks of woods all around us. My friends and I spent all our free time building forts, tree houses, played war, and made BMX trails for our home build bicycles. I learned many lessons there and developed loyalty with my friends. As we got older we were all heart broken to see our woods developed into subdivisions. It was like something magical was raped from our youth. Sad.
Same experience for me. The woods meant freedom and solitude for me. Then the trees were bulldozed to build a hotel.
All too common.....
Yes. Its called population, progress, modern. Inner cities die because the poor move in.
Who moved in, Mexicans?
I see you Brother. Understand.
Cities are like machines, they're built a specific way for a specific purpose, they're a pretty cold environmet. It forces you to follow the system to keep the machine functioning.
You just described metropolis a 1972 German movie with no words. Working the machine day and night to keep it up. Caricature movie type.
Exactly, that's what you get when you build a habitat based on commerce, everything becomes slave camps and shops.
@@kronoscamron7412 I see it just the way you described.
Really depends on the country though
Ever notice how a lot of the younger male generation are looking more and more like women.
K/r reproductive strategy shift.
When I watched the first episode of Stranger Things on Netflix. I had to google the kid that plays Mike. Literally could not tell if he was a girl or a boy. Will looks really feminine as well.
@@badgumby9544 at least some of that is likely due to selection bias on behalf of the casting & production crew... Which in turn is due to what they are exposed to in their urban existence.
Femin.boys and people who can't stop talking are everywhere...i can't stand either but women who want to be a man are just as bad
Kristtörn are you kidding. There are lots of areas in society where women are privileged in this day and age
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” G. Michael Hopf
Another great quote, "This country was a whole lot better when it was run by a bunch of old white guys". I don't who originally made that quote but in the USA it's the damned truth. I think it refers to the founding fathers.
We are at the "Weak men" part.. Hard times up ahead...
Brilliant
That’s literally the problem with the migration as well. By this quote.
The migrants come from hard times were they have to identify the group they are in in order to stay alive in their countries.
Meanwhile western world is in good times but weak men. Where it’s peace and the development is waaay ahead the poor countries. So the cultural crash is not from the culture itself but the values as well.
Where the. Quote fits in.
A paraphrase from Cyrus the Great.
I've never met a non binary person that lived in woods
Bigfoot
🤣😂🤣
I’ve never met a non binary person
@@grumpybird2661 you live in the florest. And on a far far way one.
Big facts!!!
My father used to say “I love the cities, because everyone else lives there and I don’t”. Be careful what you ask for ;-)
Surf Earth brilliant!! I am going to use that one
I see where he was coming from, but the problem is, it's lever long before they start imposing their corrupted ideologies and ideals on the rest of the county, then state, then country. I still think it would be better to cut the cancer out all together and have everyone living a better, more natural life.
@Blueshifted •• No it's not a problem, in women.
Austrian Painter Hiding From The Algorithm - problem is there’s not enough space to go around.
Blueshifted •• I agree a million percent.
A wolf without a Forrest, is a mere dog on a leash...
I’m a wolf then ;)
Sounds more like a wolfugee
Even if you have your forest, as long as you sit one remote corner of the world, too scared to leave and face the challenges, that lie beyond, you are a domesticated animal :)
awesome quote, can I use this please.
@@Gyvulys Again with your ridiculous cartoon-view of the world were anyone not in a human bee-hive is living all alone with no human interaction. You HAVE to be a city-dwelling moron to say something that patently stupid.
But it's fine, you keep deluding yourself in your safe-space, because you probably wouldn't survive a single day in the wild, being the ignorant child that you are.
Im a woman and I have always hated cities. I hate how noisy smelly and rushed it all is. I don't like to be on the go all the time. City life to me is pressure to be out doing something every day with lots of people. Traffick. Too many cars. Too many stores. And like you said, no personal space or private bubble of space. It's not healthy for people be inside our energetic auras all the time.
Amen! This is how I feel as a young woman going for my welding red seal. Once I get it, I'm moving to farm town!
You said it ! 100% agree. Should be living in the Countryside.
This year old woman couldn't have said it better. I avoid all cities. It is quite clear looking at the streed, sad city residents (male and female) that they are all miserable but don't realize it. I have never seen joy in a city.
70 yr old...
"Forest Therapy" is perfect for Men and masculinity! We weaken in comfort. Really like the timelapse in the beginning
Definitely!
Too true
Agree
Steve Fitch when I was a kid my mother put me on ADHD drugs and all sorts of downers to get me to “behave”. When my uncle got out of the service he lived with us for a while. He had me workout with him after school instead of starting on my homework (against what my mother wanted) and took me out hunting on weekends. I stopped getting into fights, my grades went up and I wasn’t depressed all the time. A lot of that was having a father figure, but connecting with nature and exercise was a big part as well. We’re not made for this world we created.
Well said, Steve.
"If you cant piss in your own backyard, you ain't got no business living there"
-my dad, 20 years ago
So good
This is great.
Haha so true
Or Edward Abbey in the 1960’s
I'll probably never forget reading this, thank you. I love peeing wherever I want outside
When you play too much GTA5 and need to go back to Skyrim.
