100 years ago: - Organic food was just food. - Grass-fed beef was just beef. - Sourdough bread was just bread. - Regenerative farming was just farming. - Spring water was just water. - Raw milk was just milk. - Living connected to nature was just living. #nostr #bitcoin #health #healthstr

Replies (16)

the axiom's avatar
the axiom 1 year ago
some guy above was talking about 100 years
And life expectancy was only 42 years. And 30% of children were dead before their 10th birthday from diseases like measles, mumps, cholera and dysentery. A hundred years ago, life sucked and most of you reading this would already be dead.
So true 😣 Crazy how the most natural things have become rare or labeled as “special”. Just makes me wanna keep things simple and get back to how it’s meant to be real food, real life 🤓
Wow. There s a lot of hate for just wanting to appreciating basic un adulterated food and nature. Don't worry haters you can still get your adulterated crap food.
Before sewers, people just threw their shit out the window onto the street and people just walked through shit everywhere because it was everywhere. Before servers, most people were dead by 40 from diseases of filth like cholera and dysentery.
You are looking recent history. Look further when people lived in the nature and sewers weren't needed
Hygiene wasn't the case back then. Doctors had the amazing idea to wash their hands and utensils before doing operations or when a woman is giving birth first time in the late 19th century. Its amazing we have such great medical care and basic hygiene today. What isn't great is that we lose touch with nature. Sure the human body adapts easily to a lot of things and we may don't really need it. But wouldn't it be great to preserve this gift? Leaving this world and showing humans in the future, how precious and unique it is? This shift from nature/organic/wild to sterilized/artificial-chemicals/controlled just seems so wrong. I think it's interesting what you're pointing at. I often think about a future where we use our knowledge from today to preserve our connection to nature.