#LivingWithinLimits

The Lifeboat Academylifeboatacademy
2026-01-05

A lot of what we’re facing now emerged from habits of thought that were once rewarded — efficiency, growth, control, certainty.

Fair share ethics depends on recognising when familiar thinking no longer serves, and allowing new ways of understanding to emerge through shared practice, attention, and adjustment.

This isn’t about having the right answers. It’s about staying open to being changed.

A social post from @lifeboatacademy which says: “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.” — Albert Einstein (paraphrase)
The Lifeboat Academylifeboatacademy
2026-01-04

It’s often not a lack of information that gets in the way of fairness and care, but the quiet belief that we already understand enough.

Living within limits asks for a different posture: humility, curiosity, and a willingness to keep learning together as conditions shift. Fair share ethics depends on that openness — not on fixed answers, but on shared attention and adjustment.

A social post from @lifeboatacademy which says: “The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.” — Stephen Hawking
The Lifeboat Academylifeboatacademy
2026-01-02

There’s a version of resilience that promises continuity — the hope that we can endure disruption and still remain who we were.

The truth is that moving through transition changes us. It pares things back. It teaches skills. It can deepen our relationships with nature and each other.

In the context of fair share ethics, that feels less like loss and more like learning how to live within reality — and be shaped by it.

A social post from @lifeboatacademy which says: “Emerging at the other end [of resilience transition], we will not be the same as we were; we will have become more humble, more connected to the natural world, fitter, leaner, more skilled and, ultimately, wiser.” — Rob Hopkins
The Lifeboat Academylifeboatacademy
2025-12-30

From the outside, the Farmastery can look complex — many roles, many functions.

But the ground it stands on is simple: living within a fair share, treating tension as information, noticing what works, and learning forward together.

Simple isn’t easy. Most of the work is unlearning urgency, avoidance, and purity habits — and what grows in their place is relationship and flow.

emotusoperandi.medium.com/fair

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