The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Dr Anna Maria Bounds - New York Preppers the Real Story COVID and Beyond
Episode Date: May 7, 2025https://www.annamariabounds.org/...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to PABN. You're going to have back the stability here. Welcome in.
We are here with Dr. Anna Marie Bounds, Associate Professor of Sociology at Queens College and
the author of two awesome books.
I was going to try to wing both of them kind of ad hoc,
but I didn't remember both of the names so well.
So can you just tell us the name of the books to start?
Yes.
Hi, everyone.
My first book is about preppers practicing, preparing,
learning prepping skills in the city of New York.
And that is called Bracing for the Apocalypse.
The second book is where we hit the ground running and you have
preppers testing their skills, testing their
their metal during the pandemic, and that's called Urban Preppers in the
Pandemic in New York City. I want to thank you for reaching out
because this is a great, this is such a perfect
and timely topic for our audience I mean it really is at the destination the situation the the first book leading into the second book
It's like, you know
Exactly what people in our community want to read about and figure out and and see you know
What people in one of the biggest cities in the world really?
prepare for and what they really did like we we know only maybe a handful of people who make prepping content,
who live in New York and say they live in New York and, you know, so, you know,
that kind of thing.
But so I guess how, how did you decide to get to this point where you're like,
I want to study the prep culture in New York, because I think a lot of people would assume
that there might not even be one. I mean, I don't know. How did you like, how did that come to be?
That's an excellent question. First, let me say thanks so much for having me
today, and I really think that your point is well taken about, you know, saying, well, this is, you know,
it's important that people understand, you know understand that there are preppers in the city
and trying to figure out what they can contribute
to the conversation about prepping and survivalism.
I think that the real issue here is that
that we're living in an increasingly risky society,
both not just in cities, but across the country, across the world.
And so I think that when you talk
about the prepper conversation,
I would argue that the community is definitely growing.
So I'm definitely glad to be here
and talk about the interesting things
that are happening in the city.
And the reason why I got interested in prepping
and wanted to write about it as a sociologist,
but also as a New Yorker needing to figure out
how I could survive different disasters
was the fact that I was living in the city
and was coming up on the short end of the stick
and decided to check out a prepping group that had been covered in the city and was coming up on the short end of the stick and decided to
check out a prepping group that had been covered in the New York Times. It was right after
Hurricane Sandy. I had been there for September 11th and all of the other things that have
happened in between. And I was the person who had, you know, the flashlight but no batteries, you know, or the peanut butter but no bread or no matches because you know, I and it because one of the interesting things was I moved to New York.
And when I grew up in the south and when I moved to New York, I thought, Oh, this is great. You know, there aren't going to be any hurricanes anymore.
You know, I'm not going to have to worry about all those East Coast things.
That was me and my naivete talking, right?
And I understood the importance of preparing
because my father was in the military
and I took it for granted that everybody did this.
And this was me as a young adult figuring out,
okay, hold on, I'm on my own now in the city with my husband.
We've got to figure out what to do.
I can't depend on dad anymore.
So that was another component too.
And I went to the New York City Preppers Network Group
meeting and it changed my life.
It changed how it reinforced questions that I have about culture and questions
that I have about being prepared in the city.
What was that group like? Lots of people?
Yeah. Here's the interesting thing. Usually when they have in-person meetings, they're
about 30 to 50 people. But when you take
a look at the people who follow online and the people who are registered with the group,
you know, it's usually north of 500. Which is interesting. Yeah, which is interesting because
you have to get, and then you have, you know, a few thousand on the Facebook app. And of course,
that's people who are officially registered.
That's not people who come to meetings
and don't necessarily sign up, but who are members
or kind of trying to be a gray man, so to speak.
So there's definitely a lot of people out there.
And that's just people, preppers who are registered with,
who are part of the group.
I've met a lot of independent preppers
who aren't affiliated with the group at all,
who live in the city.
That's incredible.
