Are you a Paranoid Prepper?

It’s amazing how many emails I get that start with either, “I might be paranoid” or “My family thinks I’m paranoid.” The simple fact is, if you think that it’s smart to prepare for likely disasters, some people will call you prudent and others will call you paranoid.

In reality, the passage of time is all that will shed light on whether someone is being paranoid or not. As an example, Joel Rosenberg wrote about terrorists flying planes into a skyscraper before 9-11. (It was after Al-Qaeda had started preparing, so he didn’t give them the idea.)

Many thought that the idea was the creation of a fiction writer with an overactive imagination. And those who thought it was possible were merely paranoid—until it actually happened. Then he was seen as a visonary and every alphabet soup government agency wanted him to come consult with them.

That’s the way it is with many threats. Some in New Orleans thought that preparing for a levee break was being paranoid—until it actually happened. For awhile after Hurricane Katrina, there was only one operational hospital in the entire city. It was Ochsner Hospital, and they had been taking practical steps to prepare for a levee break since the 50s. Most people thought they were paranoid too, until they were the only working hospital in town. Then the city that hadn’t prepared thought that they deserved $80 million of free medical care from the hospital that HAD prepared.

Other threats never pan out…like Y2K. People who were myopic and focused on Y2K ended up looking paranoid after the dust settled. BUT, those who looked at Y2K as simply being one of many potential threats on the horizon didn’t need to miss a beat when nothing happend. Those Y2K preppers who kept their supplies and training up to speed look pretty smart right about now. They may have been paranoid about Y2K, but their understanding of the need to be prepared was practical and timeless.

“Paranoia,” if you want to call it that, isn’t necessarily a bad thing…unless it starts affecting your sleep, your relationships with others, and your mood. Fortunately, there are some simple things that you can do to look at the threats that we’re facing in a way that will allow you to keep balance in your life.

So, here are some truisms about being paranoid/prepared:

1. There will always be a “new threat” to worry about. They’re kind of like waves in the surf zone. If you focus all of your energy on one, there’s always another one coming. Your best bet is to power through, keep moving, and keep your eyes on the big picture. Greece might collapse, the US will probably have another government shutdown this year. The sun will keep having solar activity. Terrorists will continue to increase and decrease their “chatter.”

2. General preparedness will help keep you from the emotional rollercoaster of going from one probable disaster to the next. EMPs, bio attacks, economic collapse, & infrastructure attacks all share common elements…people who are prepared to take care of themselves and are familiar with some hardships fare better than those who expect to always be able to pay with plastic and to always have a plentiful supply of food, water, fuel, and electricity at their fingertips. Focusing on these common elements will give you a broad preparedness base.

3. TEOTWAWKI (the end of the world as we know it) may or may not happen during your lifetime, so don’t waste all your time on Earth focusing on it. Some day you’re going to look back on how you spent your life. Spend your time today in a way that you’ll be happy about tomorrow.

4. If things do collapse, life will get REAL stressful, so don’t forget to stop and smell the roses while things are relatively stable…and figure out the magic combination of factors that let you manage personal stress. (I devote a big chunk of the FastestWayToPrepare.com course to this very skill.)

5. If you’re losing sleep now because of what MIGHT happen, you should learn how to get your mind under control for when things actually do happen.

6. Spending time making forward progress on your preparations will ALWAYS beat spending time reading about every possible disaster that could happen.

7. Unless your plan is to live in a cave, completely isolated and alone, make sure to spend time on relationships with family and friends. They’ll make your life richer if disaster never happens, and they’ll make life livable if disaster does happen.

8. Many of the things you worry about will never happen. Some might. But, as Matthew 6:27 says, “Who by worrying can add a single hour to his life?” Try to convert worry into action and/or prayer.

Efficiency = Vulnerability

We live in a time of incredible efficiencies. Our power, water, electronic banking, just-in-time food supply, travel options, communications and other infrastructure are simply amazing. All of these systems are streamlined and relatively predictable. And we’ve become dependent on them to the extent that they have become some of our biggest vulnerabilities.

These systems are all vulnerable to natural disasters, solar events, terrorists, foreign interests, and simple accidents.

Ironically, if we wouldn’t have any of these efficiencies in place, preparedness wouldn’t be so unusual because everyone would have to practice preparedness in order to survive. You can see this by looking to undeveloped countries or by looking back 70-80 years.

But our society is advancing so quickly that we’re increasingly vulnerable to more and more threats. In fact, it seems like a new threat/vulnerability combination is announced every week. One week it’s a possible solar storm. The next it’s overprinting money, foreign economies tanking, and nuclear reactors half way around the globe melting down. The week after that, it’s foreign countries’ ability to launch EMPs off of our coasts.

The threats are not going to stop. Even if they do, journalists will just recycle old threats & vulnerabilities to get viewers.

Eventually one of these big disasters is going to happen, but how do you absorb all of these threats in the meantime without going a little nuts?

I wrestled with this question a few years ago when I was getting my family prepared…and it’s one of the reasons I took what we learned and created the SurviveInPlace.com Urban Survival Course. At one point early on, I was so focused on all of the new threats I was learning about that my mind was pinging around like a bunch of sugared up kids in a bounce house.

I know from the letters I get that many of you and even more of your relatives are in that very situation.

It causes some people to stick their head in the sand and ignore the problems. It causes others to end up in a repeating loop of fixating on the latest & worst threat facing us but not taking any action. Fortunately, there’s a better option that I’ll cover in a minute.

