Category Archives: Emergency Preparedness

Goodwill and charity still exist

I posted a YouTube video by a nice prepper lady, AlaskaGranny, who I’ve watched for a couple years. She mentioned active listening and that’s going to be sort of a stepping off point for this blog post.

I have lots of opinions – many of them about politics, foreign policy and the culture war stuff going on in America, but none of that stuff really matters when it comes to if there’s an emergency situation. What’s going to matter is taking care of my family, friends, neighbors and the people around me in my community and I think that’s how it is for most people.

Often in YouTube communities, regardless which community, there’s a lot of copycat stuff or a topic that one person does that gets a lot of attention, then other YouTubers in that community will jump on the bandwagon and do a video about the same thing. I’ve seen this happen in crafting and needlework communities too, not just preppers and homesteaders. I suppose it’s just human nature and how trends work.

Some common themes I’ve heard mentioned on prepper channels are Argentina’s collapse, Venezuela’s lawlessness, planning for marauding bands of thieves, and warnings about how dangerous the unprepared, starving people will be. None of these outcomes is preordained if America has some major economic turmoil, serious shortages or other financial upheavals.

No one (especially the Russians) was expecting the Ukrainians to put up this much of a fight when Russia launched a full-scale invasion over a month ago. Zelensky was not a popular leader at home and no one ever expected him to rise to the occasion like he has. That’s the thing, people can often surprise you and all these experts or studies saying “this group of people will behave this way or that way during a crisis,” often don’t turn out that way.

I’ve read interesting accounts about WWII Londoners and how they survived the German bombing raids, which started in the fall of 1940 and didn’t ease up until May of 1941. Sebastian Junger, in his book, Tribe, explained how British experts and authorities expected mass hysteria in the run-up to the German aerial bombardment. The Churchill government expected economic production to plummet and people to fall apart

Exactly the opposite happened. Junger writes, “Not only did these experiences fail to produce mass hysteria, they didn’t even trigger much individual psychosis. Before the war, projections for psychiatric breakdowns in England, ran as high as four million people, but as the Blitz progressed, psychiatric hospitals saw admissions go down.”(p. 47) He explains that psychiatrists were puzzled as long-standing patients saw their symptoms subside during the intense air raids. Junger mentions one doctor during the Blitz commented that chronic neurotics of peacetime now drive ambulances. (p. 48).

Junger goes on, “Psychiatric wards in Paris were strangely empty during both world wars and that remained true even as the German army rolled into the city in 1940.”(p. 48)

Many ordinary Londoners during the Blitz went to work during the day, trudged to the bomb shelters at night, then emerged in the morning and headed back to work. All sorts of people with no training self-organized and worked to help clear rubble, assist the wounded, and help in whatever way they could. I’ve read numerous books on the French Resistance and they’re filled with stories of unlikely heroism by ordinary French citizens, many of them women.

Here’s something else I’ve been thinking about and that’s how we often expect other people to view things the same way we do and to take the same actions we’re taking This goes from lifestyle choices, child-rearing (oh, boy do people have strong opinions on that topic), how to manage money, and it goes on and on. In the past two years there’s even definite strong opinions on how we should interact in public since Covid arrived.

It’s hard sometimes not to be alarmed if you follow the news or gravitate to social media content that incites, inflames, or that’s fearmongering for clicks, or listen to people all worked up or angry at some particular type of person or groups of people constantly.

The whole point of emergency preparedness is not just so you can survive a crisis, but also so that you can preserve your quality of life as much as possible. British people during those WWII air raids were still having their tea – even in the air raid shelters and then going to work the next day. They did laundry, cooked meals, took care of their children and all the other normal tasks of living. The same is happening in Ukraine right now. There are even farmers still trying to plant their crops, families caring for their children and elderly family members, doctors and nurses caring for the sick, truck drivers showing up for work, and the list goes on.

Something I’ve been thinking about is, while severe shortages do sound very alarming and could cause a whole lot of disruptions and hardships, America is a very large country with vast natural and human resources. We are a country with a great deal of creative energy and innovators. I suspect that rather than sit around and starve or wait for Washington to figure something out, there will be plenty of Americans, who will jump into action and start creating their own small-scale systems to manage, if the global and national systems fail to meet the challenge.

During several floods, I’ve seen news stories of men coming with their own boats and launching rescue operations to help emergency officials. I’ve seen civilians get in their own vehicles and head to the next town or county to help out in an emergency situation. It’s very common for concerned citizens to join in search efforts when there’s a missing child or travel to assist other firefighters.

While it’s easy to see a lot of disturbing online social media behaviors, there’s also a wealth of goodwill and charity too, especially during emergencies. I’ve seen fundraisers set-up within online communities. A year or so ago a YouTube homesteader family was in a terrible car accident. The man died and his wife was seriously injured. Other online homesteaders immediately started raising money to help that family. I’ve seen people on Twitter and facebook do the same thing.

