Frankie Cordeira Jr.

Description: Why I Completely Changed My Familys Long-Term Survival Plan For the past five years Ive lived the preppers dream. Ive lived on secluded acreage out in the boondocks with a gate at the driveway to deter those who just wander past. I moved from the Canadian boondocks to the American boondocks (in foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains of California) and lived the life that all the prepping books recommend. I grew food raised livestock and had hardly any neighbors and definitely none close enough to be up in my business. I learned more about self-reliance during those years than I ever realized I didnt know. I scrimped and saved to be able to move ever-further out into the woods. I loved finally being able to have a small farm. But then I came face to face with two people who had lived through the kind of epic long term SHTF event that we all prepare for and they both told me based on their personal experiences I was doing it all wrong. Heres the reason I changed my long-term survival plan. When I first began working with Lisa Bedford the Survival Mom on our live webinar classroom Preppers University my job was to teach people the things that I had spent years learning. But I never expected our guest instructors to have such a profound impact on my own long-term survival plan. The first seed of doubt was planted by FerFAL (Fernando Aguirre) the author of The Modern Survival Manual: Surviving the Economic Collapse who taught a class sharing his experiences during the collapse of Argentina. He commented that the people who lived more remotely were nearly always victims of horrific crimes. Their little homestead nirvanaswere pillaged by criminals. The women were raped. The men were slaughtered. As ideal as their situations sounded by nature of their very solitude made them the perfect target for those without morals. According to Fernandos experience unless you have a small army with you round the clock sentries and unlimited ammo living in the country might not be all its cracked up to be. As a single mom with a teenage daughter that gave me pause. I knew that we didnt have the firepower or the tactical skills to fight off hordes intent on pillaging our farm. And I also knew that we were so isolated that no one would be around to help if we needed it. I began thinking about all of the fictional apocalyptic stories. People quickly formed communities because there is safety in numbers. Think about the prison and Alexandria in The Walking Dead. Think about the town of Jericho. Think about the novels of A. American or the books Alas Babylon and One Second After. In a truly dire scenario Im talking about grid-down all-out collapse your community becomes the people who live within walking distance of you. And if no one lives within walking distance well then you are truly on your own. But the final decision was made when I got a chance to talk to Selco. Like I said I began to doubt the wisdom of my plan after Fernandos class but then came Selcos class. Selco runs SHTFSchool where he teaches about his survival experiences living in occupied Bosnia. He survived several years living the life that we all plan for but none of us are truly ready for. He talked about the crime the desperation and the outright brutality. He talked about how families and groups of friends lived together in one home for safety. It was the only way to survive. During the Q&A session I told him about our own situation. That I was a single mom with a teenaged daughter. That we lived 40 minutes from the nearest town with any place with a Wal-Mart or bigger grocery stores and that our nearest neighbors were half a mile away. That we raised out own food had off-grid water and a big gate. And Selco told me respectfully that we would not survive in a situation that was like his. He reiterated that extended families and groups of friends had to band together for survival. He explained how small communities arose inside the walls of their city and how neighbors had each others backs. This was real life not just some imagined scenario in which we all feel invincible. Heres a link to one of our webinars with Selco so you can hear for yourself what it was like. And maybe my plan wasnt so great after all. When my daughter graduated early from high school and our former state threw up a bunch of roadblocks when she wanted to go to vocational school we decided to expand our search. Then she got accepted into a prestigious private vocational school in a smaller urban area across the country and I knew the time had come to head back to neighborhood living. There is nothing more enlightening than talking to people who have been there done that. NOTHING. No amount of theory that I could write could ever compare with the real-life experiences of these two men. And being able to ask them these questions was absolutely invaluable. I didnt start running these classes expecting to be the student but it turns out I was. I learned something that could save the life of my child and myself. I learned that I was making us both horribly vulnerable should the situation in our country go horribly wrong. While living in town has its own set of variables and concerns creating a community in your own neighborhood can be a much morerealistic way to survive. Shameless plug. To me the best part of the Prepping Intensives is the fact that you can ask questions like the one I asked Selco and Fernando. This class completely changed my own preparedness plan and I wasnt even supposed to be a student. It showed me the flaws in my logic. It gave me an opportunity to reroute our preparedness path. Even if you feel like your preparedness plan is completely nailed down you may be missing something essential like I was. There is nothing like a live conversation to put things in perspective for you and students get a Q&A session with every single speaker. This time around here is just a part of our line-up: Brandon Smith talks about barter economy Tim Young talks about moving to the country to become more self-reliant Tammy Trayer talks about off-grid living Merriweather talks about foraging Dr. Arthur T. Bradley talks about EMP survival Selco talks about survival in war-torn Bosnia FerFal (Fernando Aguirre) talks about surviving the collapse of Argentina Toby Cowern an Arctic survival expert talks about surviving with nothing more than the clothes on your back Cherie Norton an NRA instructor talks about situational awareness and personal safety Jim Cobb talks about hardening the security of your home A. American talks about surviving long-term scenarios Cat Ellis talks about herbalism and medical preparedness Lisa Egan a personal trainer talks about the importance of fitness as a prep Patrice Lewis talks about rural life And thats just a sample of our speakers and topics. Maybe youll discover that your plan has some holes in it too. Better to find out now than when its too late to do anything about it. Go here to learn about the Prepping Intensive and the Advanced Prepping Intensive. The post Why I Completely Changed My Familys Long-Term Survival Plan appeared first on The Sleuth Journal.
By Frankie Cordeira Jr.
Pinned to Domestic and Global News on Pinterest
Found on: http://ift.tt/2q88R7i
Previous Post Next Post

نموذج الاتصال