Are you saying in the group itself,
you're dealing with about 500 preppers
who would show up to these things?
And, you know, at different points,
usually about 50 people during meetings, you know, because they have meetings they have excursions
They have workshops. They have all sorts of things and then you have people. Yeah. Yeah, and then you have people who
And then you have another another group which is formed a couple of years ago, which is includes New Yorker New Yorkers as well
which is Urban Outdoor Survival Group.
And they do a lot of really interesting things as well.
So now they're two groups, plus independence as well.
So I would say that it is...
Plus, there's also a group of HNW preppers, which are very separate, very independent, even more secretive than
regular preppers.
Is that HNW?
And those are called high net worth preppers.
No way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In other words, we're talking about millionaires, the multimillionaires, the billionaires who
are interested in prepping, and they come to it from a different perspective. You know, a lot of these people are involved in finance and they're familiar with dealing
with risk and trying to protect themselves against risk and prepping is one way to do
that for your family. They're flying out of the city in a helicopter type deal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, or they have a second, you know, they have second second homes, you know that they can you know that that they can go to, you know, some even have panic what I don't want to say panic rooms, I had no idea there was hands-on,
well, I guess as much hands-on
and sort of
exploratory and skill-based
practice
in those prepper groups in the city.
But there's a lot of opportunity, right?
I'm sure. Yeah, certainly.
City navigation, that kind of stuff.
Yeah, city, you know, at first,
there's the whole, you know, The basically working with the two different philosophies or our will say survival strategies and prepping bugging out
Okay
And in that would involve things like groups getting together figuring out what a meeting point would be and then walking across the GW bridge
And then figuring out how they're gonna manage, you know life
You know a life outside which is what they do a lot for their excursions.
Yeah.
And then you also have the idea of bugging out, which of course the pandemic showed us,
how trying to figuring out how to keep your family safe in small quarters, especially
during a pandemic with a very contagious COVID-19.
So when did you start feeling better prepared?
Like what were some of the like, did you put extra food up and then you were kind of like,
oh, okay, I'm getting somewhere now.
When did you start to feel like you were making some progress?
Well, here's something really interesting and it's maybe kind of a question for you, too.
Sure.
When I went to the meeting and started
to see how people were planning and how they were thinking
and what they were doing, the first sense I had was,
I really don't know anything at all.
And there's that sense where you're like, well, you know what?
I've got a hustle.
I now know if I want to feel safe,
I need to take this seriously.
This isn't a game.
This is a philosophy.
It's a lifestyle.
So that was a big game changer for me.
It wasn't just getting flashlights for the battery.
Right?
Right.
It was far more sophisticated than that.
Right, right. You know, it was far more, you know, far more sophisticated than that.
And thinking of, I think the biggest, I'm just taking a pause for a moment because it's,
it's, it's, you know, it's, it's been a few years now and it's still emotional.
I think one of the, one of the things, and I write about this in the book, that was so meaningful to me, was that my first book came out, believe it or not,
in 2020.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, late 2019, early 2020.
And actually they had, no, in 2020,
because they had me revise the,
I requested actually to revise the end of my book.
And I thank the Prepper Group for making sure
that I was ready for the pandemic
because I was one of the few people who we were prepared.
We had food stores and most important,
we had proper N95 masks to wear.
They were already available in our bug out bags. These weren't
things that we needed to scramble and try and find on eBay. We already had all the stuff so that we
could, a good start, so we could think for a moment, okay, what else do I do now? And not just
what can I do for my family, but how can I help respond to questions and help other people?
Yeah, that was probably the biggest curve ball on with the pandemic is because it was
It was a working shtf like it was a
You know, I'm sure in the prepper groups
They talked a lot about and we talked a lot about it, those types of disasters where everything grinds to a halt and the whole world has
changed forever. And what was probably most,
what made the pandemic such trouble was that it was, uh,
it was a working as HTF scenario, you know, like even those people,
some people didn't work and you know,
all that kind of stuff or work from home and all that, like life went on and it
was, but, but it went on. But it went on masked,
it went on restricted, it went on all that kind of thing. And to us, who aren't in New York City,
most of us watching and listening, we always thought like those areas probably are really
going through it because there's so many people, so densely populated and probably
so unprepared.
