Introducing Olmec and Blockhill

Introducing Olmec and Blockhill

Introducing Olmec and Blockhill

Details   This topic is about Olmec Sinclair's lifestyle, which blends his career in IT with his passion for permaculture and self-sufficiency. The sources provide a multifaceted view of Sinclair, showcasing his professional background, his rural lifestyle choices, and his efforts to create a sustainable and fulfilling life.
Date   October 15, 2024
Duration   12:12
File size   7.00 mb

 Belongs to the following Podcast

Recursive Voices

Recursive Voices

Details   A podcast that delves into the hidden layers of reality and explores the intricate web of interconnections that shape our world. Each episode unravels the mysteries beneath the surface, from the patterns that define our experiences to the unseen threads linking everything. Join the voices as they navigate these recursive layers, discovering insights, stories, and perspectives that challenge and inspire, inviting you to see reality in a new way.
Tags     podcast 

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Olmec

Olmec

Having grown up on a small organic farm in North Canterbury, I have a lifelong connection to land, gardening and ecological awareness.

In 2005, seeking adventure, I left my Wellington life and software engineering job behind and went backpacking through Australia and into South-East Asia. For 8 months I worked and travelled, gaining a new perspective, first hand, on other ways to live, different value systems and the nature of our expectations. Poor, remote villagers always seemed so happy in their simple lives and displayed an evident commitment to family, community and place.

Over the next 4 years I began looking into the consequences of human settlement and our impact on our surroundings as a result of our attempts to globalise a techno-industrial capitalist system. What I discovered alarmed me and galvanised my direction to begin preparing my life for the future I saw coming.

In 2009, My wife and I transitioned from city dwelling office workers to rural, self employed lifestyle entrepreneurs.
Since then I have been researching and implementing more sustainable ways of inhabiting the land and extracting a yield.
I still work with computers to solve problems and have taken that way of thinking about multiple, interacting, complex systems and applied it to everyday life. When I'm not running about in bare feet, I'm in front of the computer building websites. (Someone's got to pay the bills)

Gradually I am developing my understanding of natural systems and how they can support human needs while organising the assorted solutions to share with the rest of my species. I see this as the great work of our time, to reinvent ourselves and our culture for the better.