Berkshire newbie

New Members - Introduce yourself, and say a few words
sweetsarah
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Joined: Sat Aug 24, 2013 3:02 am

Berkshire newbie

Post by sweetsarah »

Hi
I'm Sarah and I want to prepare; I haven't got a clue how to start and am feeling a bit overwhelmed and like the odds are stacked against me. It's great to see that I'm not alone though.

I am a single mum to a lovely 9 year old boy. I work in admin to pay the bills and fancy myself as a bit of an artist/crafter in my spare time ; not really great skills come the apocalypse ;)

I really think the writing is on the wall for western cizilization as we know it and I want to increase my son's chance of survival in the world he will know. I don't want to feel helpless and too scared but I have to admit that I am. I can tell that most people I bring up the subject of preparing for natural and man made disasters and the possible collapse of civilized society think I am losing the plot. So then I wonder if I am.

This all sounds dreadfully serious but I do have a sense of humour too thankfully; I have to laugh at myself sometimes - I'm only half joking really when I say, tongue in cheek, to friends that I 'want to marry Ray Mears, learn survival skills and move to high ground away from the cities'. If Ray happens to be reading, I'm free ;) ...

Maybe I've read too many Stephen King novels, watched too many shit hits to fan documentaries and too much Walking Dead (if anyone can even have too much Walking Dead or Stephen King,for that matter). My friend, today, asked me a question that made me really think hard about the future, she asked me 'why on earth would you want to stick around in a scary doomsday world?'. She said that she (a single mum too) would want her and her son to check out quickly as soon as the shit hit the fan. She said that humans had been through massive climate change before and had survived so I shouldn't get too hung up - that I should be happy and live for 'now'. There is certainly a lot to be said for having a positive attitude but I realized in that moment how important it was for me to try to survive whatever scary stuff is coming primarily so my son can survive. I feel like I need to be enabling him to aquifer the skills he will need to survive post-collapse instead of pushing him to fulfil school league tables by obediently following the government's narrow curriculum. Do I want him to live in a terrifying Mad Max world? No, but I fear that he or his children will face something along those lines and I would be failing in my duty as a parent if I didn't at least try to equip him with essential survival skills. I look online for these 'bushcraft'/survival courses that we could attend to start learning but they are all so expensive; is it only going to be people with financial means that can survive?

I can't drive and I am mostly skint (aren't we all ...?). So no expensive nuclear bunker bolt holes in the country for me yet and the not driving bit is a bit of a problem even if I had such a bolt hole! I'm in a second floor one bed flat. Shall I just resign myself that there's not much I can do and accept the lovely anesthetic offered by my friends' and most people's blinkered view that there's nothing to worry about?

I have a possible chance of swapping my flat to move to a small village near Inverness in the Scottish Highlands; my instinct tells me that my son and I might be 'safer' there - I certainly know that we would have a better quality of life through living in a beautiful area such as it is.

Anyway, I'm rambleing on a bit now - just wanted to say hello :)
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pseudonym
Posts: 5516
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 10:11 am
Location: East Midlands

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by pseudonym »

Now that's an introduction. :mrgreen:

Hello and welcome to the Forum. :D
Two is one and one is none, but three is even better.
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nickdutch
Posts: 2928
Joined: Sat Sep 10, 2011 6:53 am

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by nickdutch »

Welcome.
I personally don't think that things are gonna be as bad as you fear in your lifetime and probably not in your sons life time.
What is more likely to happen(IMHO) is a reduction in state pensions when your child is old so starting a pension plan at the age 18 would help the child a lot.
Work may get erratic as the economy sorts itself out, so having enough food in stock (cheapo value stuff) to tide yourself over until reliable money comes in in case of unemployment would be a good idea. Torches, candles and batteries (or the makings of an olive oil lamp) in case of power cuts / brown outs would be fantastic.
Learn how to sprout lentils so that you can get good nutrition in case of times of scarce foods or scarce money, would also make sense.
I don't believe we will be in a mad max environment, but if you can learn anything that can help on the way then that can be useful no matter what. First aid, how to repair something, how to brew beer, make good foods at home on a budget, grow things, its all good fun.

I did previously think that there would be an impending mad max situation, but that didn't happen, but what did happen was a delay in my pay and that meant that I had to survive on what I had, lentils, rice and tinned foods. I did very well on it all.
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sweetsarah
Posts: 0
Joined: Sat Aug 24, 2013 3:02 am

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by sweetsarah »

Thanks, Pseudonym - yes, I'm Irish so have the gift of the gab! ;) Thanks too to you, Nickdutch, for your helpful advice and for the reassurance too; I'm going to do what I can and try not to get too stressed as I'll be no use to anyone like that. I've looked up some olive oil lamp tutorials on YouTube - might be a fun and educational little project for me and Daniel.
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tigs
Posts: 1350
Joined: Sat Jul 21, 2012 5:16 am
Location: south yorkshire

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by tigs »

Hi Sarah ( great intro by the way) think of prepping as insurance its something you never want to use but if the worst happens its there! start by adding a few extra tins of food to your shopping (own budget brands are as good as labels ,sometimes even better) they soon add up ,also take a look at this thread viewtopic.php?f=9&t=817 or the link on my sig http://autonopedia.org/ , prepping is not all about what you have but what you can do so learn some skills such as camping , fishing and first aid (no you don't have to be a doctor ) the basics will do .
Ready for Anything

http://autonopedia.org/ if still out try facebook https://www.facebook.com/Autonopedia

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junmist
Posts: 1496
Joined: Tue May 08, 2012 5:39 am

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by junmist »

Great Intro Sarah welcome to the forum. When you first start prepping it can feel overwhelming if you do not come from a make do and mend/growing own food back ground so the first rule is when feeling overwhelmed sit down and have a cuppa :lol: You have skills you just do not know that you can use them for prepping. Arts and crafts are a good skill as you can look at what others consider rubbish and see potential in it and that is what you are going to need in a TSHTF problem.
One step at a time takes you nearer to independence so your first step has been to recognise that there is a problem the second step has been to join the forum. So you are already two steps ahead of the rest of the populations CONGRATULATIONS :D
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TonyAge
Posts: 34
Joined: Mon Jun 17, 2013 1:32 pm
Location: Area 2

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by TonyAge »

Hello Sarah and welcome.
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unsure
Posts: 1366
Joined: Sat Jul 21, 2012 11:53 am
Location: st.helens , area 9

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by unsure »

hello and welcome to the forum , now take a deep breath and calm down . theres loads of advice in here and interesting ideas to help you .
YES i walked away mid sentence , you were boring me to death and my survival instincts kick in .
Ferricks
Posts: 427
Joined: Sun Feb 26, 2012 12:16 am
Location: Near Glasgow

Re: Berkshire newbie

Post by Ferricks »

Hello and welcome.

Stay active on the forum and get lots of help on your journey - good luck!
:)