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AZ Prepper
12-08-2009, 10:52 AM
Solo Survival in a Societal Collapse?
by Wry Catcher
http://www.survivalblog.com/2009/12/solo_survival_in_a_societal_co.html


When it comes to natural and man-made disasters, I’ve seen my share, and each was a learning experience. Although diverse in type, all of them shared a common factor: a dire impact on the human populations they affected. That impact, in turn, led to dangerous encounters with some rough criminals. Some people cannot cope, so they turn to ruthless behavior. Other people are selfish opportunists. While we may have pity for those who can’t cope with the stress of a survival situation, we should nonetheless remain vigilant for those who would do us harm in any way and for any reason. As my niece says, “It only takes one creep to ruin your life.” She is so right!

We preppers and survivalists know by now that being part of a trustworthy and cooperative community will dramatically increase the odds for our survival. Whether surrounded by family, friends, or like-minded neighbors, having a support system in place during hard times is universally considered vital.

Suppose, however, that circumstances preclude you from enjoying the benefits of a protective community. Perhaps your friends and family live out of town. Some of you reading this right now don’t know your neighbors, and don’t want to know them. Many of you live alone by choice. Or perhaps an event forces you to become isolated from your community. Bottom line: you’re on your own. You need to ask yourself some questions now, before the bogey man arrives.

How can I maintain my sanity when chaos reigns around me?

Physical well-being is not enough. Besides the requisite beans, band-aids, and buckshot, a lonely survivor will need emotional and spiritual comfort, and a reason to live. Accumulate some mementoes of loved ones and happier times - photographs, voice recordings, a vacation postcard – anything that will abate the inevitable sense of aloneness and isolation. A few photographs and a small tape or MP3 player will fit easily into a Bug Out Bag (BOB).

Strong faith in an entity greater than yourself is a true comfort in times of trouble. Having faith in someone or something will help you endure the solitude.

As a sole survivor, how can I defend my living space?

The old adage goes, “there is safety in numbers.” Through projecting a sense of multiple occupants, your living space can be defended. If you have a source of electricity, use your radio, scanner, or tape recorder to produce vocal sounds. Set timers to turn on and off lights throughout the house. If electricity is unavailable or sporadic, quietly move about within the building. Keep any would-be intruders guessing as to where you are. Before the SHTF, place decorative glass objects on windowsills, so that anyone attempting to enter through a window will be encumbered. Plant knee-high, thorny bushes under windows and around all entrances. Whether or not actually you have a dog, place used dog dishes where outsiders can see them. Install a burglar alarm with battery back-up. Please note that burglar alarms and cluttered windowsills are not going to stop a determined intruder, but the noise these safety precautions make will alert you to trouble so that you can react accordingly.

Consider having 3M Safety & Security film installed on the inside of all windows so that “smash and grab” is more difficult. Perimeter fences should be sturdy and climb-proof. Landscaping should discourage fires from reaching the residence. Turn a basement bathroom or a laundry room into a bunker and a well-supplied defensive stand. Abandon rooms that cannot be easily defended from within. Another old adage, “don’t put all your eggs in one basket” is good advice when it comes to stashing weapons and water.

If you venture out, keep a low profile and don’t betray your location. A car can be a retreat in desperate times. It can also be a betrayer. Concealment makes the difference.

Will I be able to survive without electricity if my “strength through imaginary numbers” plan cannot be implemented without it?

If it is impossible to project a sense of strength, project a sense of abandonment. Make no noise. Cooking odors and smoke must not be visible. Venture outside of your sanctuary with great stealth and only when necessary for survival. Keep a low profile at all times.

Can I convince those who know or learn that I live alone to leave me alone?

I ask myself regularly:

* Can I prepare without alerting others to what I’m doing?
* Does my home look deserted or securely occupied?
* Or both, depending on the situation?
Perhaps the best defense is to pretend to be absent. I have known people who hid in a secret closet or a basement bathroom while scavengers rummaged through their homes. When the thieves left, the homeowner returned to living as if nothing happened because their survival gear had been stowed with great forethought. Contemplate adding an underground or subsurface bunker to your home. If that is impossible, remodel an interior room to serve as a defensive position.

Present an impenetrable exterior and a well-defended position so that those will ill intent will be inclined to go elsewhere. Your goal should be having a home and property that appears occupied, when that is your best defense, and unoccupied, when that serves your needs. The balancing act is a tricky one, to be sure.

When at home, during times of trouble, keep a low profile. As you plan for survival, downplay each change to your home and your purchase of supplies. Your caches should only be known to family and trusted friends. Loose lips don’t just sink ships, they could sink your personal safety and security. Never hire the same contractor for two separate survival projects – don’t divulge the real reason or purpose of the work you are having done.

Could I use a weapon against another human being, if necessary? Can I train to do so? Are your knives sharp? Can you keep them that way? Is your 4x4 always ready for a quick getaway if you must abandon your home? Most importantly, Do you have a G.O.O.D. plan if things get too dicey? Your weapons should be familiar to you so that using them is second nature. Ammunition should be securely stowed until needed. If your weapons use common calibers and gauges, bartering will be easier.

Can you project a defensible exterior to your home while still presenting a comfortable residence during times of normalcy? This can be problematic unless carefully thought out. Landscaping can be defensibly practical and simultaneously attractive with little effort. Fencing, however, may have local restrictions and aesthetic considerations. Check local codes for current limitations, then work within those limits to create the best perimeter barrier. With a little work now, you can make a fence that can be easily reinforced at a later and more dangerous time. What you do to the interior of your house should be your business, so long as you keep it private and non-hazardous to your neighbors, you shouldn't have much trouble.

