Discussions

My neighbors I seem to “help” regularly (due to their children)–no. They don’t think there is any need to prepare for anything within a few days, much less the future or any “what–ifs”. I think i AM their backup plan lol. The lady who cuts my hair every few months : yes. She was fussing about always being short on items both food and non-food, so I showed her the various places both indoors and in my small outdoor shed where I squirrel away items and showed her what I buy and why. She went home, told her husband what she saw here, and they have begun creating a place to store their items they buy. Not just food but medical, blankets,  non-food goods. I told her it will take time but worth it in the end. My daughter’s other caretaker started copying me last year and said so much pressure of the shortages that others have been feeling and experiencing hasn’t happened much to her thanks to her planning ahead. She said that if she hadn’t watched me scour the internet, in places she hadn’t thought to look, she wouldn’t be as far ahead in her prepping as she is. Like me, living in this dinky town, she has faced ongoing shortages of daily living items, but now that she tries to plan ahead, it isn’t as bad as it could have been. Amazing what a little foresight can do to lift some of the stress and anxiety that is our new reality now.   And yes, this site has given ideas on which areas of prepping I may need to look at and other items I may need to consider adding to my stash (like fire blankets.)

I have a mentally and physically disabled autistic adult daughter. She and I live in a rural desert community of about 2000 people. Nearest grocery store of a good size is about 50 miles one way. Our local store just carries the basics. Once I became aware of the pandemic ramping up, I started buying a bit extra of everyday items online, like paper towels, toilet paper, laundry soaps and bleach, wet wipes, canned foods, tetra pak milks, powdered eggs-fruit-butter-milk. I also bought extra supplies for my daughter, like pulls ups, bed pads, diaper rash meds, breathing machine masks, tubing and filters, nitrile gloves and paper masks. Because our town’s drinking water really sucks (heart of the Permian Basin oilfield country here) I also stocked up on jug water. Our water supply to the town does get turned off several times a year due to breakages in the lines, lightening strikes on equipment, etc. Cats and dog also got extra food socked away. ALL OF THE ABOVE I HAVE HAD TO USE due to shortages, lack of water here, shortages in my daughter’s medical supplies, grocery stores running out of needed items both in town and the surrounding towns. So in our case, prepping has now become routine as everything I gradually stockpiled (and continue to stockpile) has been dipped into just for daily living. If you had told me in late 2019 I would be living like I do now in 2022, I would have laughed at you. I am glad that I made the decision in early 2020 to start buying a bit extra on every shopping trip (then  I really began shopping hard online by summer 2020) because it has gotten us through rough patches when everyday basics just were not available in a several hundred mile radius of this town (and I have shared with my less fortunate neighbors, though I am about as broke as they are. Different priorities between our 2 families, I guess.)

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My neighbors I seem to “help” regularly (due to their children)–no. They don’t think there is any need to prepare for anything within a few days, much less the future or any “what–ifs”. I think i AM their backup plan lol. The lady who cuts my hair every few months : yes. She was fussing about always being short on items both food and non-food, so I showed her the various places both indoors and in my small outdoor shed where I squirrel away items and showed her what I buy and why. She went home, told her husband what she saw here, and they have begun creating a place to store their items they buy. Not just food but medical, blankets,  non-food goods. I told her it will take time but worth it in the end. My daughter’s other caretaker started copying me last year and said so much pressure of the shortages that others have been feeling and experiencing hasn’t happened much to her thanks to her planning ahead. She said that if she hadn’t watched me scour the internet, in places she hadn’t thought to look, she wouldn’t be as far ahead in her prepping as she is. Like me, living in this dinky town, she has faced ongoing shortages of daily living items, but now that she tries to plan ahead, it isn’t as bad as it could have been. Amazing what a little foresight can do to lift some of the stress and anxiety that is our new reality now.   And yes, this site has given ideas on which areas of prepping I may need to look at and other items I may need to consider adding to my stash (like fire blankets.)

I have a mentally and physically disabled autistic adult daughter. She and I live in a rural desert community of about 2000 people. Nearest grocery store of a good size is about 50 miles one way. Our local store just carries the basics. Once I became aware of the pandemic ramping up, I started buying a bit extra of everyday items online, like paper towels, toilet paper, laundry soaps and bleach, wet wipes, canned foods, tetra pak milks, powdered eggs-fruit-butter-milk. I also bought extra supplies for my daughter, like pulls ups, bed pads, diaper rash meds, breathing machine masks, tubing and filters, nitrile gloves and paper masks. Because our town’s drinking water really sucks (heart of the Permian Basin oilfield country here) I also stocked up on jug water. Our water supply to the town does get turned off several times a year due to breakages in the lines, lightening strikes on equipment, etc. Cats and dog also got extra food socked away. ALL OF THE ABOVE I HAVE HAD TO USE due to shortages, lack of water here, shortages in my daughter’s medical supplies, grocery stores running out of needed items both in town and the surrounding towns. So in our case, prepping has now become routine as everything I gradually stockpiled (and continue to stockpile) has been dipped into just for daily living. If you had told me in late 2019 I would be living like I do now in 2022, I would have laughed at you. I am glad that I made the decision in early 2020 to start buying a bit extra on every shopping trip (then  I really began shopping hard online by summer 2020) because it has gotten us through rough patches when everyday basics just were not available in a several hundred mile radius of this town (and I have shared with my less fortunate neighbors, though I am about as broke as they are. Different priorities between our 2 families, I guess.)