Some of these posts may seem pessimistic, but I got some much needed perspective after my sisters met a friend for dinner.
They were talking about the sorry state of the world and finding various points of agreement. She recommended some books, some of which I agree with, some less so.
Then it got weird.
I should mention that this is not a friend from church.
She started emphasizing the importance of having camping supplies (not too unusual) and gardening.
Gardening is great, and still in line with things we think about, though her obsession with sun chokes was a little weird.
Then she mentioned how she really wished there was an underground city to live in, and how you also need to remember to be quiet, have blackout curtains, and not cook anything too fragrant; you don't want people to know you have electricity and food.
My first thought there was that if you have electricity when others don't, either you are using a generator (some of which can be very noisy) or you switched to solar and they would see the panels.
I just don't think it's well thought out.
(Remember that you need the battery backup system if you want to be able to function off-grid.)
It occurred to me that this was getting specific enough that with the right keyword search I could probably find her source. There it was, on a Doomsday Preppers site. There was a post about how after society collapses you have about three days, because most people have 2-3 days worth of food.
After that is when they will come to steal yours, guided by the smell of your cooking; betrayed by your use of herbs and spices.
Look, if I am going to go to the trouble of preparing, I'm not doing it so I can sit silently in the dark eating cold beans while my neighbors are hungry.
Oddly, she still talked about the importance of building community.
Instead I am remembering a city after a bad snow storm, and power strip hanging over a fence with a sign inviting people to charge their phones... I want to be that person.
If this is the end, remember that one of the key things you get judged on is whether you gave hungry people food.
Beyond that, expecting a clear societal collapse does not show a strong understanding of how society functions.
I definitely expect supply chain issues. We got glimpses of how that worked with COVID.
I expect more adverse weather. It would be better to not have FEMA dismantled, but it generally doesn't involve a total collapse of society even locally.
Resource scarcity becomes an issue and it can be hard to get help. Those are great reasons to have food and water storage and first aid training and backup plans for staying in contact or getting home.. those are all good things.
Part of survival is also having mental resources, where you remain able to think clearly and have hope. Doomsday prepping may not be the best option for that.
I guess the name kind of implies that.
Her fear is largely based on this round of the Trump presidency, and I get that. Bad things are happening and more will. It's not good.
Viewing everyone around you as an enemy out to steal the fruits of your labor is how we got here. It's not going to help.
Here is how preparation is going at our house. Although I do not have any sun chokes, it did occur to me that we don't have a lot of shelf-stable fruits. On our last shopping trip, I bought two large jars of applesauce.
Next week I am going to get some extra peanut butter.
There will be other things -- including some inventories of what we do have -- but it will be in wisdom and order.
Ideally, we will not be the only ones doing that, so encouraging your neighbors to be more prepared is a fine idea. That can mean more people sharing.
I would rather share than hide.