People often spontaneously organize and figure out solutions, especially in a crisis. And the thing is these types of local leaders and community action don’t come from policy experts, local government, and certainly not from Washington politicians. They come from ordinary people, who got concerned about a problem and decided to take action.

It’s amazing how quickly goodwill and charity can spread and there’s still an abundance of that in America, no matter what other shortages we might face. Volunteerism and civic action in crises really are part of the American DNA and that’s why I remain hopeful for our future.

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Some good advice:

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K.I.S.S works, especially when SHTF

The sanctions on Russia are impacting ordinary Russians, but it remains to be seen how it impacts Putin’s war in Ukraine. I saw a YouTube video of a Russian guy shopping for groceries and he said a lot of the prices have doubled in one week:

Also, President Biden said food shortages are going to be real and he blathered on about how the sanctions on Russia will impact Europe and the US too, but truthfully Biden made some very disastrous decisions from the moment he took office that are exacerbating economic problems here at home. Fall-out from the sanctions will just add to the economic chaos.

If the continuing shortage issues and escalating inflation in the grocery store haven’t motivated you to stock up on food, water, necessities and try to grow some of your own food, well, I don’t know what will. Anyway, there you have it from President Biden – food shortages are going to be real. Of course, if you watched this White House’s handling of any crisis, don’t count on them having any sort of plan to deal with this one either.

Information can be a blessing or a curse, especially when we’re inundated with so much and trying to sift through it all. There’s a very sound principle that’s commonly used around the military and my husband said it often – K.I.S.S., which means Keep it simple stupid:

“The acronym was reportedly coined by Kelly Johnson, lead engineer at the Lockheed Skunk Works (creators of the Lockheed U-2 and SR-71 Blackbird spy planes, among many others).[3]

While popular usage has translated it for decades as, ‘Keep it simple, stupid’, Johnson translated it as, ‘Keep it simple stupid’ (no comma), and this reading is still used by many authors.[7] There was no implicit meaning that an engineer was stupid; just the opposite.[3]

The principle is best exemplified by the story of Johnson handing a team of design engineers a handful of tools, with the challenge that the jet aircraft they were designing must be repairable by an average mechanic in the field under combat conditions with only these tools. Hence, the ‘stupid’ refers to the relationship between the way things break and the sophistication available to fix them. The acronym has been used by many in the United States Air Force and the field of software development.” https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/KISS_principle

When large (global) complex systems fail (which is what’s happening now) there is no way to prepare for all the chaos and misery likely to follow, but if you simplify your finances and your lifestyle, you’re way more likely to weather the chaos. I mention the Amish frequently, because their belief system is centered on simple living and community, which allows them to thrive even in bad times.

I’ve fallen prey to letting information overload, when googling or watching YouTube videos on “how to” do various things, make me overthink things or believe that I need all the fancy doodads and equipment before embarking on new projects. It’s easy to think you need to buy all the “right” fancy equipment before trying new things, but I know my mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother didn’t have all of that and they managed to do all sorts of stuff, from preserving food, making home medicinal remedies to sewing beautiful needlework and quilting, etc. The K.I.S.S principle can be applied to almost every aspect of preparedness too. By simplifying how you approach tasks, it can save you time, money and a whole lot of stress worrying about not having all the “right” prepper stuff.

How to manage personal finances advice abounds, especially with the economic chaos roiling now. I’ve seen online recommendations from take all your money out of the bank to various investment options and I’ve got no advice there, except I believe it’s good to have some cash on hand, in case the electronic banking system goes down for a while. The federal government has been warning about cyberattacks, so it’s not just me fearmongering. Being debt-free and mortgage free were my high priorities and having emergency savings, so that’s been my simplified living plan and how I choose to live. I do think a lot of people will be moving into a time crunch period as the economy worsens quickly and they didn’t make any efforts to streamline their lifestyle or finances, didn’t stock up on basics, and where they’ll end up making rash decisions, as inflation and shortages get much worse.

If you can pay off even one credit card or debt in the next few months, that will free up the money you were using for that monthly payment. That extra could help off-set the extra costs of inflation or be a little to put aside in savings or use for stocking up basics. There’s still time to work on paying off debt and stocking up.

I’m a list person, because often when I’m shopping I forget items that I intended to buy, but I also pick up a lot of extra things, especially since 2020. Certainly as more people become concerned about the worsening economic situation a lot more people will be stocking up and also panic-buying. There’s no perfect prepping process, but even now staying calm and thinking through your own financial situation and seriously looking through your fridge, freezer and pantry and making a list is a good idea. I prefer to stock up mostly on basics that I can use as building blocks for many meals. I’m working at growing some of my own vegetables and herbs, but store-bought canned goods are also good to have. Frozen vegetables are still cheap where I live and I continue to dehydrate frozen vegetables, because they will last much longer dehydrated than frozen and it clears up freezer space.

