Joshua Myrvaagnes wrote:
I also wish I could just hang out with a bunch of Australian permaculturists for a bit of time each week to alter my perspective, or a bunch of people from any other country, and I've never been good at learning foreign languages. Canada seems to be more similar to America from what I hear, but I don't know the permaculture scene there very well.
Currently, my favorite podcast is
Making Permaculture Stronger Which is Australian-based. I think you will like it as it is about examining the ideas of permaculture and examining our cultural constructs that sometimes get in the way of our living the ideas of permacultures.
I'm an American but have lived the last 24 years (half my life!) in southern Mexico. It's taken a really long time for me to fully understand the traditional collectivist culture around me that is sadly being eroded by "the American dream" just like soil erosion it's a process that sometimes is just a tiny imperviable trickle, but then there are occasional events that advance the process in a huge jump.
I'm also a foreign language teacher, and I want to let you know that humans are hardwired to learn language, 1 or many. But it takes TIME, children start speaking after a year or two, but don't master the language until around 4 or 5, and continue to learn it throughout their formative years. But they aren't getting an hour-long lesson a day, they are learning the language all their waking hours. If you want to learn a foreign language as an adult you need to dedicate a minimum of 12 hours a week to it, preferably more, the more the better. Most adults frankly don't have the time, energy or motivation to do so and that's why they struggle to learn.