Admiral Ackbar lmao when you’re in the city, you have a bunch of enemies around, so you can’t fast travel 😂😂😂😂
lol
burn! lololol
probably another american boi that don't take anything seriously
Scum game yet?
This is in fact true for me. I felt 'suffocated' when I was living in a city of 4 million, so I decided to move to a much smaller town close to rural farms. I stayed in that town for over a year and I don't want to move back. I love the open space and being closer to farms and nature. I'm now experimenting with organic farming.
Great!
Sheep are easier to control when they are all together
EXACTLY RIGHT!!😏😕
Be the goat, not the sheep.
Wow
@ademgreen6225
Cities having a higher population density doesn't mean the people are more similar. Cities usally have less peer pressure than small towns or villages.
Nature is not a place to visit, nature is our home- John Muir.
Sadly with 7 bilion people youre bound to find cities poping up everywhere
T H popping, you’re, billion*
Amen brother
@@TH-xo4zx sadly closer to 8 billion and predicted to hit 8.2 billion by 2026
@@tommybohland3051 well isnt that... Reassuring....
The human race will eventually die of civilization.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
That’s a great quote
I hope so.
I've thought of this sort of thing but it's more like humans will eventually evolve to be more acclimated to city life and its stresses. We're currently in this transitional phase since civilization evolves so much faster than our biology
Humans*
Human Species*
You're right. Lived in the city my whole life and I'm definitely not one of those men.
City= Functions on distrust
Wild= Functions on trust.
In the city everybody is out to rip you off, pull you down, shove you to the bottom of the pack. Everyone is constantly pitched against one another for jobs and clawing for the top.
However out in the countryside, in the wild, for people to survive it's all about team work. Working together to fix houses to keep out the cold, hunt food to feed tge women and children, make clothes and chop wood for fire. If you took a person that acts like they do and put them into a tribal village....they'd be cast out to the wolves at spear point inside of a week.
Masculine traits are a bunch of dude on a Longboat sailing the oceans and going on Viking or packing the carriages and going on Crusade. We natural ache to work towards a goal and strive to maintain brotherhood. The city on the other hand functions exactly like they female, vindictive, bitchy, backstabbbing and selfish and so men take on those traits also and would happily cast their brother out onto the cold streets if it meant they got to drive a BMW.
I totally agree with you! Skål🍻
I agree 💯
Take your meds my good sire.
I 'get' what you are saying! I avoid cities like a plague. However, to point to an extreme example, the Taliban in Afghanistan are when masculinity expresses so 'rogue'!!
A vast generalisation on the traits of women. You don't speak for me.
I live in the city, but my wife's boyfriend lives in the forest.
BlackDogsMatter You a hunting Man?
What? Wife’s boyfriend?
@@ahnaftahmid9115 it's just a joke.
@@carlyandt6748 yeah I hunt. Why?
I laughed so hard at this, hahaha
We have lost the feeling of being hunter gathers. It's more like sheep being put out to graze.
Joe Rogan had a guest on his podcast and they discussed that human beings might be in a different developmental stage after getting virtually unlimited food/resources. They compared it to the grasshoper changing into a locust. Same animal but different genes express themselves and the locust develops wings, becomes twice as big and gets ready to migrate over huge distances.
money milked through taxes
Lemmings headed for the cliff....
Robbie Galt
More like being prepared for the slaughter!
Lol
As I get older I find living in big cities exhausting. Funny how TH-cam gets me more than people in real life and recommended this video. Great content bro
It’s like The Hunger Games in the future, all the guys have purple or pink hair.
Are you living in my mind? I think this thing every day. "High fashion" looks like the clown suits men in the capital wear.
😂🤣😂🤣 i cant fuckin stand it, my son got told, grow ya haircout properly or cut it all off, no more side shaved comb over serial killer look, INSANE how many kids in this town have the EXACT same hair cut, i never considered this place a city but, i amm going further country. Fuck society 🤣😂🤣
Cities should be for doing business with others, not permanent living. That's my opinion.
and for people who are dedicated to their work. like lifelong businesspeople. i don't think a city is a good place to raise a family
@@jackruotolo1257 not to mention that if we are to have so many buildings in the cities, they ought to be at least structurally and artistically pleasing, as opposed to the endless seas of ugly low to the ground fast food joints and gas stations we have now
@@marcusatiusvirilis7723 agreed. Cities once were an expression of a people in metaphysical terms in the art and really long lasting endurance. But now its consumer capitalist globalist mildest that is rootless with nothing but money and consuming in the end.
@@coleflores6323 I like your use of "metaphysical " to describe the situation. I believe E. Michael Jones has talked about the degeneration of architecture. Personally, I'm not a stickler for what the art is as long as it portrays something great.
hear hear
I had an old boy tell me once, “ if I caint go outside on my porch and take a leak right there in the breeze without the cops rolling down the road 10 minutes later, the place ain’t for me.”
My husband does that regularly. Hence the country life!
Sorry, what do you mean with 'take a leak' ? I'm not a native english speaker but I always want to learn.
duudsuufd it means to urinate, “ hey man I gotta go take a leak”
@@danielfrederick306 Thank you or the explanation.
