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Slow Collapse Skills: Side Hustles & Bartering | Episode 495

Author
Survival Punk
Published
Fri 05 Sep 2025
Episode Link
https://www.survivalpunk.com/slow-collapse-skills-side-hustles-bartering-episode-495/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=slow-collapse-skills-side-hustles-bartering-episode-495

 


skills side hustles

 


Slow Collapse Skills: Side Hustles & Bartering | Episode 495


When the economy grinds down into a slow collapse, survival isn’t just about food and gear—it’s about money, opportunity, and creativity. This episode continues the Slow Collapse Skills series by digging into side hustles and bartering, two lifelines that kept people alive during the Great Depression and will matter just as much in a modern Depression 2.0.




Why Side Hustles Matter Now


For most of us, one income isn’t enough anymore. Home prices are insane, food prices are out of control, and wages haven’t kept pace. That’s why side hustles are no longer optional—they’re survival.


Whether it’s running a podcast, selling on eBay, flipping yard sale finds, woodworking small projects, or offering local services, side hustles stretch your income and build resilience. Even if you don’t need the money today, it builds an emergency fund, pays off debt faster, or gives you a cushion when things really go sideways.


Sometimes those hustles even grow to overtake your day job—and if your side gig is something you enjoy more, that’s a double win.




Bartering in a Slow Collapse


Cash will still be king for a while (see Episode 492), but bartering is the natural backup when money loses power. Skills, food, and useful items all become trade currency:




  • Sharpening knives or tools.




  • Homegrown food or canned goods.




  • Repairs—clothing, appliances, gear.




  • Services like cutting hair, fixing bikes, or tutoring.




In a stretched economy, barter fills the cracks where cash doesn’t reach.




The Gray Market Angle


Not every hustle will be strictly “by the book.” Some of the most useful skills and services fall into gray areas—like cutting hair without a license, selling certain items, or working outside formal systems. You have to weigh risk vs. reward.


If the “penalty” is just a fine that’s smaller than your profits, it becomes a business expense. If it risks jail time, it’s not worth it. The key is being smart and realistic.




My Story: Survival Punk as a Side Hustle


Survival Punk started as my own side hustle. Instead of wasting time on video games, I poured that energy into writing, DIY projects, and podcasting. Years later, it’s still here, still growing, and still providing value.


That’s the lesson: don’t wait until collapse is at your door to start. Build something now, while you still have options.




Final Thoughts


In a slow collapse, side hustles and bartering aren’t optional—they’re survival strategies. They bring in money, provide trade value, and might even replace your day job. Start one now, while you still can.


This has been James from Survival Punk—DIY to survive, you guys.


 


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