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After being laid off with just $6,000 in savings — and having experienced homelessness — John started over. He left Utah and moved to northern Arizona, where land was still dirt cheap in the middle of cattle country. There, he bought 2.5 acres of raw dryland for $1,800. The property wasn’t scenic or easy. It was exposed, overgrazed, and bone dry. But it was affordable. And that mattered. For the first four years, John lived in a small camper van on the land while slowly building the foundations of a self-sufficient life. Instead of rushing to build a house, he focused on infrastructure. He shaped the land to capture monsoon rains, creating a water system that now provides what he needs each year. He added solar power piece by piece. He worked on soil improvement and food production before ever pouring energy into permanent shelter. Only after those systems were functioning did he build his cabin — for about $13,000 — doing nearly everything himself. He built the windows, the doors, even the hinges. By moving slowly and avoiding debt, he was able to create a home that is entirely off-grid and fully paid for. Today he grows most of his own food. In winter, crops thrive inside a hand-dug underground geothermal greenhouse that protects plants from freezing temperatures. Next to his cabin, he carved out a food cellar by hand for storage. He raises pigs for meat and butchers them himself. Chickens provide eggs. More recently, he added horses for transportation and to help restore the surrounding pasture. John earns income through small, tangible goods he produces himself, including hand-blended teas and hand-ground corn flour. He also shares his process on his YouTube channel, Frugal Off Grid, where he documents what it actually takes to build a resilient life on a tight budget. Besides being homeless as a teen, he says he didn’t grow up with much structure, and for a long time life carried a lot of pressure. After losing his job, he rebuilt slowly from a camper van, focusing on creating something stable and long-lasting. He lives off-grid because he values autonomy, and solitude. Caring for animals, working with his hands, and solving practical problems at a steady pace has brought a kind of calm he hadn’t experienced before. John focuses on systems-based thinking: shelter, water, food, power, and income. His guiding idea is simple: more structure, less pressure. When the right systems are in place, life gets quieter and more manageable. — Frugal Off-Grid: / @frugaloffgrid https://frugaloffgrid.com/ On *faircompanies: https://faircompanies.com/videos/he-l...