One thing I’ve noticed over the years with the rise of foodie culture (especially things like Food TV and the growing interest in becoming a chef) is a lot of people begin to buy into a lot of “trendy” things, like now it’s “pink Himalayan salt” or eating only “non-GMO” foods. Look, canning salt, which is a fine, plain salt with no anti-caking agents or potassium iodide added is important in home canning, but for general cooking and baking – any kind of salt will work – from fancy, expensive salt to cheap iodized salt that’s under a dollar a canister. Iodized salt is often recommended, because we don’t get iodine (potassium iodide) in our diets. Stocking up on salt is important, because beyond making food taste good, salt is vital for our health. Salt also has a lot of uses beyond cooking – from medicinal to cleaning.

There is no scientific evidence that GMO foods are less safe to eat than non-GMO foods. When the choice becomes eating or not eating – no one’s going to be fussing over whether the food is non-GMO. If you’re planting a garden, well, then I can see people being a bit choosier, because of the difference between heirloom and hybrid seeds, if you plan to collect seeds. However, here again, there are some benefits to hybrid seeds as many of them have been developed to produce plants that grow better in some climates and are resistant to plant diseases. I did buy some hybrid tomato seeds that are supposed to be good for my growing zone, because years ago before my husband became ill, when I used to plant a vegetable garden here, I struggled with getting tomato plants to thrive in my backyard.

I’m not very picky about brands and will buy store brands, except I am very partial to Heinz ketchup and have stocked up quite a bit, lol. However, if the choice came to some other brand or no ketchup, I would certainly buy the other brand. I also have plenty of cookbooks and think I can make a passable ketchup substitute, if push came to shove. And that reminds me ketchup requires vinegar and vinegar should be on a basic food supply list too and it has uses way beyond cooking and food preservation.

Hopefully, grocery costs here don’t rise like the video above with the Russian man talking about prices in his grocery store, but the craziness seems likely to hit everyone around the world, so trying to prepare however you can now is just common sense. Although common sense isn’t really that common these days, but I believe if you’re able to type in “how to” in Google or YouTube, you can probably come up with some usable information to get you started toward learning how to do millions of things. If you’re really ambitious you can hunt down some books about those topics or find someone who knows how to do those things and acquire even more skill sets.

The one thing we should all be learning from seeing what’s happening in Ukraine, is that when SHTF, most people still work hard to persevere and they focus on the basics each day. The K.I.S.S principle can be applied to almost every aspect of your life and even complex or arduous undertakings will be more achievable if you simplify as much as possible and take things one step at a time – especially in a crisis.

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Where are our American leaders?

It’s hard to keep a positive attitude if you follow the news about what’s happening here in the US with our political dramas and the economic problems compounding almost daily and then look beyond our shores to the crises swirling abroad. Everywhere you turn there’s another looming situation that’s like a flashing warning sign that major system failures are moving closer and inevitably going to impact all of us.

Yesterday I saw this report from Ukraine that made me think about the importance of carrying on, as best you can, no matter how terrible a situation you find yourself in:

None of the decisions I have made with personal preparedness come anywhere close to Ukrainian farmers making a decision to plant crops in a war zone. At 1:27 in this video the sound of a military jet flying overhead catches the farmer and reporter’s attention and they both look up at the sky, neither knowing if it’s a Ukrainian or Russian jet. That moment made me think how small my problems are compared to millions of other people in the world.

It feels surreal that we’re now seeing world leaders talking about nuclear war, looming global food and gas shortages, inflation climbing daily, talk of major economic collapses, oh, and warnings of likely major cyberattacks too, in the news these days. While things seem very likely to get much worse and chaotic in ways none of us ever thought possible in America, at the same time I believe there are millions of Americans, in communities all over our great country, who will show every bit as much courage, determination, resourcefulness, and resiliency as the Ukrainians have mustered with their country being invaded by Russia. I have a lot of faith in the American spirit.

However, I wonder where our leaders are in America, where both political parties flit from one media sideshow to the next and none of them seem focused on coming up with real solutions for any of the looming crises that keep hitting the news. It’s rather bizarre that nowhere in America are leaders standing up and offering leadership, advice or offering any coherent direction for any of these problems. It’s all talking points and gimmicks (usually more grandstanding pushing pointless legislation & government spending that doesn’t address the problems).

The government of Ukraine is urging their farmers to stay and plant their crops this spring. Where is our government on figuring out solutions for the sky-rocketing cost of fertilizer and looming fertilizer shortages? Do our states and federal government have food reserves to feed America in a crisis? What’s the state of government fuel and food reserves? What about the escalating inflation, the growing shortage problems, the gas prices?

Less than 8% of Americans are on Twitter, but I can guarantee you most of our American political leaders, the journalists and political pundits who try to rile up people in the news are on Twitter every single day – trying to outdo each other with the clever hot takes and driving spin cycles. President Biden likely doesn’t tweet, but he has a Twitter account where someone posts tweets and former President Trump has spent the past 14 months fuming that he’s not on Twitter and trying to come up with a social media platform that can compete with Twitter. That’s what our leaders are concerned about – owning spin cycles.