I work as a gardener in a moderate sized city but I always find a place to take a leak. (We can cut or let grow bushes you know).
Daniel Frederick hell yeah. That’s my top priority. I gotta be able to piss anywhere and everywhere.
" There is both silence and the sound of the camp fire, and it's perfect." I wonder if anyone besides me understands how profound that statement is?
Literally everyone and noone.
You're not that deep kid, get your head out of your own ass
@@danvondrasek made me laugh bro 😂
I've grown up my whole life in the woods of Alaska. I live about half off the land, and about once a year have to make a trip to the city. It stresses me out everytime, like I'm a different person, troubles concentrating, chest pain...
You are very right with your words, and I appreciate knowing there's someone else who feels as I do and all that I've known, we are slipping so fast from realizing what we are doing to the All Mother Earth and it makes me sad. Much appreciated and greatly respected words of wisdom my friend. From Alaska with peace and love.
Cities put too much stress and anxiety on people. Rural living is where it's at.
@@EaZiE01 That makes no sense
I agree that city life is stressful, but for me it's 100% worth it. I moved from a rural area to a big city several years ago and never regreted it.I can't stand the monotonous drudgery of rural life: Two shops, five pubs, nothing to do, nowhere to go.
I suffer from something called 'emf sensitivity'.
I only feel relief when out in the middle of nowhere with nothing but nature surrounding me. Many of us fail to understand the damage that this unnatural environment is doing to us.
I lived rural for 19 years. I am so happy that I am out. The people there all Gossip for everyone. You do 1 wrong thing and you get marked for your entire life. Next; Alcohol is like water there are so many abusive alcoholics around. Its an toxic Environment
P3pp3r LOL, alcohol isn’t available in a city environment? Come on, it’s everywhere.
You are probably one of the most polite man talking about masculinity I've ever watched
Agreed. I've stumbled across other "personalities" on the topic and it's strenuous putting up with the banter.
I moved to London in 1995 until 2003. After the initial excitement it began to wear thin. The sense of overcrowding, claustrophobia, the bad manners, crime etc just got to me. Being stuck in traffic or walking through tunnels from train to train was awful.
I planned an exit and now I live in a farmhouse in rural France. Heaven.
And yes, I can urinate almost anywhere.....It's a French passion 😂
Same in Romania, they pee everywhere but in a toilet.
The peeing thing is real, walking around holding it in coz everywhere is concrete is unnatural.
I think that is why I don't like France, the smell of urine is insane...
No wonder Paris smells like piss.
Had the same experience in Nashville, TN. It was all brand new for a year. Everything was exciting and vibrant... until it wasn't anymore.
Everytime I watch your videos i feel calm. Thank you so much for doing what you do and please don't stop fighting for the old way of life..this new life is shite.
2 worst inventions of mankind
Big cities
Big government
and big corporations. they all go hand in hand.
Add up the clues. It's a sad outcome
In other words. Overgrowth is bad.
- Plant based Agriculture
- Corporations and foreign govt lobbying
are two more big ones.
Fire and the wheel
Moving out of the city was one of the best changes ive done in my life.
There really is something calming about cold, emotionless nature lol
I've been thinking about moving from a city of 237000 population city to under 10000 population town lately myself. Mostly because of my school is there but also because of my own mental health eventhought I got forest nearby for quick get away healing but it's not always enough.
@@ToniSeppala696 I used to live in a 2,5m city and ended up heavily depressed for 3 years. After leaving to an around 1000 people village, I feel much better, though the necessity of visiting said city for education still exists, and transport gets annoying.
@@michawrona593 I wouldn't be able to think myself living that big city myself. My current city is big enough for me as large(r) city to live in. Althought it looks like that it's going to be bigger and bigger little by little. And I understand why you ended up depressed. Good to hear that you've been better after getting out of there. Hope it will be better by the day for you and no more depression.
@@ToniSeppala696 Thanks.
I can at least hope that with current demographic trends of Europe, we could slowly move away from giant cities.
Modernist citybuilding trends were a grave mistake.
"I'll sit here and enjoy the silence. It's perfect." - a wise man.
I love and appreciate masculine men.
Where are you from?
What is your idea on masculinity?
They gotta have chest hair.
@estelle patella chest hair does not make a man. Lots of men have no chest hair. You should say to you a man is one with chest hair that's more correctly stated
I bet you're not the only gay man who thinks so.
I live in London and my mental health is reaching its limit. I have to escape this sick place!
I agree its totally corrosive now living here. Camden has no heart or soul anymore. Traffic jams and a broken transport system. I'm looking to emigrate.
Run for your lives "gentle"men. I mean that literally as well as figuratively
The cities have been taken from us. Our societies make men feminine and the city is just a high dose of society. We need cities. Why are our people being encouraged to run away and live in caves like animals?
Why leave? It belongs to us.. Time to push back if that's how you feel.. Running away is not the solution.
@@wageslave5760 Agreed. Our people are encouraged to run and hide in the woods like beasts.
