Dmitry Orlov – Interviewed By Barry at DR Escapes
If the social and financial structure around you collapsed tomorrow, as it did for many people during the fall of the Soviet Union, are you prepared to survive and even prosper? In my latest interview with best selling author Dmitry Orlov we discuss lifestyle and how your lifestyle decisions may dramatically impact how your family will fare if times get tough.
Dmitry left Russia with his family in 1976 and settled in the Boston area to pursue an education in computer science and linguistics. Along the way Dmitry realized he was trapped in the traditional American pursuit of a career.
He was working day and night to make money to pay for the car and city condo and all the trappings of success. He needed the car and condo and all the trappings of business to keep making money. The same vicious cycle most Americans face every day. Well Dmitry gave it all up for a life on a sailboat full of travel and freedom.
In our interview, I passed along some of your questions as well as my own to get Dmitry’s perspectives. As you probably know if you follow Dmitry or the ClubOrlov blog, Dmitry brings an interesting perspective to the whole lifestyle and survival dialog.
In this interview, Dmitry shares his thoughts on why he believes that Russian citizens were far better prepared for a collapse than the typical American citizen. His logic is sound and it definitely makes you question…. “what would my family do in a collapse, faced with”:
No lights
No running water
No flushing toilets
No trash removal
No gas at the gas pumps
No government services
No public transportation
Strangely enough, quite inadvertently, the Russian citizens may have been far better off to handle such a collapse, and here is why…..
In this first part of our two part interview with Dmitry, we learn more about his experience growing up in privilege in Russia and follow his journey out of Russia to Boston. Some of the topics Dmitry touches on in this part of the interview include:
Benefits of a travel perspective
Failures in Soviet central planning
Evolving to a barter economy
Role of small family farms
Advantage of generalists over specialists
Transition from a “job” to life on a boat
In the second part of this interview we pass along a few more of your questions in order to dig a little deeper into Dmitry’s opinions about the current status of America and why Dmitry is convinced that what Russia suffered in the Soviet collapse was a soft crash and what America is headed for can only be a catastrophic hard collapse.
In this part of the interview, Dmitry poses a realistic scenario and challenges us to think about how we would handle a collapse.
As I interviewed Dmitry, I couldn’t help but draw parallels with my lifestyle down here on the north coast of the Dominican Republic. Many of the things that Dmitry pointed out about the conditions that supported the bounce back by the Russian citizens seem to apply here.
On the north coast we enjoy:
Abundant food grown on small family farms or taken from the sea
Virtually unlimited fresh water not dependent on extensive government infrastructure
A resilient population unaccustomed and not dependent on many of life’s high-tech luxuries
An economy that can easily fall back on barter in the face of a currency collapse.
Copyright DREscapes.com; 2011–2014
Don’t underestimate the American people they are not as stupid as the mainstream media tries to keep them. In every city in every town their is some sort of self help organization fighting for this or that cause whether it be over the environment city planning to stamp collecting to community arts groups or some other cause you will see a group of people organized around it. Much like the Soviets ( council’s) that midwifed the Russia of 1917 American’s also have had the ability to come together and organize to overcome or confront a situation they were faced with. Not always victories and often losing but never giving up and pulling together in the face of adversity is also an American trait as much as current social relations try to atomize us into consumers A collapse might just be the best thing that ever happened to America and the world. Then the American people would get it’s voice back something it has lost as a result of Media Concentration that should never be allowed to happen in the first place. That is the hope for America and I live in Canada…much more stuffy society if you ask me and with this current government far from the values that MOST Canadian’s hold dear.