Last year I did a 10-day test of my preps. (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4) It was the most important prepping activity I’ve every done and a real eye-opener to say the least. I found it an enjoyable experience that required a lot of problem-solving. For 2024, I highly recommend such a test of our preps, even if only for a few days. How about during a week’s vacation? I promise it’ll be one of your most memorable and educational.
As the test began, I quickly I discovered I only had a very fuzzy idea of what I’d do during those first few hours and days of TEOTWAWKI. It’s not that I didn’t have the preps, it was more a question of getting into a whole new mindset and trying to prioritize what needed to happen in those first few hours, and what exactly I needed to do with all those preps. As Jim Croce sang, “Your life has changed, confusion reigns, what have you become?” How true it was.
By the end of Day One I decided to avoid that confusion from happening again, and to prevent the waste of resources such as freezer contents, I needed an action list, an instruction booklet if you will, of how to handle Day One and Week One. After the first week when the most important priorities have been taken care of and changes of habit will have started to take effect, the manual will no longer be necessary as we transition to the “new normal” mode.
This article is a look at the actual manual I prepared and an explanation of why each section was included. I call it my Day One Manual (DOM). It assumes a scenario where the grid is lost and the SHTF with no prior warning. I refer to this type of SHTF event as instant, while slow-motion refers to those few weeks during which it’s become almost certain that Day One is nearly upon us and it’s time to take some final actions, similar to how the events unfold in JWR’s novel Patriots. For me, a second manual will be prepared for that type of event as some of the priorities will differ.Continue reading“Day One of TEOTWAWKI: A Written Plan – Part 1, by St. Funogas”
