You don't have to be a "doomsday prepper" preparing for the end of the world (unless you want to be), but you should at the very least have basic, practical emergency preparations to help get you and your loved ones through most emergencies or natural disasters.
Emergencies and disasters come in all shapes and sizes, and usually without warning. Having peace of mind knowing that you are prepared to provide for yourself and your loved ones can eliminate a lot of stress and worry in an already stressful, and potentially life threatening, situation.
There are endless ways "IT" can hit the fan. IT can be local, regional, national or global. IT might be a devastating earthquake or storm, an EMP strike or CME (Coronal Mass Ejection) that takes down the power grid, a deadly global pandemic, an economic collapse, a critical long term food shortage, or even World War 3.
IT can also be less dramatic. IT may only affect you and your family, but still be devastating - such as an unexpected job loss, business failure, automobile accident or illness, or the death of a spouse. Regardless of what IT is, when IT hits, you and your family will be grateful that you planned and prepared ahead of time.
The old saying "If you fail to plan, you plan to fail" is particularly true in emergency and survival situations, where failure can mean the death of yourself and/or your loved ones.
At Iron Survival, we want to help you to understand and plan for the key areas of emergency preparedness, and to assess your strengths, weaknesses, and areas of improvement.
In helping you to understand and establish your home emergency preparedness plan, we also want to help you understand and conduct your PACE planning. PACE planning is a military planning concept that has infiltrated many areas of civilian life, and for good reason. It is a simple acronym for a critical concept that helps you to identify and plan for multiple options based on different, changing or worsening circumstances. P is your Primary option. A is your Alternate option. C is your Contingency option. E is your Emergency option. This provides depth and redundancy in your planning and available choices, as Murphy's Law will always apply in a disaster or emergency, and you will likely find yourself requiring additional options when things go from bad to worse. Rather than panic and lose precious life-saving time because something foiled your plan, or worse - being without any options - you can quickly switch to "Plan B", or C, or D.
To illustrate this at a basic level, consider that part of your planning may be how you would plan to get home from work across town in an emergency. For this illustration, let's say there was a large earthquake:
Primary
Your Primary option to get home obviously would be your regular vehicle, taking a special pre-determined route to avoid major traffic snarls. If your vehicle is not functioning or available (it was in a parking garage that collapsed during the earthquake)...
Alternate
Your Alternate option might be a bus or other public transit. You already planned ahead and know the routes. If that were shut down or unavailable (the earthquake knocked out power across town)...
Contingency
Your Contingency option might be to commandeer a bicycle (no stealing - be sure to return it later!)...
Emergency
And, last but not least, when everything else fails your Emergency option might be to walk home (time to renew that gym membership).
Simplified, but you get the idea.
You should conduct the same type of PACE planning in each of the key areas of emergency preparedness. Begin with establishing or securing at least a Primary method or option in every key area, so that the main bases are covered. Then, as you are able, begin to add a second Alternate set of options. Then a third Contingency set, and so on. You may find that you already have some areas well covered in depth, but have critical gaps in several others. For example:
This is only scratching the surface. Yes, it can take some time and thought, and you may need to purchase some items, but isn't your life and the lives of your family worth it? The piece of mind you obtain in the process is beyond measure. 0nce you have a plan, practice it, test it out, and refine it to work the bugs out. When disaster strikes, your planning and preparations may very well save your life and that of your family.
It is critical that every member of your family knows and understands the plan. You can also "war game" scenarios with your family to help you improve your plan. "If X happens, then we'll need Y." Be careful not to go overboard, as you can't prepare for every possible contingency. If you have good emergency preparedness supplies and a solid plan, and good common sense, it will see you safely through most emergencies that can be reasonably prepared for.
Remember: The time to identify and address the critical gaps in your emergency preparedness, and to plan, practice and refine your plan, is before an emergency or disaster happens.
When you have a plan, and multiple options, you are far less likely to panic, and more likely to survive, in an emergency.
Iron Survival, LLC is ready to assist you in your emergency preparedness planning and preparations. Contact us today.
"FEMA is broke. The system is broken. If this is the new normal, Americans can't rely on a federal cavalry when disaster strikes. They will have to take care of themselves." Brock Long, FEMA Administrator https://www.cnn.com/2017/12/19/politics/summer-of-hurricanes-broke-fema-weir/index.html
"FEMA is broke. The system is broken. If this is the new normal, Americans can't rely on a federal cavalry when disaster strikes. They will have to take care of themselves."
Brock Long, FEMA Administrator https://www.cnn.com/2017/12/19/politics/summer-of-hurricanes-broke-fema-weir/index.html
The time to plan & prepare is before disaster strikes!
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Administration is warning consumers not to use plastic bags to collect gasoline as fuel shortages persist throughout the Southeast. “We know this sounds simple, but when people get desperate they stop thinking clearly. They take risks that can have deadly consequences. If you know someone who is thinking about bringing a container not meant for fuel to get gas, please let them know it’s dangerous.”
Source: Darnell, T. (2021, May 12). ‘Sounds simple, but ...’ | Feds warn against using plastic bags for fuel storage. Atlanta Journal-Constitution. www.ajc.com
Note: This is only an example. It is meant as a starting point to help get you thinking. It is by no means an all-inclusive list.
Emergency planning & preparedness are critical. So is training... Iron Survival offers training for individuals, families & groups of all skill levels.