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We can still control our own actions and hearts

We are entering uncharted financial territory with the present situation we’re all facing – economic chaos is going to hit us all hard and none of us will be able to escape the fall-out. That’s the reality. All of these massive sanctions on Russia will impact us too. It’s already in motion, yet millions of people continue to walk around unaware and making no effort to prepare their finances, stocking up on basic supplies and thinking about how to survive escalating inflation, increasing shortage situations and the steep rise in gas prices. I can’t predict what’s going to happen with the conflict in Ukraine, but this spilling over into a larger world war is quite possible. While I hope this war in Ukraine ends soon, no one knows how this is going to turn out.

The steep gas prices are going to drive up the food prices and everything else even more. President Biden announced he’s stopping Russian oil imports and he also has not undone any of the green measures he put in place immediately when he came into office, intent on decreasing American oil and gas dependence. Most of us can’t just instantly switch to an electric car or go green. Russia may initiate major cyber-attacks , our own government is warning as this crisis with Russia invading Ukraine escalates.

Here’s a good video laying out the situation from Chris at City Prepping:

One thing Chris mentions in this video is normalcy bias, which is a cognitive bias where people tend to disbelieve and minimize threat warnings. I’ve seen this myself with people dismissing severe weather warnings even with our modern Doppler radar, where storms can be tracked in real time. Many people still dismiss tornado warnings, even when tornados have been spotted in their area.

We live in a culture where personal responsibility doesn’t weigh highly in our values anymore and that worries me with this current situation. I’ve talked to family members about becoming more prepared and the reactions I encounter when trying to mention being prepared is mostly complete dismissal or acting like I am being too alarmist from my four adult kids. I have other family members who have been preparing. I mentioned stocking up on more groceries with these shortages increasing, when I ran into one of my dearest friends recently at the grocery store of all places, as we were commenting on the empty shelf spaces. She told me she knows she probably should, but hasn’t and she said her pastor has been urging them to prepare.

I write about preparedness here on my blog and I mentioned it on Twitter a few times, but I’m pretty much convinced a whole lot of people won’t take any proactive efforts to prepare and will be left reacting as the economic problems escalate. I’ve been trying to stock up extra on basics, as I can afford, so I can hopefully help my family and others some, if things get really bad. I figure if things don’t get bad, I can always donate extra canned goods and things to my local food pantry or people in need.

Mostly, I’m trying to keep a positive attitude and be grateful for each day. I’m also trying to learn more about the history of Ukraine and the relationships with Russia. I started with reading, Ukraine and the Art of Strategy by Lawrence Freedman and I bought Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine by Anne Applebaum. I have a few other books about Ukraine and Russia on my list that I will probably buy later. Reading more about situations happening in the world helps me understand more about what’s going on in the news now. I had some general knowledge about the Ukraine/Russia controversies and have been following those happenings for years, but I wanted to read more background history considering the events unfolding now.

Whenever I feel discouraged or let fear begin to creep in (and that’s usually when reading news online), I look at a small wooden plaque I bought at Walmart a few years ago and hung above my desk where I sit at my PC:

We still have control over our own actions and our own hearts. We can all choose to be kind to others, no matter how much terrible stuff is going on in the world.

Be Kind.

Pray.

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Ukraine and WWIII – yada, yada, yada

My blog started out being mostly politics, but it’s become a lot of prepping these days. I think the food shortages, inflation, and economic turmoil are going to be the most important events for most of us in the foreseeable future.

The media right now and many of the online prepper and news sites are on Ukraine and WWIII – yada, yada, yada.

The situation in Ukraine escalated and I don’t have a prediction on what Putin will do next or how far he’ll go, but I feel confident in saying that the Biden White House will be slow to respond in an effective way to deter him. The night before last, I saw that the Biden White House was insisting that Putin moving into the two breakaway areas of Ukraine wouldn’t be an “invasion,” because it didn’t go beyond Putin’s 2014 incursion. By yesterday morning, the Germans finally agreed to sanctions on the NordStream2 pipeline with Russia, so the Biden WH changed their word game and decided that Putin’s action was an invasion. Same goes with sanctions against Russia. The Biden White House promised swift and severe sanctions, but now it’s looking more like slow and incremental sanctions.

I wish Biden would let the Keystone pipeline continue and unfreeze all the fossil fuel restrictions he put in place here. Instead, his spokespeople are playing word games, blaming what happened in Ukraine two days ago for the rising gas prices that have been hitting Americans for the past year. It’s all total bullshit coming from this White House. The Ukraine situation may well exacerbate the problems, but they didn’t cause the months of rising gas prices.

