Jo Nuske

Jo Nuske My identity is eclectic It is time to own me in the many and varied ways I interact with the world.

From the spiritual, to dental implant info, I seek to share what I have learned

Mind boggling: the destruction is horrific
01/02/2026

Mind boggling: the destruction is horrific

When a story inspires to remember to honour the workers of the land and to make kids aware, then it is worth sharing. Fa...
29/01/2026

When a story inspires to remember to honour the workers of the land and to make kids aware, then it is worth sharing. Fabulous

The principal looked at my muddy boots and actually apologized to the students for my "messy appearance." He didn’t know I was about to change one boy’s life forever.

My name is Joseph. I’m 68 years old, and I’ve been fighting the hard Iowa clay since before I could legally drive.

I don’t have a LinkedIn profile. I don’t have a retirement fund managed by a guy in a skyscraper. I have 400 acres, a third-generation mortgage, and hands that haven't been truly clean since 1974.

For fifty years, I’ve pulled calves in freezing sleet while the rest of the world slept under down comforters. I’ve bet my entire livelihood on the weather, praying for rain while watching my corn turn into brown paper under a scorching sun.

But apparently, that wasn’t "professional" enough for Career Day.

Last month, my granddaughter, Maya, begged me to come to her high school. I tried to say no. I knew the lineup.

And sure enough, when I walked into that auditorium, I stuck out like a sore thumb.

To my left was a corporate attorney in a suit that cost more than my first pickup truck. To my right, a software developer talking about "optimizing synergy" and working from coffee shops.

The students sat there, eyes glazed over, terrified about their SAT scores and drowning in pressure to get into colleges they couldn't afford.

When the guidance counselor introduced me, he gave a tight, embarrassed smile. "And finally... this is Joseph. He works in... agriculture."

He made it sound like a disease.

I walked to the microphone. I didn’t have a PowerPoint. I just held up my hands. They’re thick, scarred, and stained with grease that no amount of soap will ever scrub out.

"I’ve never sat in a lecture hall," I told them, my voice raspy. "I don’t know what 'synergy' is. But I know that when the grocery store shelves go empty, you can’t eat a diploma."

The room went dead silent.

"You are being told that if you don't go to university, you've failed," I continued, looking at the rows of teenagers. "But let me tell you something. This country doesn't run on emails. It runs on the backs of people who aren't afraid to sweat."

I pointed to the attorney. "He creates paperwork."

I pointed to myself. "I create food. And when a blizzard hits and the supply trucks stop running, paperwork won't keep your children fed. My corn will."

I saw the teachers shifting uncomfortably. I didn't care.

"There is dignity in being tired at the end of the day," I said. "There is freedom in fixing your own tractor. And there is peace in knowing that you don't owe a bank $100,000 just for the permission to get a job."

When the bell rang, most of the kids rushed out, back to their phones. But one boy stayed behind.

He was skinny, wearing a hoodie pulled up to his chin. He looked at the floor, kicking his sneaker against the gym mat.

"My dad's a mechanic," he mumbled, refusing to look at me. "He comes home smelling like gas every day. My teachers tell me I’m smart enough to 'escape' that life. They say I should be an architect so I don't end up like him."

My heart broke right there in that gymnasium.

I walked off the stage and put a hand on his shoulder. He flinched, then looked up.

"Son," I said, "Let me ask you something. When an ambulance breaks down on the highway with a dying patient inside, who saves the day? Is it the architect?"

He shook his head slowly. "No."

"It's your dad," I said firmly. "Your dad keeps this world moving. He is the difference between life and death on that highway. Don't you ever let anyone tell you his life is something to escape. It’s something to honor."

The boy’s eyes welled up. He wiped them quickly with his sleeve, nodded once, and walked away. He stood a little taller.

I went back to the farm and didn’t think much of it. I just went back to the harvest, back to the solitude of the cab.

But yesterday, I was at the hardware store buying hydraulic fluid. A woman came rushing down the aisle and grabbed my arm.

It was the boy’s mother.

"You’re the farmer, aren't you?" she asked, her voice shaking.

I braced myself for a complaint. Maybe I’d been too harsh.

Instead, she started crying.

