M4S 004: Preparedness Planning in 9 Easy Steps




The Mind4Survival Podcast show

Summary: There are 9 components to successful preparedness planning to ensure that your strategies work when it really counts. To create a plan that will work for you and your family, you need to take some time to figure out the information below so that you have all the data you need to increase your likelihood of success.<br> Preparedness Planning Steps<br> You've probably heard that saying, "How do you eat a whole elephant?" with the answer "one bite at a time." Well, the same holds true with preparedness planning.  The steps below seem really simple, but this helps to take the overwhelm out of something as huge as potentially saving your family member's lives.<br> Step 1: Make Time to Plan<br> You need to set aside time to make the plan. Write it down on your schedule like an appointment, and stop putting it off. You need to treat this time seriously and focus completely on what you're doing. You may be doing all the planning by yourself, or you may be coordinating with your partner, so be sure to accommodate their schedule too.<br> <br> Not doing so can cause you to rush or wait until the last minute. If you do your preparedness planning while the event is unfolding, you’ll increase the possibility of making mistakes at the worst possible time.<br> Step: 2:  List Who and What You Are Protecting<br> You will need to decide on who and what you can protect. You can’t protect everyone and everything. You’ll have to decide who and what is most important to you personally and for survival. While you might want to save the entire neighborhood, it may come down to just being able to save your family.<br> <br> So take some time to prioritize. Obviously, your family comes first. You may be able to include some close neighbors or friends in your plan. Put it all in order.<br> <br> You may be planning to protect things as well as people. Your home, garden, and vehicle might all be on your list of things to protect. For example, if you live in hurricane country, boarding up your windows helps protect your home from storm damage.<br> <br> Remember, protection isn't just about violence. It's about a multitude of potential threats, which leads us to the next step.<br> Step 3: What Do You Want to Protect From?<br> Now, think about what threats you are the most likely to be facing.<br> <br> For some, the main focus of their preparedness planning is directed toward natural disasters like tornados, floods, hurricanes, or earthquakes. Perhaps you live near a nuclear or chemical plant and worry about an industrial incident.<br> <br> Or is your plan directed towards knucklehead terrorists or a random auto accident?<br> <br> Think about what is most likely for you, not about a more far-fetched Mad Max scenario.<br> Step 4: What Are Your Resources<br> What resources do you have available? Resources can include many different things, such as<br> <br> time<br> money<br> supplies<br> food<br> housing<br> skills<br> storage space<br> natural resources (water source, etc.)<br> vehicles<br> equipment<br> secondary location<br> <br> You’ll need to analyze what you have, whether you have enough, and if you need to add resources.<br> Step 5: What Is Your Daily Life?<br> Disasters and bad guys strike at different times and are unpredictable. You need to think about different scenarios and how to handle them based on your daily schedules.<br> <br> Where will you and your family members be at certain times of the day? Do you have a central meeting point? A plan for picking up the kids?<br> <br> Preparedness planning needs to be able to be flexible and keep up with your changing life.<br> Step 6: How Long Will You Be Required to Execute the Plan?<br> You will need to have an idea of how long you are going to be in and executing your plan. Obviously, disasters are rarely isolated events,