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#127260 - 03/14/08 02:16 AM A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded)
Taurus Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/26/07
Posts: 458
Loc: Northern Canada
I am sorry about the long rant, but once in a while we all need to share some thoughts / points/ observations etc. The whole point of a forum I guess.

When the SHTF, how well you walk OUT of that situation depends entirely on how well you walk IN to that situation. I am constantly amazed at how I see people get into a bad situation with nothing and walk out of it totally unharmed, while others have tons of stuff and get killed . Sometimes I think walking into The S*** with the right state of mind is better than all the gear in the world. As such I have my own way of thinking when it comes to keeping my ass alive. Everyone will have their own ways, but these guidelines have proven effective for me. I figured a forum is the best place to share my thoughts and ramblings.
I think survival is survival, plain and simple. It matters not to the grim reaper if you are a soldier or a mountain climber. Death can come anywhere at any time, but there are a lot of ways we can give him the slip (temporarily at least) just by being prepared to face a bad situation. Once the reaper realizes you are determined to live he may move on to easier prey. I think your mental state and how you react will be a greater asset to you than any PSK could ever hope to be. The PSK or any other gear you have is just another tool to ASSIST you along the way. (A great tool to have, but a tool all the same) I have no fancy survival acronyms or the like, but these words, phrases and sentences have been engraved into my way of thinking for as long as I can remember. They have served me well. For the purpose of my rant here I will try to be as non Military and as generic to survival as I can.

PLANNING- before you do anything that puts you in harm’s way, make a plan. Be it a short road trip to visit friends or a mission BEL in a far away land, treat it in the same way. Tell people where you are going, when you should arrive and what to do if you don’t. Before you make your plan ask yourself 3 questions:
1. what is the BEST thing that can happen?

2. What is the WORST thing that can happen?

And 3. What is MOST LIKELY to happen?

Make your plan according to those guidelines’. A British E.O.D Exchange instructor once told me this and it has been some of the greatest advice I have ever carried with me.


FLEXIBILITY- Make a plan A, then a plan B, and then allow enough flex in your plan to make a plan C on the fly. If it calls for sunny skies all weekend, take a rain jacket and stuff it in your bag anyway. If you don’t, it will rain. Even the best and most well thought out plans will change. This is beyond our control. Don’t get discouraged by it but rather accept a change in plans as something that will take place most times. Prepare for the worst and hope for the best as they say. A lot of time your plan C will be better than plan A was anyway.

SITUATIONAL AWARENESS – One of my biggest concerns. Pay attention to what is going on around you. On a mission, a road trip, in heavy traffic, at a concert or wherever you are there is a whole world or trouble you can avoid if you take a second or two and LOOK at what’s around you. Think I am kidding? The next time you sit to watch a movie in a theatre with your wife, a friend or whoever ,ask them to close their eyes. Now ask them how many emergency exits there are, and where the closest one to you is. How many isles down? If the power goes out, a fire or any other emergency takes place the 10 seconds it takes to find out the answers these simple questions may be all you need to save your life. You will be amazed at how many people won’t know, and further amazed at how many people won’t care. Once you get used to this way of thinking it will come second nature to you and you will always do it subconsciously. To further add, always try and keep track of directions (NORTH) even when just traveling to a store you have never been to. When out and about Keep prominent landmarks in the back of your mind and which direction they are from where you are.(rivers, lakes, roads etc) If something goes wrong at least you will be able to say: “North is that way and there was a road somewhere to the east about 5 k”. That’s better than nothing. BE AWARE of things that don’t look right. Don’t walk down a dark alleyway if you can easily walk around it, and so on. In short, take two steps back and look at the big picture and what part you are playing in it.