In the city they would diagnose you with social anxiety disorder 😊
😂😅😥
I have social anxiety. If we had the money, I would buy 100 acres of land, and build a house right in the middle of it. Nothing but nature around me!
@@Kristen242008 Same here.
Underrated comment here
@@Kristen242008 I like people but since i live in a rather smaller town in Sweden where we dont really have the big city issue. We have a great community and it doesn't feel like tons of people mashed together in one place. I can go and walk in the forest by myself and probably wont see more than maybe 1 or 2 people there but at the same time still be close to my friends and family at home. I think it's a perfect balance, and i dont want to be completely isolated from people but not have the big city thing so thats why i think smaller towns or villages are great instead.
"Can't breathe here"
Lol I live in Delhi, one of the most polluted cities in the world. Can relate.
Bet they can't relate to our Delhi smog😂
Go start a new life in your respective rural village. Enjoy open space and breathe the air of freedom.
Lol. Good luck bro
I have been contemplating the same today.
Aqi 500
I just found your channel recently. I am a woman but I also agree with you. People don't make friends as easily in the cities. I've since moved to a small town further away from the big cities. People are friendly and relaxed here. It's easier to build a community.
Agree totally. Though I’m a woman, I have the same feelings. Living in the city brings too many pressures and it’s hard to have a family.
People there act like it's so natural to live in crowded incongruent chaos.
5 years ago I had to convince my family we needed to leave the city, we moved over 4000km away to the west coast of Canada and now live in a place called Halfmoon Bay British Columbia on the Sunshine Coast of Canada. Im now enjoying the quiet also, and feeling more alive then ever before.
I live Southern Vancouver Island. The west coast is beautiful, as long as you stay away from them cities.
I know of half moon bay in California, didnt know there was one in canada
peeyavochka oh yeah: everything the US has Canada has a little shittier.
@@qs6899 Look it up, then tell me which Halfmoon Bay is better.
Rigger Mortis I would say the US one, but it’s in shithole California so y’all might take the dub there.
Correction: human health is not made for big cities.
Conclusion*
Please explain to me how you make health
It's all right between your on 2 eyeballs, not Where?
@Jason K Egypt and Rome where thriving? Who? The 1 percenters like right now. Wasn't aware you are apart of that club. The club that believes everything they are told?
Don't go correcting this wise man you fucki'n brat
I never saw someone speak the truth in such a natural, spontaneous and frank way. I also love the woods or the 'mato' as they call it here in Brazil. In living in a city I always felt the confort zone problem you mentioned and always thoght the problem was with me but now I realize I'm not the only one.
You're definitely not the only one. I live in England and I hate our cities, they're dirty, crack heads all over the place, always noisy with people yelling, car horns raging all the time, things are way too expensive.
I would rather live as far away from cities as I can in our rural areas.
It’s sad how light pollution can stop you from seeing the stars at night.
Meg Jewelz ahh yes what a shame
I live close to Kansas City. I can still see some stars and star formations at night like the big dipper, but only a few.
Man are you right, I haven't properly seen the stars since I was a little kid living over in Eastern Washington in the early 90's. Back when the world was a little more beautiful than it is now...
Light pollution sucks. Ever been miles away from a city but still see the glow of light over it? I suggest visiting the country side to see stars.
Edit: autocorrect plus my own personal fail.
What's nice is you can drive 30 miles or so away from the city, out into the country and still get a great view of the night sky.
I'm visiting New York right now. I'm working here for a month. My wife stayed in Europe.
It's so crowded, yet I haven't felt so isolated in a long time.
In bars people are competing about being the most energetic and loud. I'm not loud so I don't have a chance there even if I'd try.
I felt sad about it and I thought something is wrong about me. This video helped me to see things from different perspective
This is why I'm hesitating to go abroad. I live in a small country with little business opportunities. I want to work on interesting problems, which means going abroad is my only option. But living abroad is suicide to me. I lived for a year in the UK. I was celibate the whole time, I hated the food and didn't seriously connect with anyone. All I had were shallow relationships that ended once the door was closed.
@@immortaljanus well yeah... the food is shit in the UK. Everyone knows that.
@@Draclord35 Make your own food then, get control over what you consume!
And in the city...my man stares at the loud fake persona women. I left.
This guy is incredibly calming.
My thoughts exactly. I nearly fell asleep listening to him, in a good way of course. Just enjoyed listening to him talk for twelve and half minutes.
I swear I had to reread the title to make sure ASMR wasn't in it
No he looks like he hasn't brushed his teeth for month
@@Predestinated1
Who cares
This is why I believe I was depressed till I moved to farm lands.
Wonderful for you. Nature is the great healer.
"I will enjoy the silence and the sound of campfire, so its... Its perfect."
Its deep in our soul. I love to death the sound of fire crackling. Fight bears bare handed like a real man hahahaha
About a year ago I moved from a big city, where I'd spent most of my life, to a small town where I can walk for fifteen minutes and be on the moors. Initially, I felt very lonely, but over time I realised that I made the right decision. When I have to go back to the city I feel very claustrophobic and can't wait to get back home.