The Bottom Line

Under many worst-case scenarios, odds of solo survival are less than 50-50. The odds get worse as sustained hardships persist. This you must know and accept, if you don’t accept those odds then you need to become part of a like-minded group of trustworthy people who will work with you to survive. If, however, you accept the odds, you must commit to not rolling over and dying without a fight. No human parasite will find an easy victim at your place. Many have survived while alone. You can, too, if you take stock of your vulnerabilities and prepare accordingly. Ask yourself the tough questions and answer them truthfully – your life may depend on it.

Kelly Alwood
01-19-2010, 04:48 PM
Some great things to think about above.
What shoud be aquired before all this is a group of friends. We all have people we hang around with and such, so why would we not have a group? Maybe becasue they dont subscribe to the same line of thinking we do. They are not motivated to prepare. Many reasons. But I will tell you this, when disaster strikes and people need food, shelter and protection, they will all come running to your house. We all know this to be true. People in our lives see how we prepare and know we will be ready. I will tell you one more thing about this, and that is most of these people plan to come to your house and have you take care of them. I know this for a fact with my own associates. You Will have people come to your place. And they WILL expect you to take care of them. It might be family, it might be neighbors, church members, or co workers. They are people who are completely unprepared for anything, with no resources, knowledge or skills to bring to the table. They are purely dependants.
So, knowing this you now have a decision to make. You MUST have a list of people who will be accepted through your door and stick with it. I predict this may be the most difficult part of the whole ordeal for a lot of people. You may literally have to decide who dies and who doesnt based on your list. You cannot possibly take care of everyone. Nor is it our job. We have all sacrificed for what we have put away, while others are going on vacation, buying news cars and tv's, and other "fun" things. Why would it be our job to go without and put provisions back for such people? It wouldnt. We cannot save the world, so we have to decide who we will take in. Be Very careful with your list. By now this is sounding harsh. Your first priority and responsibility is to your immediate family. You cannot take away from them,(who sacrificed with you to get it) and give it to the neighbor who takes vacations every year, and has a new flat screen and a nicer car than you. We all have to live with our own decisions. And our families too. Of course it is not the neighbors childrens fault the father was a failure and bought a new car and tv, but its not yours either! It is not your responsibility to take care of people.
This said, how can we help our neighbors and friends without doing it for them and let them in to use up my families resources? By education and preaching. My moral responsibiity stops there. I preach to all my friends and neighbors and associates. They are all tired of hearing it from me. So when the time comes that they knock on my door wanting in, I can, in compete morality tell them NO. GO AWAY.
I explain to them relentlessly why it is important, and what they need to do. If they make the conscious choice not to provide for their family, I am certainly under no obligation to them. You have no need to fear reprisal from these people either. They will be very angry and deserate. No doubt. But if they have no resources to take care of themselves, you can rest assured they dont have the means to take yours. Those things kinda run hand in hand dont they? You can bet your liberal democrat neighbor has no guns and training to be a threat to you. Desperation will never equal training and skills.
I have my list who will come in. Some of them help prepare, and some dont. I know who doesnt and I love them enough to not let them die, so I gather supplies for them knowing this.
I also put extra back for "others" that may show up empty handed due to no fault of their own.
Now, with this comes another layer. I am prepared to take other people in, as there is saftey in numbers. Combined resources. Labor being one. But the determining factor here is that they are completely self sufficient. We only need each other for support and numbers and not supplies. If they come to me with their own supplies substancial enough to provide for themselves, I will take them in as much as space permits.
Now, I have also made a rule to be flexible in a certain matter. IF this person has a specific knowledge base or skill set that is demanded at my place, then if I have the EXTRA provisions, I would take them in. For example, a doctor or surgeon may prove his worth for me to bring him in. It may be a great machanic, or anything else you desperately need. But, you must have extra provision above that of your families before you make that deal. And, you can bet this individual is not alone. The doctor would most likely show up at your camp with his family. Now you have to decide if his contribution is worth the cost of resources.
So, just when you thought you had enough stuff, I hit you with this. So think and ponder and analize this so you can make realistic preparations.

drennen17@gmail.com
02-14-2010, 07:12 PM
Interesting article ... never gave this subject much thought previously. Will need to expand my planing consideration to include some of the points noted!

Imamom
02-21-2010, 05:55 PM
My fear is not that I will have to survive alone, but rather that I will have to survive with six kids.

Surviving in a group of prepared, like-minded adults is one thing.

Surviving on your own when you have made preparations ahead of time for crisis events is more difficult than scenario number one, but still doable.

Surviving as the sole leader of a band of irrational, dependent minor human becomings is quite another

AZ Prepper
02-22-2010, 08:04 AM
My fear is not that I will have to survive alone, but rather that I will have to survive with six kids.

Surviving in a group of prepared, like-minded adults is one thing.

Surviving on your own when you have made preparations ahead of time for crisis events is more difficult than scenario number one, but still doable.

Surviving as the sole leader of a band of irrational, dependent minor human becomings is quite another
I'm sure that a great deal of being able to do this is the mental preparation and multiple plans for various scenarios. You can never be completely prepared and there will always be wrenches thrown into scenarios, but you just do the best you can, continuously learning and preparing, and have faith that you'll be watched over and taken care of for the differences.

Imamom
02-23-2010, 12:16 PM
I think too, the trick here is teaching those you expect to have with you to be as self-sufficient as possible. For example, there are thing kids can do to help with survival such as gardening, chopping wood, being taught to identify plants, etc. Neighbors can also be taught these things under the guise of useful and fun information, and then when the need arises to use it, they will at least have the information in there for the Holy Ghost to work with in inspiring them.

Kelly Alwood
05-31-2010, 12:18 AM
Great point. I think the challenge is getting people to dedicate the efforts to acquire the skills and knowledge before hand. Im sure most people will not bother, and will come running to the prepared for help, only to add to your count of dependants.