Episode 4 – The Old Paths Still Walked: A Living Example of Craft, Community, and Discipline
Most people assume that a life built around discipline, craftsmanship, and intentional community no longer exists, that it belongs to another century, another culture, or only to books and nostalgia.
In this episode of Pursue the Old Paths, JD challenges that assumption by highlighting a living, working example of people who are not merely talking about tradition, but actively walking it.
JD shares firsthand experiences from Homestead Heritage, a deliberate community in Elm Mott, Texas, and their working farm along the Brazos River, Brazos de Dios, “Arms of God.” From horse-drawn plows and hand-built homes to blacksmithing, pottery, weaving, cheesemaking, and water-powered milling, this community pursues excellence in craft, work, and daily life with uncommon seriousness and skill.
Joining JD for this episode is his wife, Regina, who brings a thoughtful and grounded perspective as a wife, mother, grandmother, and homeopath. Together, they discuss what stood out most during their visits, the beauty and precision of the craftsmanship, the community’s openness to teaching, and the contentment that permeates their way of life.
This conversation explores:
- What disciplined craftsmanship actually looks like when it is lived, not romanticized
- How excellence, not convenience, shapes culture and community
- Which principles from this way of life are transferable to modern families
- Why this path is not for everyone—and why that matters
- How Pursue the Old Paths and The Watchmen are not about withdrawal from society, but about mastery, responsibility, and excellence where you are
This episode is not a call to join a commune or abandon modern life. It is proof that the old paths are still viable, still powerful, and still demanding and that most people do not reject them because they are impossible, but because they require cost, patience, and discipline.
The old paths are still being walked.
The real question is whether we are willing to walk them ourselves.
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