The shackles of modern society restrict men even more than women, with the result of taking away their character, strength and their pride of accomplishing something through their own abilities. Everyday it saddens me to see, how being a pathfinder is frowned upon today. Thank you for another great and straight to the point video, keep it up and wish you the best!
@POOR PIRANO Completely agree on that.
You know, thank you. I'm from Northern Canada. I'm in a unique situation where we are in a forested city. What you spoke of in regards to feeling congested or short of breath even applies in a city of only 100,000 people. There is something that happens to the energy a man or woman produces when they are confined to the structure of a city. They start to change negatively. It's almost as if they are producing static from a television. The anxiety radiates from them as they live fast paced lives, hearts racing, no time to think. You see it sucking the life out of their faces. It's a disease in a way. To experience life in a flurry that can cause you so much damage. I really do agree with you. It is not healthy to live in densely populated places. When you say that you can breathe, I know it runs much deeper than just filling your lungs. You return to peace when you can simply sustain yourself in a wooded area. Things move slower. You do too. Your lifes rhythm returns to a slow and steady pace, and you reconnect with what life actually is. I am terribly sorry for people who have never experienced that. I feel grief in a way that people could be blinded by city life. I couldn't imagine living without the smell of muskeg and pine trees on my clothes. Or the smell of wet WILD grass, and not some overzealously kept lawn in a city. It goes even deeper than just manhood. City life steals your humanity from you.
Beautifully said! This should be more voted high and perhaps even 'pinned'. Thank you.
Interesting. I recall in my late 20’s I lived in the city. I was severely depressed and when I moved away that depression lifted.
I really relate, I'm female but I closely empathise with you. I grew up in rural Australia on land, so peaceful, quite, it is it's own world ... Now I have moved to the capital city, very big, but also very small when compared to much larger places like new york, shanghai. Yet, it makes you feels so trapped, short breathed. You cant escape the thousands that walk and talk and the closest to peace is probably your bathroom when you go to the toilet...funny that.
i also am female and can relate, so can many others! its not just men who hate the city life
I'm in NZ and grew up in the country; I live near the beach but work in the city, I could NEVER live there lol I hope you find your way back to nature, peace and solitude someday :)
Now i understand why i don't like to talk to phone in front of others. I need my privacy. I like it. Thats why i have a limit amount of time in which i can operate with others. If i go beyond that limit i get angry.. i like to do things my own. I appreciate help but i prefer to resolve things alone. Its hard to explain. People don't understand how to behave correctly. They don't respect limits. They help and seconds after they are giving orders, making decisions... are you helping me or giving me orders?. Thats why i get mad...
@@holymegadave I have the same thing. I don't want to talk or use my phone much when people are sitting next to me on the subway or bus. I feel pretty unconfortable.
@Melanie Willard i dont feel anger with few people (i prefer small groups). I only get angry when i need to stay long periods of time surrounded with others without having my moment of peace. I often realize people behave different in big groups, they tend to follow.. the level of stupidity increases.
24 yrs old and am gravitating towards this lifestyle, always felt a little out of balance and strange in large cities.
Thanks again!
City feminezes men, yes. With these:
-> Porn
-> Music
-> Alcohol, cigarettes (drugs effects testosteron)
-> Food
-> less movement, less physics, no workout or training
-> being passive (watching tv, movies, funny videos)
-> Men dont have real idols like back in the days
-> Media effects our behaviour and our mind... repeating is the key here
These are just a few
or they're feminized by the feminized men they live with, who won't let them leave that lifestyle.
Also less nature -> more stress -> less testosterone.
One repeating pattern that really hurts mental health is this - you go to work, where you sit at one place, ass glued to chair for 9 or more hours, with the only breaks being toilet and lunch. Then you return home and lay in bed watching tv, youtube or reels. Rinse and repeat for 5 or of you're seriously unlucky, 6 times each week. Then when you start to feel sad due to this bleak, grey environment, people suggest going to therapy. What they do not realize is that the damage caused by sitting in one small, bleak, fluorescent lit cabin can not be repaired by visiting another small, bleak, florescent lit cabin every weekend. Our mental health suffers, and physical health gets worse too. We end up being skinny all over the body, but develop pot bellies, likely caused by sitting around all day, and not getting any physical activity. Its sickening.
@@devanshvatsal4128 SO TRUE. YOu have to know it and do the right things to avoid this trap. Hope you being well my friend, i took it like you said for 1-2 years.
Since I've started watching your channel I've made sure to find time occasionally to explore nature until I am intimately familiar with it. I know what kind of trees, bushes, rocks, dirt and animals I will find when I go for a hike. Everyone should connect to the land and nature in general. It helps keep you... grounded.
Amen!
Great, but I hope you realize there is always more to learn in nature, which really goes for everywhere. I live in the woods, a mile from my nearest neighbor, and every day is an education.
Stop and look and listen to them . Watch how they move in the wind. Listen to the sounds of their creaking branches in the wind. Listen to the sound of the leaves quaking in the breeze. You will feel rejuvenated and you will notice the difference between the sounds and movements of the different types of trees. Good luck.
I've never liked cities. Too many people, too much control, too little freedom, too much noise. You are dead right on this one...