Everything in our politics and news media is idiotic word games. As an aside, I found it somehow fitting that the Twitter politics journalist and pundit class recently became obsessed with some stupid actual word game, Wordle. The developer sold the rights to the game to the NYT recently and now the Wordle crowd started complaining that the NYT is ruining the game. Yep, Wordle, sounds about right for the professional spin crowd…

And no, I don’t care what stupid comments Trump made calling Putin a genius. Trump will say whatever he thinks will fuel the right vs. left spin war in America and promote himself. Trump only cares that he is the main topic of conversation in the news. He uses the negative liberal media backlash to play the victim card for his supporters and it works. The bottom-line though is nothing Trump says will change any policy in the Biden White House. I’m just sick of all of the partisan politics and the extreme partisan politics will likely cause more turmoil. It sure won’t help make anything better in America.

None of us watching this can change any of the politics or what’s happening in Ukraine. The only people we can change or control is ourselves. I don’t have any brilliant takes on Ukraine and frankly, with so much information hitting us from so many directions, I have no idea what’s really going on in Ukraine. Lots of people online claim to have inside sources or connections, who are telling them – this, that or the other.

I don’t have any inside line, so I’m focusing on what I think matters to ordinary people. And what matters most is encouraging people to stock up as much as they can afford to each time they go to the grocery store. Stock up on other supplies too, especially necessary medical supplies. And at the same time try to put some money aside for the looming inflation that’s most likely going to get a lot worse.

Here’s a common sense video on the situation:

Nothing will return to normal anytime soon in America seems like a safe bet.

Since the Biden WH is coming under fire for their handling of the Ukraine crisis, as soon as possible, I expect they and the liberal media will flip to a new narrative – either Trump hysteria or the truckers protest that’s supposed to start. They will want to flip the narrative, so I’m not getting all worked up about Ukraine., because I suspect Putin will do what he wants in Ukraine (and possibly elsewhere) and Biden and the West will pay lip service to sanctions, but do as little to respond as possible. As quickly as they stopped talking about their Afghanistan withdrawal debacle, is how I expect them to try to deal with Ukraine.

I was a stay-at-home mom during my husband’s military career and when he decided to retire, our kids were older and I decided to get a job outside the home. I worked at Walmart a number of years and stayed as an hourly associate. During my years there I was a department manager of fabrics and crafts, department manager of the over-the-counter pharmacy, department manager of lawn and garden, department manager of hardware and also a zone merchandising supervisor, where I was responsible for the homelines area of the store and then I was asked to take over as the zone merchandising supervisor of the hardlines side of the store. I left Walmart in 2015, because my husband’s health had declined to the point it was no longer safe for him to be home alone for hours at a time.

I’m not an expert on anything – not foreign policy, not domestic policy, not politics – although I am interested in these things. However, I am very familiar with how Walmart stores operate and since Walmart is the largest retailer in America and the world, I’m going to mention some concerns with the shortage situations I’m seeing in my area. Merchandise arrives at Walmart stores in several ways – via Walmart trucks that come from Walmart warehouses, shipped from vendors directly, and some comes from vendors, who come to the store and stock their merchandise on the shelves themselves. There’s also merchandise in a few areas that was always slow coming in, that was called assembly merchandise that came from the warehouse, but took much longer to come in from suppliers than regular warehouse merchandise. Fabrics and crafts had a lot of assembly merchandise.

When I walk through my local Walmart stores in the past few months, I’ve noticed growing shortage problems, especially in vendor-stocked items – like soda, the bread aisle, the Debbie snack cake section is usually almost completely empty most of the time. When I worked at Walmart vendors always wanted more shelf space and space for displays and that they can’t even maintain stock on there regular spaces now was a red flag to me.

In a store, the end of aisle display areas (end caps is the term used in Walmart) are prime real estate and you want to keep your end caps filled up and looking nice, because that’s what people see first. I’ve noticed there are usually a whole lot of nearly empty end caps or end caps that are basically faked out – with little merchandise spread across the front of the shelves. Often feature displays of all sorts arrive in the store and when I worked there, department managers would order items that sell well for end cap displays too. What caught my notice was that there’s so many end caps that are skimpy so often, plus there are always many skimpy sections of shelves throughout the stores, yet there are always associates busy stocking.

I suspect the shortage problems are widespread and affecting all sorts of areas in our retail food supply. It’s not just a single problem that’s causing these shortages. The vendors seem to be having supply problems and the Walmart warehouse system also seems to be having problems. Other retail grocery chains are having shortage problems too.

I have already started some seeds indoors and I’ve got some cold hardy vegetables started on my patio. I plan to set up two raised beds when my son has time to come help me with that. Years ago, before my husband became ill, we had a nice size vegetable garden. My soil here is mostly sand and clay. It took a few years of constantly amending the soil before my garden produced a decent amount. Southeast GA a lot of years has drought conditions and if you’re on municipal water, then there are usually water restrictions in the summer too, which impacts gardening. Last summer was a lot of rain and my backyard was often like soup for days on end. There are also a myriad of bugs and plant diseases here that can turn your thriving vegetables into a dead zone overnight sometimes.

