Some books speak to our core fears. This book helped me through some of mine, though it took me a while to process, and I’m still absorbing its lessons. This book is equal parts mindset and practical advice. The perspective on being prepared for the worst day of your life was surprisingly healthy and helpful. Doomsday preppers are not portrayed in the kindest light, and the author does his best to work through that stereotype and explain his perspective. The goal is not to hoard resources in a bunker. The goal is to build a thriving, more self-sufficient lifestyle through careful thought and deliberate actions. The goal is to build a community that is ready to handle emergencies and hard times. The goal is to expand your capabilities to survive and thrive through gear, training, and practice. These are all more worthy (and achievable) goals than what my fears tell me I should be doing.
The book is laid out in seven chapters. First, Glover covers mindset. This is the most philosophical part of the book. This part was a bit hard for me because I have a pretty good imagination, and I can easily think of all kinds of bad things that can happen. Glover balances the big, bad, scary things by mixing in the importance of being ready for smaller, more common threats like car accidents and weather emergencies. Overall, the book is balanced. That is, it describes bad things that can (and will) happen, and explains how being prepared helps us survive and thrive and ultimately have more peace in our daily lives. He also points out that ignorance and arrogance are two excuses for not planning. Both are dangerous.
Second, he covers planning. He uses PACE- Primary, Alternate, Contingency, and Emergency- to describe the type of plans that can be implemented for different scenarios. An easy example is a fire escape plan. The primary plan would be to go out the front door. The alternate plan is to use the back door. The contingency plan is to use a window. The emergency plan is to get out by any means necessary, including breaking windows or possibly jumping from higher windows than would be safe (were it not an emergency). The author walks through several PACE examples throughout the rest of the book. The point is to think through how you can react if the normal way you do things isn’t possible or if things go wrong.
Third, the author discusses situational awareness. We tend to go through life absorbed in our own thoughts, often on autopilot. This is not a great way to see danger coming. Glover recommends taking at least one day a week to practice situational awareness- seeing people and events, training yourself to pay attention to the baseline behaviors of your environment, and learning to tell when things are off or weird. These early warnings can help us act more quickly in a developing situation, but not if we can’t see them.
Chapter 4 is about decisions. When we observe things being off, we must be willing to act. We can’t freeze. Glover calls it “Getting off the X”. In a fire, you must be able to get out of the building. In a hurricane, you have to be able to evacuate. In an active shooter scenario, you have to be ready to move, break windows to escape, or potentially fight for your life. In this chapter, Glover also discusses the question: What are your criteria for deciding to use deadly force? There is a fascinating description of a scenario the author uses in training to help people understand the difficulties and nuances involved in making such a tough decision. I appreciated that Glover didn’t offer simple answers. The question is one to wrestle with. He did offer some simple advice to help- if you can run, or end the scenario without fighting or killing, you absolutely should, but if you can’t, if fighting and killing is the only way to keep you and your family safe, you should be trained and ready to end the confrontation as quickly and effectively as possible. Glover recommended When Violence Is the Answer as a resource for learning about this tough concept. It’s on my list now. This can be a controversial area. I found Glover’s ideas to be calm, insightful, and well-balanced.
Chapters five, six, and seven are similar in nature and build on each other from personal to community. Chapter five covers what to include in your Everyday Carry (EDC) kit. Six covers mobility and how to prepare to be mobile in an emergency, basically, your vehicle. Seven covers the homestead. A simple way Glover describes these is like a medic (EDC), an ambulance (mobility), and a hospital (homestead). The goal is to have enough equipment for security and survival to expand your capabilities and give yourself every advantage possible when things go wrong. Glover covers survival needs in order of urgency. It doesn’t make much sense to worry about things that might kill you in the long term if you need to deal with things that can kill you right now. Wounds and injuries can kill in seconds or minutes after a car crash. Exposure to the elements can kill you in a few hours if you can’t figure out shelter. Dehydration will kill you in about three days if you can’t find drinking water. Hunger will kill you in about three weeks or so if you don’t have any food. So your plans and equipment need to be ready and staged in a way to allow you to address immediate needs with speed, and also provide for solutions for long-term problems.
I will have to revisit this book over time as I absorb its lessons and work on being a more capable human. I have started to expand my situational awareness. I’ve always loved collecting gear. I need some land to start a homestead. If you have extra, shoot me a message.
This is for anyone looking for ideas about being more self-sufficient.
(Rated R, Score 8/10, audiobook by the author, 5:14)