I've lived out in the backwoods, smack-dab in the middle of nowhere, all my life and the older I've gotten the more grateful I've become to live where I live. If I have a problem, I fix it, if I need to be alone, I hop a fence or two and I might as well be on the other side of the moon. Cities seem to suck the life out of people, especially men.
I live in the outback of the bavarian Alps close to Switzerland, always wanted to move to Munich in my teens. Now i am 20 and grateful to live in peace and happiness. I was born here and I will live and die here.
I’m in a small city of 100,000+ in the US and I think I agree with you. I can’t walk down my block without seeing something terrible. No exaggeration. The police don’t even really come here for the riff-raff and when they do, they don’t do anything to help. Like they’re afraid to be offensive to people or something. It’s messed up and disgusts me.
If you can't shoot off your back porch, you're living too close!
Someone shot off THEIR back porch.. and put dang 22 caliber round in OUR horse barn. I think they livin' a bit too close ya think? Re think your statement son
Courts Griner Photography if a .22 is making it all the way to your barn, yes they ARE living too close.
Just watching this man walk through the woods lowered my blood pressure
Try it
Wonderfully said
What a perfect spot! I love to imagine that a man sat right there doing just that a thousand years ago.
I was thinking the same Al. I went to a hot spring way out in the Idaho woods. Our guide said that native Americans had built up the pool more than a hundred years ago. Truly a sacred place.
Vloging? Probably
@@richardstylez1950 Maybe the paintings in that shallow cave eroded away.
@Sang Man ya ain't that shits. And a huge parking lot for the up coming mall
I'm currently working in London Bridge and having to deal with miserable people all day long. Using public transport every day to go to work drains me, the people and the city life drains me, worst of all, I also live in Central London and that also drains me. I'm stuck here because my parents think this sort of lifestyle is a good way to live. Now I'm thinking of my escape because I care about the future generation. No way would I want my future family to go through the same BS as I have. City life has definitely made me feminine, now it's time to become a REAL MAN.
Those awful miserable people. Hang on a minute. Isn't it you who's miserable? Sounds a lot like psychological projection, what you're saying. Poor you having a job, having options, but no vulnerability, jus scorn for those sorrowful people. They're not even cruel or mean to you, just 'miserable' you say.
I'm a powerlifter and every year I have a de-loading month where I go to my dad's village and help out with the farming, I keep all my devices away except a simple dial phone, it is simply the most refreshing time of the year where I can just escape from all the noise and happenings of the city and retreat into this warm place of a simple humble being. This has helped me greatly in life and help put things into perspective.
That is a true luxury.
I guess quite nature and the church of iron have a place together then. Those two are almost complete opposites, unless you do basic strongman stuff.
What do you even bench bro
@@design7054 I typically max out at around 510 lbs
@@JCWAS I am from Southern Germany, Bavaria to be specific.
"I didn't move to the city the city moved to me AND I WANT OUT DESPERATELY!"
Isac Brock
Sell you're easily replaced belongings, gas up the car, and drive. It is easier than you might think. You will wonder why it took you so long. In three days you can be anywhere in America. Three days. 72 hours. Think about it.
Logos, I hear you, I used to hunt quail where my mom's house now resides
This happened to me and because of the out of this world house prices I was still a renter. This gave me the freedom to move further north and I have seen a huge increase in my mood and my family have blossomed
Yes, it's happening here on the oregon coast of USA. Very sad to watch it happening.
I've lived in a big immigrant-ridden city for seven years. Probably not coincidentally, that was when I developed depression. I hate going out. I get lost all the time. My only escape is in dreams, when I return to my golden childhood home, over and over again. I read about a man who house-sat a cottage in Wales. He didn't speak to anyone for a year or two. He lost his sense of identity, his sense of himself, which is reinforced by constant interaction with other people. Without that interaction, he just...disappeared. He become a quiet void, a prism for the earth and sky and the singing of the birds echoing in the mountains.
When I read that, it suddenly elucidated a poem I'd loved for years, but never understood until then:
The birds have vanished from the sky
the last clouds drain away
we sit together, the mountain and me
until only the mountain remains
I want that more than anything. I fantasise about the apocalypse happening, leaving me the only person for a thousand mile radius.
you should go there if you are able to, I went in the autumn of 2018, it was everything I imagined, avoid cardiff obviously, but Aberystwyth is tolerable for brief periods, its sort of a cute version of our current year English metropolitan areas, you start seeing all the big brands pop up and the liberal student types but it feels like its being drowned by the surrounding nation.
I live along the HS2 route not far from Oxford, I suppose it would be considered a relatively rural area for England but... when I got back here the difference was shocking, all the stress seemed to come back and going through the little wooded areas ( old railway line ) we have at the edge of town I didn't get the same sense at all. I would go again if I could but I refuse to drive as I don't want to get sucked into the rat race litigation mentality. I don't think my parents want to leave this part of the country so i'm stuck here, but I would leave without hesitation if I could.
I would pay money to just have him read bed time stories from his cave.
What are you some kind of baby? Bedtime stories?