"My son has been ashamed of his father for years," she said, tears streaming down her face. "He wouldn't even let his dad pick him up from school because of the old work truck. But since that assembly... he’s been in the garage every single night."

She took a breath. "He told his dad yesterday, 'Teach me how the engine works.' It’s the first time I’ve seen my husband look proud in a decade."

We stood there in the aisle, surrounded by tools and nuts and bolts, and I got choked up too.

We have made a terrible mistake in this country.

We have convinced a generation that working with your hands is a consolation prize. We have shamed the plumbers, the electricians, the farmers, and the mechanics into silence, making them feel small so that universities can sell more degrees.

But here is the hard truth: You can have all the CEOs and influencers you want. But if nobody plants the seed, if nobody welds the pipe, if nobody turns the wrench... civilization collapses in about three days.

So, to every young person reading this who loves to build, fix, grow, or create:

We need you.

Don't let them talk you into a life of debt you don't want. There is honor in the dirt. There is glory in the grease.

And one day, when the world breaks down, the people in the suits will be looking for you to save them.

Do you agree that we need to bring back respect for trade skills and blue-collar work? Drop a "YES" below if you support the men and women who keep this country running.

Words to think with…….
25/01/2026

Words to think with…….

Wonderfully said.
16/01/2026

Wonderfully said.

A game changer….as costly as implants? Probably cheaper in the long term. Wow!
14/01/2026

A game changer….as costly as implants? Probably cheaper in the long term. Wow!

Imagine regrowing a lost tooth the way children grow their first set. Kitano Hospital in Japan and Seoul National University made it reality: A drug that activates dormant third-generation tooth buds, allowing adults to regrow fully functional teeth in 6-8 months—no implants, no dentures 🦷

Humans carry genetic instructions for three sets of teeth. We grow baby teeth, then permanent adult teeth, but the third set remains suppressed by a protein called USAG-1. The experimental drug (an antibody that blocks USAG-1) removes this biological brake, triggering dormant tooth buds to develop. In trials, 68% of participants aged 30-70 regrew at least one complete tooth with roots, enamel, and natural integration with jawbone. The regrown teeth function identically to original teeth—no different from the ones you're born with. Treatment involves monthly injections for 6 months, then the tooth erupts naturally like childhood teeth.

The dental industry opposition is fierce: Americans spend $124 billion yearly on dental implants, bridges, dentures, and related procedures. A single implant costs $3,000-6,000 and lasts 10-15 years. Natural tooth regeneration is a one-time biological process costing an estimated $800-1,200 per tooth that lasts a lifetime. The American Dental Association published concerns about "unknown long-term effects" and "disruption of oral ecosystems," despite successful 5-year follow-ups showing zero complications. Major dental implant manufacturers have lobbied the FDA to classify tooth regeneration as "genetic modification requiring extensive long-term studies"—a categorization that adds 10-15 years to approval timelines.

For the 178 million Americans missing at least one tooth and 40 million missing all teeth, this represents biological restoration versus artificial replacement. The technology exists, works reliably, and threatens a century-old dental industry built on permanent tooth loss.

Should an entire medical industry have veto power over treatments that make their services obsolete?

📊 Source: Kitano Hospital & Seoul National University Dental Research, March 2025

Simple philosophies that have sound wisdom
07/01/2026

Simple philosophies that have sound wisdom

Words to think on…for those parents who need it.
07/01/2026

Words to think on…for those parents who need it.

07/01/2026

Illuminating…..

Love the teachings of this guy.
03/01/2026

Love the teachings of this guy.

Love this:sensible philosophies to think about
28/12/2025

Love this:sensible philosophies to think about

A Christmas Story about 2 strange events that helped an elderly widowed woman remember the joy of the past and the wonde...
25/12/2025

A Christmas Story about 2 strange events that helped an elderly widowed woman remember the joy of the past and the wonder of the Festive season. Filmed on a small digital camera.....as part of Uni study.

It has special memories for me because my mum (who has since passed) agreed to be the star of the show.

I created this video in 2014 which has been transferred from the Serene Spirit channel and website. Sorry about the video quality.

A Christmas Story about 2 strange events that helped an elderly widowed woman remember the joy of the past and the wonder of the Festive season. Filmed on a ...

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