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You Can Grow Your Own Food… But Still Let Other People Grow Your Mind
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If You Don’t Control Your Thinking… You’re Still Living On The Grid
You can unplug from the power company.
You can drill your own well, grow your own food, stack firewood, and sleep better knowing the lights going out won’t touch you.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth most off-grid folks never stop to ask: who’s supplying your ideas?
Because if your opinions rise and fall with headlines, algorithms, and expert moods… if your fears, hopes, and assumptions still come pre-packaged… then the grid didn’t lose you. It just moved upstream.
And that’s the grid nobody prepares for. The grid few understand.
Because mental dependence doesn’t hum or spark. It doesn’t trip breakers or throw outages. It just quietly trains you to react instead of think, comply instead of judge, repeat instead of understand. You can live miles from the nearest substation and still be mentally plugged into the same system as everyone else… same narratives, same reflexes, same borrowed conclusions.
Real independence starts one level deeper. Before land. Before tools. Before power.
The World Isn’t Short on Information… It’s Short on Owned Convictions
Don’t be the lizard on the rock—be the deer in the frost, carrying your own fire instead of borrowing the world’s temperature.
Here’s the thing: Critical thought was never meant to sit politely on a shelf like a dusty book no one opens anymore. It wasn’t designed to be admired from a distance, quoted on tests, or paraded around at a party like a trained trick.
Nope… real “critical thought” is supposed to have feet. Critical thought is supposed to stir things up. Critical thought is supposed to cut into real life, rearrange the furniture, and force you to live differently tomorrow than you did yesterday.
When a good thought or idea doesn’t take on life, it grows cold. And when it grows cold, it doesn’t disappear. It morphs into the surrounding environment.
Cold-Blooded Minds and Warm-Blooded Souls
Alright, to see what I mean, picture a lizard stretched out on a rock.
The sun warms the rock, the rock warms the lizard, and the lizard comes alive. But when the clouds roll in and the temperature drops, the lizard slows… stiffens… goes still. It doesn’t generate its own heat. It just borrows it.
Now picture a deer standing in that same cold wind.
The deer doesn’t get its warmth from the weather. It carries its own warmth. It moves when it wants to move. It runs when it needs to run. It doesn’t surrender its life to the temperature outside.
That’s not just biology… that’s a picture of the human mind.
Some people live like lizards. Their thought life rises and falls with the temperature of the room: headlines, social media moods, slogans, whatever the crowd happens to be chanting this week. When the environment changes, so do they.
Others live like warm-blooded creatures. They carry a heat source inside. They can step into cold, hostile, confusing situations and still think clearly… because their thinking isn’t borrowed. It’s internal.
And here’s the key: Warm-blooded animals must internalize and regulate their body temperature to survive. Likewise, human beings have to internalize and regulate their thoughts to remain free.
The Question Isn’t Whether You Think
So let’s clear something up right away.
The question is not, “Do you think?”
Of course you do. Everyone does.
The real question… the only one that matters… is this: Who’s the master here? Passive, uncritical you… or… you as a critical thinker?
Because there’s a massive difference between using thought and being used by it.
When Your Own Thoughts Won’t Shut Up
Everyone knows the feeling.
It’s two in the morning. Then it’s three. Then it’s almost four.
Your body is exhausted, but your mind refuses to clock out. It runs unpaid bills, old arguments, imagined disasters, half-formed fears… over and over… like a bad radio station you can’t turn off.
When that happens long enough, thinking stops being a gift and starts becoming a parasite. Your face goes gray. Your days lose their color. Life starts to feel thin.
Healthy thinking includes the ability to say, “That’s enough for tonight,” and mean it.
That isn’t laziness. That’s controlling your thoughts.
It’s the difference between being dragged behind logic like a dog on a leash… and being the one holding the leash.
Logic is a wonderful tool. But it’s a terrible master. (My friend Nick would say… if logic controls your view of God… then logic is your god.)
There’s more. When logic alone sits on the throne, you become a servant to abstractions. When critical thinking in the biblical sense takes the throne, logic becomes one instrument among many in a fully human life.
The Guest Who Knocks—and Won’t Leave Unless You Ask
And yet… here’s the twist… critical thought isn’t optional.
Thought knocks at your door whether you invite it or not.
Think of it like a traveler who shows up in the middle of a storm. You let him in. You hand him a towel. You feed him a warm meal. You give him the spare room. For a while, with your permission… the house is his to inhabit.
But he’s still a guest, right?
He was never meant to move in permanently and eventually evict you.
That’s also how living ideas work. They arrive with urgency. The good ones demand attention. And at certain seasons of life… especially those late-teen and early-adult years… they demand it loudly.
At these times, your critical thinking ability cries out, insisting on being heard. It’s a bit like a thought window that wants you to stop coasting mentally and get moving. It’s a time when “just going with the flow” can quietly become a form of self-betrayal. But be careful…
Miss that window, and chances are you’ll never fully reopen it.
When You Don’t Think… Someone Else Volunteers
Here’s the part nobody likes to admit.
The person who says, “I’m not really into deep thinking—theology, politics, philosophy, ideas just aren’t my thing,” hasn’t escaped critical thought.
