Preparing That Brings Rest
Apr 14th, 2012 | By Josh Thomas | Category: Education, Prepping, Top Headline | Print This Article
My experience working with men and women who are seeking to prepare themselves and their families for coming disasters has made one thing quite clear…preparing can be an anxious business. When you or I decide to plan and to prepare for coming disaster, we open
ourselves up to unsettling thoughts. But the purpose of our preparation is peace. We are seeking to act now so that when things go badly, we will not have to fear. A little stress now as we prepare can go a long way to providing rest then.
But does that mean that we have to run around frantically as we seek to prepare? I hope not! I am persuaded that proper planning and careful implementation of that plan can make our preparations far less stressful.
Without sober planning, our preparations become mere reflexes. What we need is thoughtfulness, clear headedness, and wisdom. Whether it’s deciding where to live, choosing what and how much food to store away, or how to provide for the security of my family, I need to plan.
There are tremendous resources available to help make that kind of plan. Many are available on this website. For anyone seeking to prepare for coming disaster, the first step is to learn all you can about the potential dangers and about how you might act to prepare yourself for those dangers. It’s no good to install a fire hydrant when you’re region is threatened by a flood. We have to use our resources wisely. How can I use my available funds to purchase supplies that will best fend off the kind of disaster I most anticipate? Asking and answering these kinds of questions can go a long way toward bringing calmness and rest.
But there is an even more important step that must be taken in order to plan and prepare well. You must engage in a thoughtful contemplation of the future. What are you planning for? What will be the outcome if you accomplish your preparation goals before the disaster hits? Do you expect to merely survive? Or do you hope to thrive? Granted, thriving may look very different in some settings than others. But here’s my point—if you plan well and execute that plan, you can face the future with restful hope.
I see an example in the Scriptures that might help establish my point. The Book of Exodus tells us that the children of Israel were wandering through the wilderness of Sinai. They were running short of food. To meet that need, God provided them with manna. Manna was a kind of grain-like food that appeared every morning when the dew settled on the ground. The Israelites were commanded to gather only what they could use for the day. If they tried to carry over manna as left-overs for the next day, it would get wormy. But then on Fridays they were commanded to gather twice as much. The manna they kept over from Friday for the Sabbath (Saturday) did not get worms. Now what possible lesson might we gain from this piece of Bible history? It has to do with what you expect from the future. Do you believe that if you prepare well now that you will enjoy rest when the things you’re preparing for come to pass? That requires faith. Many Israelites didn’t believe God and tried to go out and gather manna on Saturday morning. No manna fell. Those who believed God and who had gathered the required quota found rest. They had all they needed for the day when no manna fell.
Now the work of preparing for the failure of the grid or some such disaster is not as cut and dry as the story of the manna in the wilderness. But like those Israelites, if you and I plan and prepare well, we can have rest when the day comes. As a Christian, I believe that God has promised to supply all my needs. He has also commanded me to act wisely to care for and provide for my family. That means that, like those Israelites in the wilderness, I can trust that my double manna kind of preparation will be the means whereby God’s provision will come. And that means I can prepare now in peace. I can anticipate that my preparations will bring me rest when the hardship arrives. Believe and prepare. And in your preparations be at rest.
©2013 Off The Grid News







My prep that brings me rest is storing ammo and equipment in the mountains where I live.
I purchase used barrels that transported “Dextromethoraphan” they have toxic labels but that is the active ingredient in cough medicine. Wash the barrel with vinegar, and then a gallon or two of water with Baking Soda to neutralize any chemicals.
In each I put.
A “tuna can” of 7.62 x 39 ammo
A small ammo box (30 cal)
some 22 LR, and hunting ammo for each rifle that my kids carry. I purchase ski pants/jackets/gloves in spring and using one of those space bags or my food vaccum I compress them down. I have knives, pocket knives
Darn it this posted without me being finished the Barrle size is a 10 gallon with a waterproof seal but a five gallon bucket from home depot with the gamma seals available from cheaper than dirt will work to.
A spool of spider wire
Fish hooks
Ice fishing rods and reels (cause they are small)
Flies for fishing
Split shot
A tomahawk
A pistol or two in 22 cal
panchos
Socks
Underwear for everyone
Aspirin bottle
Cold tablets
Dental Floss
Toothbrushes
toothe paste
Scissors for cutting hair
Cable ties (multiple sizes)
1 spool of nylon 550 cord
Those heavy duty scissors
sharpening stone
oil for guns and sharpening
Automatic fishing reels (1 doz)
a box of Bic Lighters
A lexan bottle of beans and rice mixed in layers
A bottle of iodine for water purification
Razors
Extra reading glasses
Books (bible, survival, plant identification for that area)
Cards and or games
Military rifle cleaning kit in (5.56) (cause it is tough and will fit in any bore, dont forget to ask for the 308 adapter ) patches
Big Pliers (Channel locks) purchased from farm or estate auctions
Hammer and sledge
Leathermen (I purchase from Pawn shops)
Tea Candles
In some a rifle with the stock removed so it fits in the barrel, a 22 Marlin tube feed works if you cut the barrel to 20 inches (mount a scope on the rifle.
Emergen – C packets from Sams
The cheapest multi vitamins you can find
The cheapest fish oil tabs you can find
Salt
Pepper
Garlic Powder
COFFEE!!!!!!!
Drink packets
Canteens with Canteen cups
US military pistol belts and used holsters
Lots of Bullion in foil packets (purchase from a discount food center)
those really lightweight ropes from Harbor Freight in Camo or OD green
A 9-12 tarp folded to about 1 foot and wrapped inside the barrel.
Folding shovel
Soap
washcloths
Towels
Hack saw blades (Used to cut new shoe soles from shredded tire pieces found on the interstate)
Leather Gloves
Spatula, slotted spoon, ladel
Water purifier by Katadyne (Pocket or Combi)
Then I fill it with food stuff that wont spoil
Beans, rice, bullion, butter buds,
Two barrells per site.
I find a tree that is visible and unique I walk exactly 15 paces direct North from the tree still in the canopy and bury two barrells at each site. There are summer and winter barrells which differ slightly in the heavy clothes. The barrels are buried about two feet down on their sides and a yellow rope is tied to the top of one. I bury everything but the rope and leave about 12 inches of the rope above ground. The rope is then covered with leaves, so you can walk the 15 steps and begin to kick and scrape up the leave until you find it. The barrels are very expensive but I have been doing this for many years, collecting and storing. Do the same in some manner and you will have some peace of mind.
PS unless you are really good at directions use a GPS, but dont forget the rope because the GPS error of 10 meters or so is a lot of ground to cover if you misplace it.
The Col