Ok I'll repost this.
It sets out how I see it.
Im not pretending it's all ok, it is all ok ATM nothing in my world has changed that I can see.
I'm not laying any guilt trip on you, from my perspective it's the other way round.
You make me feel I ought to be as depressed and miserable as you are, by it all.
My family is relatively healthy, my children haven't been conscripted to fight some war, I'm not having to pull children trapped underneath rubble from bombed out buildings, and my food isn't rationed. Ok so petrol might go up and some in the family might be made redundant. That can happen in the EU.
My life, even if there is some hardship coming, is a lot better than other places in the world.
If I had conditions like families in ww2 or people today living under constant conflict or under Isis rule, I'd be depressed and worried.
As it is, I think I'm extremely lucky.
If I can keep food on the table and my family healthy, that's what really matters.
So that's what I aim to do.
If I have to cut back on things, then I do.
When I was a kid no one whose parents were working class could afford holidays abroad.
We have become used to living like millionaires ( in comparison) if we have to return to that for a while, then so be it.
The problem nowadays is we all expect to do these things, it's normal.
Most of the country chose to return to "the good old days,"which is probably exactly what they are going to get.
In the "good old days" working class people didn't go abroad for their holidays if they were very lucky they got a caravan down in clacton for a week.
They didn't have the latest gadgets because there were no mobile phones, iPads etc.
Today our expectations are raised in what we expect to be able to do.
What might happen when we are trying to sort ourselves out, is we may return to that age where we can't all jet off into the sun and have the lifestyle we think we are entitled to.
IMO we will still have the things that matter, which is caring for our families and we might need to lower our expectations a bit in the lifestyle front, especially if those working have to support those made redundant.
But IMO we' ll chivvy through somehow.