Avi Goyimberg a nigga enjoy a bedtime story every now and again
looooool
@@rasalasad5315 Their probably 12 and haven't had a parent in their life's !
Yeah never know now of days !....
Lol same
Cities are psychologically damaging to everyone, including women. People need their personal space and freedom to feel happy.
Studies have shown cities have the highest incidence of crime, depression, and especially suicide. And from personal experience, people in cities seem very on edge compared with people living in nature or smaller communities.
We didn’t evolve to live shoulder to shoulder with millions of people. And it effects our society as a whole socially and emotionally for the worse.
Ive spent a lot of time doing home deliveries both in the city and out and let me tell you. EASILY the most uptight, on edge people I ever came across were in smaller towns. They worry about EVERYTHING. Immigrants taking their shit, brown people scaring them, the government, people in general. They just can't keep themselves from complaining about everything, real or imagined. People in the city are just people. They come in all types. Out in the country? Uptight as hell, and scary too.
One of my family members grew up in a village, and they are full of fear, hate, low wisdom etc. You may be right man, living in nature cut off from everyone feels so peaceful, but it can make you hatefull towards everything different too, if you dont have a brain that is. Most people i know, including almost all of the people who grew up in villages, seem to have no brain.
Again, not demolishing with opinion, as i said you have a point, however i havent seen anyone wise enough brought up within a village. Most people were either too narrow minded or abusive/fearful to cover themselves. Again, cities have their disadvantages as well, as displayed in the video.
YES! He's talking about mental health issues caused by cities that are NOT inherintly an issue of sex or gender. cities are designed for productivity, for capitalism, for many working class people shoved together for a profiting upper class. the issues of masculinity and femininity is oppressive because capitalism isn't very good at handling the differences of sex and gender in a way that makes it not oppressive. thats why we have a patriarchy f.ex., not because it's natural but because it's unnatural, undemocratic, unjustified
It really depends on the persons perceptions and beliefs, there is nothing objective, the problem is within us, we choose to see it in that way
Im a Black Man, and I've now decided after one week. I want to live in the country. = peacefulness
Andre's Davis I know how you feel. I used to live in a city, I now live in a very small town. I love it.
Good on ya mate! Nature will heal you :-D
I'm with you! I always wanted to and definitely wish I had made different life choices. I suppose it's never too late.
Live your dream man! Best of luck!
@@SusiesRepeat Susie where do u live? I live in a small city but my city is growing up and I dont want that :(
I live in Germany, in a small village with forest all around it and only 60 people on the countryside, the older I get ( currantly 28) the more I admire my life, the more I see how precious my luck is to be born here... and being able to stay here. We make firewood every year, we grow so much vegetables, that we run a little store for the peaple around and I love to camp in our woods year round, and nobody is looking strange at you, because you are having a piss somewhere. I bought a house with no neighbour's around and will live here till I go on the biggest travel there is.
Thanks for your videos, very very inspiring and calming
In big cities men become feminine and women become masculine. Funny how that works
in big cities men become feminine and women become monsters
And neither men or women become the other. Masculinity is not truly gone in men. Femininity not truly gone in women. I'm talking about real men and women. Born with XY or XX chromosomes. That trans craziness is only body mutilation.
@@whomagoose6897 try explaining that to "modern people"
@Johannes Liechtenauer Johannes Liechtenauer I tried explaining how bad it is now, imagine how it will be in 20,30,40 years, for our children. Most people say "oh it will be their problem". Pretty fucked up mindset in my eyes. Our European tradtions\genes will not live on from people like that. So yea, most of the time why even bother
@357MagnumPlinkster Society exactly the water is turning the freakin frogs gay
cities make a lot of us women miserable too ... longing to be free of this ugly concrete jungle one day...
good luck sister
shieldmaiden
@g quin You respond to a 4 month old posts by a total stranger just voicing an opinion... but I'm the imbecile? lol... byebye and GL
@@douganderson7002 Yep, best to ignore abusive weirdos like that... must be miserable to be them.... ugh
@@inkythinker you can get out my dear, it is literally a matter of making a decision and acting on it. The rest will follow! (And ignore that sad wanker in the comments, lol).
The silence in the background sounds beautiful.
Thanks!
I truly appreciate your content.
The silence of the woods can heal a mans soul.
Agreed. The woods have changed me for the better this year.
@David Harrow Adopt one! Its not hard, and they love the woods
Indeed, I spend my childhood and teen years practicing living in the woods with my cousins making camps and bases and would spend all day out there, now sadly I am confined to city life with my job and life that I haven’t been out to the woods in so long, I really need to again but working two jobs just doesn’t leave much time for it
When you only hear yourself breathe and the breeze in the threes branches.... So quiet. So still and wonderful.
Fuck you just reminded me that ive been in this city for too long
it will also put you on your knees begging for warmth, shelter, survival
I have said this for a long time, big cities make people crazy and or ignorant about the world around themselves.
