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Action of the Week
Resources for Building Household Resilience

“Resilience involves an active decision … that must be frequently reconfirmed. That decision is to keep moving forward.”
~ Dr. Rachel Yehuda
Action of the Week, March 22, 2026
Resources for Building Household Resilience
A dozen years ago, when the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies convened a panel to discuss resilience, the panelists agreed that the construct was “complex” but came up with a number of human-friendly definitions. In the intervening years, however, the word “resilience” has increasingly been co-opted and weaponized as a globalist buzzword.
Now is a good time to reclaim the basic concept of resilience for ourselves. The definition quoted at the top of this post—“an active decision to keep moving forward”—is similar to Catherine’s definition of “turtling,” which involves moving forward steadily, taking action, never stopping, and recognizing that small steps add up.
In this “rock and roll” year marked by inflation, conflict, and growing threats to supply chains and food security, we encourage you to “turtle” and build greater household resilience in whatever areas you can—whether by shoring up your ability to withstand food and energy shocks or by building and strengthening relationships with high-integrity people and businesses in your neighborhood and community.
On the latter point, Solari Connect can help you find like-minded individuals in your area with whom you may wish to form a Solari Circle. Reinette Senum also recently provided an excellent overview of time banking, a mechanism to restore old-fashioned “kindness and neighborly deeds,” operating on the premise that “every human being has something to contribute.”
Below, we list some in-house and external resources to get you started—and we invite subscribers to post additional suggestions in the comments below.
Links
The notebook is the revolution (Foghorn Express post on time banking)
Related at Solari
Health Series (including Homeopathy Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3)
Food Series: Finding Sources of Fresh Food
Solari Connect and Solari Circles: Tapping into the Solari Network
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Another valuable resource is Soilandhealth.org.
From the website:
“This website provides free downloadable e-books about radical agriculture, natural hygiene/nature cure and self-sufficiency. There are secondary collections involving social criticism and transformational psychology.
There is no fee for downloading anything in this library.
The library’s topic areas connect agricultural methods to the health and lifespan of animals and humans. A study of these materials reveals how to prevent and heal disease and increase longevity, suggests how to live a more fulfilling life and reveals social forces working against that possibility.”
Well that is a real gem! Will post.