They’ve outsourced it.
If you don’t know which ideas guide your actions, you are still being governed by ideas… just not your own. You’re governed by your family’s prejudices, yesterday’s advertising slogans, today’s propaganda, or whatever voice happens to be loudest on the screen.
There is no neutral ground. There is only chosen critical thought… or environmentally influenced cold-blooded reptile thought.
When Mental Canals Clog… Epidemics Follow
It’s also true that when a society stops circulating honest thought, thought doesn’t disappear.
It comes back sickly.
History is full of examples. Take Prohibition. For over a decade, an entire nation was forced to think about alcohol constantly—how to ban it, how to protest it, how to get it, how to dodge the law.
The result wasn’t moral renewal. It was organized crime, poisoned liquor, and a population trained to lie around a bad idea.
When mental canals clog, thought returns like an epidemic: sweeping movements, sudden manias, wild opinion swings where whole populations get carried away like driftwood in a Mississippi flood.
Today, the epidemics still exist but often wear different clothes: addictive media, bureaucratic mazes, online cults of personality, digital shouting matches that consume energy once spent on art, worship, craftsmanship, and neighborly life.
Unfortunate truth: Bored, hollowed-out minds will latch onto anything just to feel alive.
Buried in Seeds… Starving for Fruit
It sometimes seems like nature is wasteful with seed.
A single tree drops thousands, so that maybe a handful ever become trees.
Thought works the same way.
Every day, you are showered with seeds: headlines, jokes, half-heard conversations, scrolling blurbs, “hot takes.” And if we’re honest, maybe one in a million ever changes how you live.
Modern culture specializes in overproducing seeds… but offers little fruit.
Your mind becomes a showroom floor… always stocked, never truly planted. In school, you cram for the test, dump it on paper, and make room for the next load.
That isn’t thinking.
That’s renting out your brain by the semester.
Real thinking takes one seed, presses it into the soil of your life, and sticks around long enough to see whether anything grows.
When Thoughts Demand Flesh
So, how then shall we use critical thought?
Is it meant to live safely in books and abstract arguments… or is it meant to cross the bridge into reality? Into life?
Take a single sentence: “All men are born free and equal.”
That sentence doesn’t want to stay in thought only. It wants laws. It wants wars. It wants rules, reforms, reconciliations, and sacrifices. It wants to rearrange who votes, who owns property, who walks through which door.
Over generations, that one idea dragged nations through both bloodshed and rebuilding alike.
That’s what living thought does. It insists on becoming flesh.
Thought that never changes a habit, risks nothing, and touches no injustice… isn’t thought at all.
It’s background noise.
Even Your Name Is a Thought Trying to Come True
Let’s also consider something as simple as a name.
Call a boy “Junior,” and you’ve quietly handed him a task: become your echo. It may take seventy years to see whether that thought blossoms… or collapses under its own weight.
Words lodge themselves in lives.
Even careless ones.
And when you zoom out, the labels grow larger: American. Consumer. Progressive. Conservative. Baptist, Catholic, Boomer, Millennial, Gen X, and Z.
These aren’t just descriptions. They are living thoughts trying to write your story before you pick up the pen.
You can let them rule you. Or you can wrestle them into shape with biblical wisdom and contemplation.
Big Ideas Stay Fake Until They Get Specific
General ideas are always cheap. Abstractions are free.
“Freedom.” “Progress.” “Human dignity.”
They sound noble just floating about in the air. But they are simply the “no cost” words of manipulative preachers, polemicists, and politicians.
A thought becomes real when it becomes specific: this law, this neighbor, this sacrifice, this line you won’t cross.
The Christian story drives this home brutally: the eternal Word becomes one specific crying baby in one specific poor town. Not vague light… concrete presence.
That’s the pattern.
Your beliefs only become honest when they touch the cashier, the refugee, the annoying relative, the coworker you’d rather avoid.
Freedom Isn’t Thoughtlessness… It’s Chosen Thought
Thought is also a bit dangerous, but in two opposite ways.
Treat it like a permanent institution … “Science always produces truth,” “Universities will always protect wisdom” … and you fall asleep while your thought canals silt up.
Outsource thought as someone else’s job, and you become prey to every fad and frenzy that comes along. Do an experiment. Ask someone you know about a subject in the current news cycle. See if they have any original thoughts. See if there’s any critical thinking. Or do they just puke back up their favorite network’s talking points?
Look, the only protection against all this nonsense is conscious participation: knowing which ideas actually govern your life… and choosing them deliberately.
Look Around. The Field Is Already Planted.
So pause. Look around.
Look at the headlines. The jokes. The slogans. The assumptions baked into the shows you binge.
Each is a seed.
Most will die on pavement. A few are already taking root.
Ask yourself: Which ideas am I willing to let become real through me? Which guests have become tyrants? Which ones might free me… if I let them in?
You are not a spectator.
You are part of the great distribution of ideas, whether you’re conscious of it or not.
And your freedom doesn’t come from having no masters, no ideas, no commitments. It comes from choosing which words you will allow to become flesh… and then living in a way that makes them true.