The idea that this guy has failed to adapt to the evolved world such that he is compelled to go and live in the bush(like a caveman) is a sign that he has failed to evolve. He is the specie that ends up becoming extinct. Acting like a cavemen does not make you "more of a man", what makes you more of a man is having a penis(period). What you fashion your life being becomes your choice,but a true survivor adapts to his "new" environment and makes the most of it,that is what separated us from the simians. Having self awareness and control is what makes one an exceptional human being regardless of gender.
@@vforvendetta60 You are one of those effeminate men aren't you?
@@vforvendetta60 Uh. To make a point ur not wrong, how ever men do like to be free and city life dose get to be Alot. As for men well their are people who like him are forced out cause they lived a life of space and many freedoms. From his perspective he has a point that city life isn't real for him. It dosent me he can't adapt. It means he is not used to the restriction. That we grew up in. U live the way he did and come back to they city and u realise that he dose make a few point that are agreeable. I wish I could live out in the wild. To have freedom like that
@@vforvendetta60 that's an interesting point of view
@@loriedsonemma-o3318 It shows a weakness of mind when you choose to personally attack a person with an opposing opinion without addressing the points raised(ad-hominem)
For a man to be truly happy he needs a spear, a gaggle of bros and a mammonth to hunt down.
A good woman isn't terrible either, though
Now now, no need to romanticize a past that isn't anywhere as comfortable as it's being portrayed.
@@cosmic_gate476 well we live a present where powerful forces are literally trying to destroy humanity and they're closer to success than they've ever been in all of history so yeah dude I can only speak for myself I'll take the spear and the beast
@@cosmic_gate476 we are in a society so numb and comfy that the idea of facing the elements is just inhuman when in fact we are not living to our potential physically nor psychologically. At some time western culture will face a crisis where goinf back to a more natural way of life will be our only choice as a species
@mister clean again, imagining that period to be like modern humans camping in the wilderness is a flaw indeed. You forgot about the part where humans thought and acted completely differently - the foundation for morality and the social contract didn't exist. Wanna guess what every ounce of human development came from? Abstraction and mass cooperation networks with other humans - i.e. towns, cities, organizations and rules. If you seriously want to find the answer to what it would be like to go even a few hundred years back in time and live in human settlements there, read City in History by Lewis Mumford. Tough book, but if you understand it you will be blessed with a shit ton of knowledge
I completely agree I feel very uncomfortable in cities
There's more pressure, less time to think, and always another person to blame in the city.
When people choose money over happiness, they move to the city
not always true, can be very exspensive to have your own land and build your own house.
I wish I could afford a house out of town on some land... but land is growing more expensive by the day 😵
@@mandrew20111 my dream is to have my own land and build a house on it! Not cheap though
@Bronze Cop hes just making a silly comment that has no truth to it. move on with our day!
You need to get that money first to build the house and move
Like Bane said...
" Peace has cost you your strength, victory has defeated you."
Tough times create tough men, peaceful times create weak men.
So you want the war to break out?
True statement, I've been through terrible shit and I chose to use the bad times as a area to grow and toughen up, and also realizing the reality that life isn't just some field of flowers, it's pain, hardship, and even death in a lot of places.
He meant men should focus on the grind
And keep developing character building is like going to the gym everyday to keep it health and effective
@@Avatinfernus weak is a mindset. The inability to deal with real conflict, be it physical or mental is weakness. Indecisiveness, lack of confidence, worrying about everything, etc...all traits of weakness. These are also traits of depression. Whether or not it matters is going to be up to the individual.
Avatinfernus
No offense but your "food for thought" is undercooked and pretty rancid bud. When men "get weak" physically, emotionally, and mentally the ramifications are extensive, multileveled and can range from neutral to grandiose and even dire. Historically, and in more modernist time periods, this has always been true above a tribal/communal level.
In this day and age across the Earth; particularly among and/or across nations, polities, and regions like the industrialized 'West' and 'Developing Countries' like China, Nigeria, and India; many cultural, socio-political, familial, economic, medical, etc.....problems and issues are like they are in part due to (modern)Human male "weakness"(read: fragility, cowardice and incompetence). A good example of the aforementioned being the worsening status of entrenched 'Western' governmental corruption.
Even just on a personal level, if boys and men are "weak" they're almost automatically trusted less, de-valued and deemed unattractive. While its okay to be physically average and mentally more sensitive, It's almost never good being "weak". If you are in need of some excellent sources just ask.
Just came across your channel , was because of the recent COVID-19 , Coronavirus pandemic. Glad I checked you out and like the channel, I’ve always had a admiration for Vikings and their history as well as a general love for the outdoors and being able to survive in the environment you live in. As I watched this episode I thought at first how sad that you have to feel like that about cities, I’m sure there are good ones , but at the heart you are right. Most big cities are corrupt and have a bad side they prey on outsiders and the less fortunate people. Was recently in NYC with my family and you definitely need to have your head on a swivel at times but for the most part you mind your business and keep moving. A crazy different atmosphere and one that’s nice to visit once in awhile but that’s about it. Thanks for your time and sharing. Till the next.
I like to visit the city sometimes, for the same reason I like to watch a horror movie.
👊
Concise and effective. Cheers
Reminds me of the Ron Swanson quote, 'I work with a lot of women and that includes the men'.
He even looks like Ron.