While I would love to grow enough fresh vegetables for myself, I’m not banking on this new gardening effort. I am continuing to stock up – especially canned goods. I also dehydrate a lot of things – especially frozen vegetables, which are still available and economical. I learned how to do that online. It works, it’s easy and I can use that freezer space for other items. The dehydrated vegetables can be stored in jars, in mylar bags with oxygen absorbers, or food saver bags. I suppose you could also use ziploc bags if you didn’t have any of the other options available.

Everywhere you look more serious problems in our food chain seem looming, so I think it makes sense to stock up, but that doesn’t mean you should stop trying to learn more skills and try as many ways as you can to be more self-reliant.

If you’re a person who waits for the government or “experts” to tell you economic problems are worsening or it’s time to stock up, I suspect you’ll be in for a rude awakening when reality hits you. I’m not saying panic or build a bunker, I am saying put some effort into stocking up extra food and water on a regular basis. And by all means try to come up with as many options as you can for sourcing food in your area, beyond the retail grocery stores.

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Watch this video once, then watch it again

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Some special needs preparedness considerations

While I understand the desire to be totally self-reliant and not dependent on other people, the reality is we are all a part of many systems in our modern life. Emergency preparedness for people with special medical needs and special dietary needs got me looking for more detailed information back in 2020 and despite my criticisms here and there of some online prepping advice, overall I have learned a great deal from the YouTube prepper community and the homesteading community. Although these are two separate communities, there are some overarching topics between the two and both communities push learning to be self-reliant and learning more skill sets.

Everyone’s got to have water, food, clothes, shelter, but if you or a loved one have special medical or dietary needs, emergency preparedness becomes a lot more complicated. Despite my desire to always try to be as self-reliant as possible, in 2020, I realized just how challenging life could be during an emergency situation with my husband unable to even get out of the bed hospice brought and needing assistance with everything. Many days he couldn’t even sit up in bed without help. I’m going to explain some challenges and some of the things I learned and some things I probably should have done differently.

First and foremost, many preppers talk about go bags or bug out bags, which is a bag that has emergency supplies for each member of the family in case you have to evacuate your home. There are many excellent videos and information online on things to consider packing. If you or a member of your family require special medical equipment or a member in your household has mobility problems, the basic bug out bag will not be adequate and neither will the get-home bag, preppers recommend you have in your car. Often people with special needs require a whole lot more equipment and necessities than can fit in a bag.

Before my husband was on hospice care, he had been dependent on a walker for several years and then a few years before hospice care, he had become almost completely wheelchair-bound. He could take a step or two with the walker to get him into the wheelchair some of the time, but at other times he needed assistance to get on his feet and move at all. So, even leaving the house required some prior planning. Going anywhere by myself also required prior planning, because he could not be left home alone due to dementia and mobility problems. I had to arrange grocery shopping or my doctor’s appointments so that my son could be here with my husband.

If you or someone in your home has special needs, it’s going to require thinking through some emergency preps beyond the basic bags and supplies. If the special needs involve home oxygen, medications that require refrigeration, and other special arrangements, this creates an even greater need to think through how you would handle an emergency evacuation from your home and leaving your vehicle, to set off on foot, might not even be a possibility.

Watching unfolding emergency situations closely in your area becomes imperative and you might need to contact officials in your area for advice or assistance, depending on the situation. You definitely can’t be a lone wolf type prepper if you’re dealing with special needs.

Hurricanes are a common weather emergency where I live and we dealt with one hurricane evacuation a few years before 2020. Once the weather reports put us in the cone of uncertainty, I started thinking about plans to evacuate and did not hem and haw. I coordinated with other family members and I needed my two sons to help me with my husband and the pets. We evacuated early and did not wait until the last minute.

My husband was put on home hospice care in late January 2020 and at first there were 3 nurse visits a week and 3 CNA visits a week to help with his care, but once the pandemic craziness started things changed quickly. The CNA visits stopped completely and the nurse visits went to one home visit a week and one phone visit. I felt overwhelmed with that level of caregiving required for someone completely bed-bound, but the hospice nurses were very willing to offer advice and suggestions, plus they had a 24-hour number and a nurse on call for emergencies, which I did have to call one weekend.

One day the power went off during an afternoon thunderstorm and it was off almost an hour. My initial thought was, “Oh shit, what am I going to do now,” but I took a deep breath and calmed down. My husband was on home oxygen, so I switched him to one of the portable tanks of oxygen and I began monitoring the power company’s outage app on my cell phone, to follow when power was expected to be restored. Another time, late on a Sunday night, the oxygen machine started beeping loudly and it died. I called the emergency service number on the machine and the man from the medical supply company arrived within an hour with another machine.

