I was speaking with a friend recently who mentioned he still has a generator in the box taking up space in his garage. It has been there for ten years. He did not know what to do during the Y2K panic so he spent money to make himself feel better. I am not knocking the value of a good generator. I have used mine for almost twenty years. However, purchasing a generator he did not know how to use without at least buying some gasoline to go with it was a waste of money. It has been said the humans are the only creature that move faster once they realize they are lost. I am sharing my experiences for the benefit of those who do not have a lot of training or experience in preparedness that they may go just slow enough to make good decisions while moving fast enough to be effective.
I was first referred to as “a survivalist” twenty-five years ago by local authorities during a routine traffic stop. Still a teenager, I had saved my Christmas money to purchase my first rifle, an AR-7 survival rifle. I had to explain to the nice officers why it was broken down in the back seat of my father's car. I dressed like the cover of a survival magazine during my high school and early college years and my appearance had brought me the attention I thought I wanted. This teenage self-expression included camouflage pants and a black T-shirt accented by a defused hand grenade hanging from a chain around my neck. I quickly learned the attention this drew was not in my best interest. Today I look like every other clueless rat in the race.
It is not just the blatant activity described above that draws unwanted attention. Someone asked recently how to keep their nosey neighbors from watching them bring in supplies. I advised her to buy several identical plastic tubs. Each time she goes out, an empty tub will go with her and return full. The world sees just one tub going back and forth and incorrectly assumes it is the same one each time. Absent evidence to the contrary, people tend to see what they expect.
Lesson One: Read the remainder of Five Preparedness Lessons Learned.