TIME APPRICIATION – Taken out of Military jargon. Simply put it means to give yourself enough time to complete a task. It ties in with planning. If you are in a constant rush to get to work, maybe you should leave 10 minutes earlier. Your chances of avoiding a car accident have just gone up considerably. Your SITUATIONAL AWARNESS goes out the window when you are in a panic not to be late. Like I said before, survival is survival. Being pinned down by mortar fire is no less a threat to survival than a car accident, both will kill you . In my life I have experienced both and I was no more or less in danger of being killed by either. Many things in life are FAR beyond our control. But keep in mind that many things are.
GEAR –A very sensitive topic here. These are my thoughts on gear. Gear is great to have but NEVER rely on it too much. Often you will hear people say “this is a piece of gear I would bet my life on” That’s fine. There is nothing wrong with carrying a piece of quality gear to ASSIST you in a survival situation but…………….gear will eventually fail. Your spirit will only fail if you let it. You can snap a knife, lose your lighter, tear a hole in your waterproof jacket or use your last match but if you are determined to make it out of your current situation you will. Only YOU have the power to allow your will break. No gear you get on sale will ever replace SKILL, ever. I try my best to train with as little as possible and to treat everything I have extra as a bonus. I make no claim to be good at this as I will constantly meet someone who will leave me in total awe with what they know or with what they can do. My father is the best outdoorsman I have ever seen, bar none. He barely carries anything in the field. When hunting together I am constantly amazed that he can do the things he does in the woods with the meager supplies he DECIDES to take. He could take more stuff, he simply doesn’t need it. Even with all my training and all the scrapes I have managed to get myself into I will never reach the same level of ability as him. The funny thing is, that is what he says about his father as well. Now don’t get me wrong. I am not saying you should carry nothing with you. I am simply saying that you should bet your life on your skills/training and not on what’s in your pack, that all. Keep in mind that people have done far more with much less than we carry now.

CONFIDENCE – Train, practice and build it as high as possible. I am at a stage in my training that I am very confident in my skill and abilities. But don’t ever get overconfident. I am smart enough to know not to push my luck. Know your limits. Put yourself in a stressful situation once in a while and you will feel better after having achieved something. Start out small and build up to bigger things. Get good at using your GEAR and then practice making do without it. Good PLANNING, AWARENESS and SKILLs will boost your confidence through the roof. Don’t let anyone ever tell you that something can’t be done.

FITNESS- your brain is the sharpest tool some say, but keep in mind that you brain is carried around by your body. You don’t need to be a marathon runner by any means, but you won’t do very well in a bad situation if you can’t keep your wind. Train your body to assist your situation. There are no bad points about being fit, in any situation. The fitter you are, the better you will be able to cope with stress, fatigue, hunger and so on.

I guess I will stop there. I could go on but I have been flapping my gums long enough. I try to incorporate these points into all my daily activities no matter if I am home, or in a place where I wish I could be. In the end, we all have a system or state of mind which we will fall back on in times of emergency. What I have said is what has kept me alive through some hairy s***, But to each his own. So far the reaper has missed his chance. I apologize if I am appearing all sentimental but after some of the stuff I have went through lately it makes anyone think like that at times. It is nice to type out your thoughts even if no one else shares your point of view. The one thing we all share on this forum is the love of life. That’s why we try and survive tough situations without giving up. There is simply too much to lose. God above (or whoever you choose to believe is up there) has given you only one life to use so be equip and prepared to protect it with all the tools available to you. Just don’t lose sight of the forest for the trees. Surviving is good, but LIVING is even better. Get out there and do those things which make life wonderful and worth surviving.

Take care friends smile


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#127262 - 03/14/08 02:28 AM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
wildman800 Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2847
Loc: La-USA
I think your "rant" is right on the money. I thank you for the reminder and for what you're doing now.

Your personal sacrifices are appreciated by those of us who have been in your present boots, before.

Please keep your butt in 1 piece so the rest of us can "rag on you" after you get home!!!! Bo
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret)
The best luck is what you make yourself!

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#127272 - 03/14/08 03:18 AM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: wildman800]
MoBOB Offline
Veteran

Registered: 09/17/07
Posts: 1219
Loc: here
Taurus,

My spirits lightened when I saw you posted. You have no need to apologize for gum-flappin'. You are providing us a "hot wash" on life as it pertains to you right now. Your thoughts are incedibly valuable to all who visit this forum.

As a retired U.S. veteran who was never called to dicey situations I can only thank you for doing your duty with honor and pride. You make all us vets proud to be a part, albeit small, of your life and service.

O Canada!

God bless you

MSgt Taylor, USAF (retired)
_________________________
"Its not a matter of being ready as it is being prepared" -- B. E. J. Taylor

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#127279 - 03/14/08 05:20 AM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
JCWohlschlag Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 11/26/06
Posts: 724
Loc: Sterling, Virginia, United Sta...
Great to see your post, Taurus. God bless and we cannot wait until your excursion is over and you are safely back.

Your post is a wonderful reminder. The primary purpose of survival preparedness isn’t getting gear… it is planning. You could have a U-Haul full of gear, but unless you’ve put the thought and planning into what you have and how it is going to help you, that gear is useless.