There was also an afternoon of bad storms, where we were under a tornado watch and I spent hours sitting by my husband’s bed pondering how on earth to get him to the main bathroom if a tornado hit, because that’s the safest space in our house. I kept looking at the window in the room and wondering what would be the best thing to do if a tornado touched down. I messaged one of my daughters, who lives in another state, to see if she had any ideas, because I was thinking perhaps if I put a blanket on the floor, I could slide him off the bed onto the floor and pull him to the bathroom using the blanket. My daughter suggested getting him on the floor and covering both of us up with a blanket and the mattress from the hospice bed. Thankfully, no tornado touched down.

The pandemic craziness brought shortages in stores, which I had never even thought about happening in America. Prior to this I did not pay close attention to how much medication we had on-hand, I just called in a refill when my medicine or my husband’s began to look low. I began paying close attention to both my medication and my husband’s medications and supplies. My doctor gives me a 90 day supply, so if you can get a 90-day supply it is important to try to keep as large of a supply of your prescription medications as possible. I also refilled my prescriptions as early as possible. I coordinated with the hospice nurses and they used FedEx to deliver my husband’s medications the next day.

With all the supplies that hospice ordered and our insurance covered, I also found these supplies online and ordered extra and paid for them myself – from chux, to wipes, to depends, etc. If you have over-the-counter medications or medical supplies you use regularly, it’s best to build up a supply now, if you haven’t already done that, as shortage situations are increasing again and the political and world situations are entering a very uncertain time.

Talk to your doctor about concerns. Talk to family members and friends about your concerns or special needs, whether it be medication, equipment, help with tasks around the house, and especially talk about and ask for advice before there’s an emergency. Make sure they know details about your situation and if you’re unsure about your planning or how to handle situations seek out help and information.

There’s even professional information on YouTube. I found a YouTube channel, Dementia Careblazers, an invaluable source of information on caring for my husband and dealing with many of the challenges, especially the year he was on hospice care. Many times when I was at my wit’s end dealing with some of my husband’s difficult dementia behaviors or bewildered with it, Dr. Natali’s videos helped me figure out how to cope with it and find strategies that helped. While this information wasn’t emergency preparedness information per se, it sure helped me understand the special needs involved with dementia.

While all the basics of emergency preparedness apply to people with special medical and dietary needs, it’s really imperative to put extra focus on the special supplies and assistance you will likely need in an emergency situation and think ahead as much as possible. With the world situation and a trucker’s protest set to begin in the US in a few days, this could lead to more shortages or disruptions in shipping and availability of supplies.

I strongly encourage anyone with special medical or dietary needs to sit down, take inventory of those supplies and make a list of items to stock up on.

Being diabetic, storing 50 lbs. of rice won’t work for me, because rice shoots my blood sugar sky-high. What I’ve been doing is working on losing weight, working to keep my blood sugar under control and while stocking up is a little more challenging, it’s not impossible. I have a lot of frozen vegetables and items I do eat stocked up. I also have canned goods and a couple years ago I started dehydrating a lot of vegetables. I hope to grow some fresh vegetables of my own this spring and summer, but if that doesn’t work out as planned, there are many local farmers nearby, farmers markets and also some farms in the area do “pick your own,” where you can go pick vegetables or fruit at their farm. I’ve picked blueberries here many times at a local farm.

Try to think about and figure out more options for your specific situation and I believe the most important one is sharing your concerns and talking them over with family and friends and don’t hesitate to seek out more information or advice, if you’re not sure what to do.

Ask lots of questions rather than sit and worry or let yourself feel overwhelmed. This is something that took me some time to get used to doing, because I like to think of myself as independent.

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Special needs prepping

Tomorrow I will have a blog post about some thoughts on prepping supply challenges for people with special needs. With supply shortage problems escalating, I strongly believe anyone with special medical needs or special dietary needs should really put extra effort into thinking ahead and stocking up on supplies.

In 2020, I took personal preparedness much more seriously, because my husband was placed on home hospice care in late January 2020 and completely bed-bound until he died last year. I am an insulin-dependent diabetic and have heart problems, so I put a lot more effort into prepping supplies.

If you wait for someone else to come take care of everything for you, in this shortage environment, you may find your problems way more critical much faster than you can’t find your favorite brand of a particular food item or toilet paper.

If you have special needs, I highly recommend you move your prepping efforts, of not only basic supplies, but as many of the supplies specific to your special needs, into high gear. I’ll jot down some things I learned throughout this pandemic in tomorrow’s post.

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Survival: The Mind-set

Here’s my 2012 follow-up to my friend’s post:

Reading Gladius Maximus’ excellent essay, “Gimme A Knife”, brought to the fore some thoughts on this subject of survival.  Since getting hooked on my Kindle a few years back, I frequently download obscure free books on a range of topics(mostly history, but some literature and the occasional odd title that catches my fancy), in addition to the many I buy.    To save you the inconvenience, I’ll add this off-topic comment: don’t download free public domain books from Barnes and Noble.  The formatting is awful and each one starts with a message from Google, stating each book has been carefully scanned to preserve it.  How each page ends up with many words containing symbols in lieu of letters, I know not, but save yourself the aggravation of reading this mess.  Amazon’s public domain books far surpass Barnes and Noble’s.

