A dad building something special for his family, his community, & the New England region he loves | Championing an American-made & rooted economy.

Joined March 2017
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A little introduction for new and old followers alike: First off, I’m no one special in the grand scheme of things, but I’d like to think I’m very special to my family, and I’ve designed my life off that presumption. My name is Greg, and I live with my young, growing Catholic family of 6 in northwestern RI on our homestead, where we homeschool our kids and tend to our chickens, veggies and flowers (with more additions planned in the future). I write for a Substack publication called Kinward and record a daily podcast called The Dissident Dad Show, while working on building a family business. I believe in this idea called eternalist generationalism, where responsibility doesn’t end with my lifespan or my kids’ childhoods, because it reaches upward to God and eternity, and outward into the moral, spiritual, economic, and ecological world my descendants (and my neighbors’ descendants) will have to live in. If eternity is real, then I’m obligated to build a rightly ordered micro-civilization, not just carve out a private, comfortable life. I think we’d all be a little better off if we focused on our local economies of land, people, and politics rather than getting worked up over national or global happenings. In fact, I think we’d be much happier overall. I love New England and American wouldn’t live anywhere else. I have ancestry going back to the Mayflower, so you could say I’m a Mayflower American. I’ve also fought for this country, and so have five generations of men in my family. But you wouldn’t see my kids or me going abroad to fight in any wars right now; rather, if anything, you’ll see us fighting for our own local communities and people if it came to that. I love nature and the American landscape; exploring it, being tethered to it. One of the greatest feelings is walking through the woods all day watching a bird dog run around looking for grouse and woodcock and the thrill that comes from shooting it when flushed. I think our lives would be more enriched if we conserved this natural world of ours as best as possible. Finally, I think the nihilistic mind rot of our modern age has destroyed so much beauty that used to exist in our homes, architecture, landscaping, the way we dress and treat others, our faith in a higher being, our cooking and baking and how we even present it, and even how we just think, act, and converse with ourselves and each other. We destroy nihilism through beauty. The beauty found in family, faith, nature, traditions, our communities and parishes, and having the freedom to live this way without being oppressed by any governmental entity. Thanks for following along.
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as parents, we should inspire delight and in turn, wonder in our children. Sure it may not be a good drawing, but you should be delighted in this experience of him learning through first principles.
idk why we're expected to lie to kids. like it's very obviously not a good drawing. i know that, im pretty sure he knows that. why would i lie to his face, just because he's 5? if anything it's more important to tell him the truth now so that he has time to get better at it
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babies running a variable ratio schedule of reinforcement on the parents.
babies: chuck one, eat one, chuck two, eat one, chuck three, eat none.
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good evening.
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kids set up a table for themselves in the office so we could have a romantic dinner. we … accept.
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still said Grace and prayers, but had to yell across the rooms to each other.
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Greg Cello retweeted
Cabin bunting spotted.
Replying to @Nopetwit
That was 4 years ago just reminiscing This is today
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babies: chuck one, eat one, chuck two, eat one, chuck three, eat none.
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New England farm coast beaches >>>
First beach day of the season
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a tale of two lives: 🍗🐓 vs 🥚🐓
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this guy’s America 250 mogging everyone on the road right now.
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monoculture mirrors modern culture more than most realize. it simplifies living systems, extracts what it needs, and depends on outside inputs. The same pattern shows up in modern institutions, relationships, and daily life.
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that’s why regenerative agriculture feels like a real antidote. Like a return to realism. It moves in the other direction, rebuilding fertility through relationship and time. I can sense this every day I’m outside trying to figure it all out with my kids alongside me.
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my daughter has no idea what’s coming to her a couple weeks from now.
My daughters requested an America 250 themed birthday party. 🇺🇸🗽🦅🎂 When setting up I thought about how special it is to have children who love their country so much they wanted to share a birthday with it. 🥹
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I call it the meat bird transport 3000.
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wisdom begins with wonder. How are we to cultivate wisdom in our children, if not through wonder?
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good morning. Beautiful day ahead
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when bro calls an audible to get beers for the baptism afterparty, you best be ready to deliver.
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