There are just SO many big threats to prepare for…it’s hard to know where to start and whether or not to simply throw in the towel, and abandon life as you know it in preparation for an immediate breakdown in society.

A few years ago, I didn’t think the country would last more than a few months, let alone until 2012. And every week I have people telling me that they think things will collapse within the next few weeks. Fortunately, I was wrong a few years ago and many people have been wrong since then, but at some point people worried about immediate collapse WILL be right. It could be a day from now, a decade from now, or a generation from now. We just don’t know.

So what do you do when you’re being barraged by threats, know you need to act, but have limited time & money and don’t know what to do first?

Calm Down

The first thing you need to do is take a deep breath. In a survival situation, panic can kill you quicker than a lack of oxygen. One of the best ways to prepare for the stress of a survival situation is to learn how to handle stressful situations in everyday life as efficiently as possible. This isn’t a switch that you can flip…it’s a skill that’s developed over time—and a skill you can start developing today.

Practice calming down while driving, while talking with customer support that doesn’t speak English, and with friends and relatives. There are some situations where escalating conflict helps, but in most cases it doesn’t.

If you’re frantically preparing, you might also want to calm down a little. I believe preparedness is both urgent, and a way of life. It’s a marathon, not a sprint. It’s easy to prepare at such a frantic pace that you quickly burn out or make expensive mistakes. But when you make it a part of your life, it becomes quite fun and enriches every day in addition to preparing you for disasters.

Listen to your body. If your “fuse” is shorter than it should be, figure out what you need to do to get calmed down. More sleep? More exercise? Less caffeine? Everyone’s different, but everyone shares similar bio-chemical needs.

Make a Plan

The next thing you need to do is make a plan. What threats are you MOST concerned about? What preparations can you do that will help you no matter what kind of disaster you face? What skills & supplies do you currently have? Which skills do you need to develop & what supplies do you need to start getting? What if you have to bug-out? What if you can’t bug-out and you have to Survive In Place?

You will continually be modifying your plan based on opportunities and your unique situation, so don’t feel like the plan you make today will be set in stone.

Control Your Time, Control Your Mind

It’s easy to spend hours and hours reading, watching, or listening about the next worst thing that’s going to happen. It’s also intoxicating to read about other people’s survival plans and about other people’s survival skills instead of actually doing stuff yourself.

I encourage you to control what you watch, listen, and read. There’s no shortage of information out there about all of the threats that we face. And it’s not a bad thing to be aware of them, but think about every potential disaster you hear about as encouraging your decision to be prepared rather than as something new to worry about.

One of the best illustrations of this is helicopter pilots. Helicopter pilots are a unique breed. Airplane pilots know that if their engines go out, their plane will naturally glide some distance and they have a good shot at being able to land safely.

Helicopter pilots, on the other hand, are basically flying a rock attached to a few spinning tongue depressors through the air. If the engine goes out, autorotation will buy some grace, but landing a dead helicopter becomes more like landing a rock than landing an airplane.

As a result, helicopter pilots are very aware of all of the threats they face and everything that could go wrong at any given moment and cause a series of cascading disasters. The ability to accept and deal with all of these potential threats, embrace them, and enjoy finding solutions to them is what makes for great helicopter pilots. They learn that at some point you have to stop over thinking what might happen and just start flying.

Similarly, the more aware you are about the political, natural, and terrorist threats that we face, the more you’ll want to develop the mind of a helicopter pilot…always aware of what could happen, but never dwelling on any one thing and letting it paralyze you.

Fortunately, there’s a balance.

What I encourage you to do is watch & read enough to spur you to action and spend the rest of the time that you would have spent reading/watching actually DOING things to get prepared. Once you’ve read and or watched enough to make you want to take action, then you don’t need to watch anymore.

That’s a big reason why I am so focused on not only writing about vulnerabilities that we face and big picture preparedness, but also simple, fundamental things that people can do on a daily basis to get themselves prepared. I want every article that I write to have actionable steps that you can take immediately so that you become more prepared every day.

Take Action!

Once you’re aware of the threats that we’re facing…both in the US and globally…the biggest thing you can do to get prepared and stay sane is to take action.

“It’s a marathon, not a sprint.” “Rome wasn’t built in a day.” “Slow and steady wins the race.” These are all good sayings to remind you to pace yourself. If you have to sprint, then look at your preparedness as interval training and plan for time to catch your breath and regroup.

Think you’re a tough-guy and can sprint the whole marathon? Ironically, the marathon event immortalizes a Greek messenger who ran as fast as he could for 26.2 miles to Marathon and fell over dead from exhaustion as soon as he delivered his message. In other words, pace yourself.

Do something on a daily basis to get more prepared. Don’t just read about skills, practice them. Do things that will earn you the right to sleep soundly because you’ve made forward progress.

Don’t kick yourself for waiting to get prepared. It’ll only waste mental energy. Learn the lesson and get moving.

Don’t think you’re going to go from newbie to expert in every facet of survival overnight. It’s a process—and any progress that you make will give you that much more of an advantage over the general public. Decide right away whether you want to become an expert at one area at a time or throw yourself at everything at once and be content with a low level of proficiency in several disciplines. (You’ll probably want to take a hybrid approach)

It's easier to work with your neighbors and allow everyones' talents assist in preparing food storage, tools, weapons, building supplies, etc. Be wary of users and abusers who only take, and have nothing to offer!