Now, back to the topic, a few months ago,  I read my  amazon.com freebie,  Willa Cather’s, My Antonia  (available free here or here).  This novel exemplifies the “put one’s hand to the plough” mentality that separates those who persevere and thrive and those who prefer to wallow in misery.  The young male main character, Jim Burden, narrates the story of moving to early 20th century Nebraska to live with his grandparents, who were early homesteaders.  Jim becomes fascinated with neighboring homesteaders, the Shimerdas,  a family of Bohemian immigrants.  Throughout the story, Jack’s grandmother exemplifies the indomitable American spirit and she’s a testament to planning not just to survive, but to live as comfortably as possible in an unforgiving environment.  The Shimerdas, city-dwellers in their home country, fail to take responsibility for their own survival, necessitating good neighbors to prevent their demise.  In one scene the grandmother packs a hamper to take to the Shimerdas, she offers this line:

‘Now, Jake,’ grandmother was saying, ‘if you can find that old rooster that got his comb froze, just give his neck a twist, and we’ll take him along. There’s no good reason why Mrs. Shimerda couldn’t have got hens from her neighbours last fall and had a hen-house going by now. I reckon she was confused and didn’t know where to begin. I’ve come strange to a new country myself, but I never forgot hens are a good thing to have, no matter what you don’t have.”

Despite the Shimerdas family’s hardships and suffering caused by their parents lack of survival skills, Antonia Shimerda and her siblings (thanks to neighbors and others in their rural Nebraska community), get on the path toward successfully homesteading and thriving in America.

I’ve noticed this dichotomy in how various regions of the country respond to natural disasters too.  In the heartland, entire towns were swept away by flooding, yet you saw neighbors helping neighbors and I recall one reporter interviewing a young man, who was  helping build a sandbag barricade.  This young man, nonchalantly told the reporter that his family’s home had already been washed away one town upriver, so there was nothing they could do about that.   He told the reporter they decided to come and try and help their neighbors save their homes.  Yet, when natural disasters strike urban areas, the scene quickly turns into political posturing about the federal response, looting concerns, and a general spectacle of people who don’t seem well equipped to survive.  To be clear this isn’t a racist comment, I’ve observed this in Long Island, New Orleans, LA, and other urban areas and I think the difference is in the sense of community that still flickers in rural America,  that no longer burns in urban areas.

During Hurricane Katrina, GEN Russell Honore became one of the most prominent faces of Katrina.  After Hurricane Katrina he wrote a book, aptly titled, “Survival: How A Culture Of  Preparedness Can Save You And Your Family From Disasters” (here).  I bought the book, thinking my husband might want to read it, because he worked for GEN Honore, earlier in their careers and my husband came home almost daily with stories (many very amusing).

When I read the first few pages, I decided to read the whole book.  His book offers up many excellent remedies for improving our state and federal response to disasters, but the main take away he pushes to the forefront is that you are the main  driver of you and your own family’s survival.  He describes his rural upbringing working on his father’s farm and later working for pay for a  neighboring dairy farmer , Grover Chustz.   He describes Chustz as lacking formal education, but being highly creative, innovative and most of all striving to make sure everything on his farm was done well.  Honore describes how Chustz  taught him a fundamental lesson that carried him through a highly successful military career.  Chustz pulled out a single wooden match and had Honore break it.  Next,  he pulled out two matches,  put them together and had him break them, which proved harder to do.  Then he pulled out four matches and Honore couldn’t break them.  He explained  to Honore that’s the power of a team.   I believe that’s the challenge we face in America –  rebuilding the power of the team.  With the rise of the Tea party movement, the phrase, “Take Back America” took flight, but perhaps we ought to readjust that to rebuilding the American team.

Reality TV garbage, like Doomsday Preppers and the fixation on extreme survival skills, like Bear Grylls, marginalize  the seriousness of learning practical steps to take to be prepared.  In fact, stockpiling and building a fortress probably won’t increase your odds of survival anyway. The surest way to survive lies in building that team, where individual strengths and skills can lead to  innovation, creative-brainstorming and more ideas on how to tackle our problems, even in the most dire situation.  If you are stranded by rising water, calling Washington won’t help you, but calling your neighbors, who can pool resources sure might.

In a previous post, I mentioned federalism as the key to revitalizing America, in hopes of pulling back on some of the federal encroachment on states’ rights.  And the vital building blocks to stronger states lies in rebuilding our sense of community.  This isn’t about celebrity-driven national movements or the Glenn Beck type extravaganzas.  It’s about concerned citizens within communities sharing concerns,  ideas, pooling resources and taking charge of their own survival.  Considering the fractured nature of not only American communities, but more importantly American families, this team-building effort can’t be done overnight.  In fact, it could take years, but without it, we will keep making those  3 am calls to Washington and realize, no one is at home.

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