Relatively Stable

A Future Me Problem


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What year is your problem from?

In this week's Stable Roots, Kim explores a simple thought experiment that came to her in the wee hours between waking and sleeping: What happens when you take a problem you're facing today and place it in another time period?

Would a fallen tree have felt different in 1825? What about a dead mouse in a feed bag? Would the problem still exist, or would it reveal itself as a product of modern technology, expectations, and endless decision-making?

Through stories from life at Lavender Hill—including a storm-damaged water oak, a Sunday morning botulism scare, and a veterinarian's reminder that knowledge and control are not the same thing—Kim examines why modern life can feel so exhausting even when we have more tools than ever before.

Sometimes the problem isn't the problem.

Sometimes it's everything we've attached to it.

This episode is an invitation to take three steps backward, widen the frame, and ask a different question:

What year is my problem from?

In This Episode

The origin of the phrase "That's a future me problem"

Why some modern worries would have made no sense in 1825

The hidden burden of endless options and decision-making

A fallen tree, Hurricane Helene, and the cloud of choices surrounding simple problems

What a dead mouse in a feed bag taught Kim about uncertainty

The difference between knowledge and control

Why waiting has become such a difficult skill

A practical exercise for gaining perspective when a problem feels overwhelming

Memorable Quote

"Not every problem belongs to today. Some belong to tomorrow. Some belong to the past. And some problems aren't problems at all, but questions that time hasn't answered yet."

Stable Roots on Relatively Stable is the audio companion to Kim Carter's weekly Substack essays, recorded from Lavender Hill in Upstate South Carolina, where horses, history, grief, resilience, and ordinary life intersect in unexpected ways.

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Relatively StableBy Kimberly Carter