The goal is not to download some list of the crap you should have off the internet, go buy all of it, and say, “Mission Accomplished.” That isn’t preparedness… that is a shopping spree.

The fact of the matter is that you either plan now before a disaster happens, or you have to try and plan while under the pressure of being in the disaster. After the crap hits the fan is too damn late to begin making survival plans. Wondering whether or how much water was on the survival list you downloaded two years ago, trying to remember where your stored it two years ago, or wondering if the water is still suitable to drink are not good things to be thinking about when you need water now!

The very first piece of gear that should be on your survival lists is your brain. And that is not some coy statement that you can respond to by saying, “Well, as long as my head is still attached when the disaster happens…” and blow off. You need to think, evaluate, and make plans about possible disasters before you ever buy gear for a possible disaster.

There are no shortcuts to being prepared. The only easy way out of survival is accepting death. Deal with it.
_________________________
“Hiking is just walking where it’s okay to pee. Sometimes old people hike by mistake.” — Demitri Martin

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#127286 - 03/14/08 12:40 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
bigmothertrucker Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 02/21/08
Posts: 79
Loc: Alberta
well spoken friend.
_________________________
"Knowledge without experience is just information" - Mark Twain

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#127287 - 03/14/08 01:08 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: bigmothertrucker]
justmeagain Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 12/07/07
Posts: 67
The book Deep Survival by Laurence Gonzales will back up a lot of what you wrote above. I can't reccomend that book highly enough.

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#127297 - 03/14/08 03:43 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
martino910 Offline
Newbie

Registered: 04/02/06
Posts: 40
Well said.

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#127304 - 03/14/08 04:42 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: martino910]
TheSock Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/13/07
Posts: 471
Loc: London England
Great stuff! keep it coming! Anyone else who can give us armchair survivors some advise from where knowing it really counts?
The Sock
_________________________
The world is in haste and nears its end – Wulfstan II Archbishop of York 1014.

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#127319 - 03/14/08 05:53 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: TheSock]
Dan_McI Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 12/10/07
Posts: 844
Loc: NYC
Taurus, Good comments.

Stay and get home safe.


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#127336 - 03/14/08 08:12 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
BrianTexas Offline
Ordinary Average Guy
Enthusiast

Registered: 04/26/06
Posts: 304
Loc: North Central Texas, USA
Amen, Brother! Some of the best advice I've ever read on this site.

I'd like to add that planning, situational and time awareness can help prevent some survival situations (i.e., don't cut through the darkened alley to save time). Best way to survive sometimes is to not tempt trouble in the first place.

Stay safe. God watch over you during your missions and come home soon.
_________________________
Also known as BrianEagle. I just remembered my old password!

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#127353 - 03/14/08 09:37 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Dan_McI]
Reddave Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 02/06/05
Posts: 50
well constructed piece. long, but made a very good follow on explanation. ALWAYS...,its not what you carry, its what you apply to a scenario, gear/kit makes it easier to succeed ,but when all else fails, its how you adapt the principles. the 6 P's is good but if IT catches you unawares, its all about how you adapt. you dont have to come out of it smelling of roses, just come out of it in on ,or two pieces. then get to casualty asap

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#128032 - 03/21/08 07:47 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: Taurus]
SwampDonkey Offline
Veteran

Registered: 07/08/07
Posts: 1268
Loc: Northeastern Ontario, Canada
Hey Taurus,

Very good to hear from you.

Difficult survival situations like the one you are now exposed to, do have the benefit of clarifying the mind and allow us to focus on what is truly important.

Experience is the best teacher; "Thank You" for sharing your hard earned lessons with us.

Stay safe, come home soon, and from Canada we appreciate your service.

Mike

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#128034 - 03/21/08 08:24 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: wildman800]
CJK Offline
Addict

Registered: 08/14/05
Posts: 601
Loc: FL, USA
Good to hear from you.....you are right on....but you didn't need me to tell you that......those of us who 'get it'....are of the right mindset to 'get it'......those who don't have the right mindset....they won't ever get it.....but that doesn't mean we should stop telling them......keep going.......

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#128315 - 03/25/08 08:44 PM Re: A few thoughts I wanted to share(long winded) [Re: CJK]
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
Don't forget that plain old dumb luck seems to get a lot of people out of a lot of bad situations. Of course, bad luck can affect the best prepared, too.

Sue

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