Like, you know, it was it was really interesting. Marlon Smith, the head of Urban Outdoor Survival,
which again is a it's it's now based in New Jersey, but it's, you know, a New York, New
Jersey group. And Marlon used to be part of the New York City Preppers group. He said
something that I thought was terrific. He said two things
that I thought were important. The first one he said was, you know what, we have
to stop, when there was all this confusion in terms of, you know, the
government changing policies every day, you know, people, you know, the
government really being overwhelmed
and capable of responding. He said we have to stop listening to these people. You know we have to you know focus on you know ourselves and being more self-reliant
and figuring out what we can do to protect ourselves because you know there is no palvary
coming. Yeah oh yeah that's a huge lesson that a lot of people have to learn. And I
think that more and more people are learning it. But that is a lesson that people had to
learn. I think a lot did learn through 2020 2021 was like, there's no magic. There's no
magic. You know what I mean? There's no group that's going to come FEMA is only so big.
There's only so many people and so many resources. And if it's a, if it's a nationwide situation or worldwide situation,
like pandemic, then it's just,
there's not enough people to help all the people we don't have a whole nother,
you know, population of people going to come and help you in those sorts of
situations. And yeah, no, it was. Yeah. And also, you know,
one of the things that, um, uh, you know, I'll never forget when you were saying that, you know, in. And also, you know, one of the things that, you know, I'll never forget when you
were saying that, you know, in cities, because, you know, we're, we're, we live more, you know,
we're much closer together. That was, you know, definitely a concern because, you know, when people
talk about, you know, the pandemic, and I'm no, no way being dismissive of anybody's experience,
it was a very different scene when you had 18 wheelers,
parked in your neighborhood or the neighborhood adjacent
to you that were being used as morgues,
morgues for Americans.
It's a very, very different scene.
When as a professor, my receiving emails
from students about the loss of their parents,
I have had one student in my class, God bless him,
he lost everyone, He lost everyone.
He lost everyone.
Can you imagine being a young person and losing your parents
and losing your siblings and then losing your aunt and uncle?
How do you get up in the morning?
So all of these personal, very specific things things that people dealt with people lost their jobs, right?
you know, they lost, you know, so, you know a sense of
They I'm gonna say a loss of reality but we entered into a different reality definitely was a loss of reality
Yeah, right. Yeah, what we saw is reality for a long time changed entirely. I I you know, I'm still
Floored you know when I think about some of the things that you know people went through
Excuse me. And also I think you know, they're they're issues and this is just a
sidebar
You know given the changes um, given the fact that it was a pandemic when we lost someone,
we weren't allowed to properly mourn. Yeah, which makes sense for safety reasons. Yes,
a lot of people didn't get closure. And you see a lot of, you know, a lot of stress and
a lot of anxiety and a lot of heartache because of that still. So we're dealing, you know,
with all sorts of things in the post-pandemic world things
I don't even believe that we even realize yet you bring up a good point about the I
Have to explain something that we talked about
back in early 2020 here on PBN when we we were looking at this thing kind of like a lot of people were looking at
it like what what's going on and
looking at this thing kind of like a lot of people were looking at it like what what's going on and
We're lucky enough to have a guy on the network Dave Jones who was nuclear biological and chemical warfare specialist in the army
so as you can imagine he had some good takes on everything and
when we were trying to meter out like
How Like what's the appropriate response because we know, at probably just like your prepper
group in New York, we were never looking up to the government and going, what exactly
should we do here? You know what I mean? We were using the expertise that we had and people
we knew and that kind of thing. But one of the things that Dave said in your comment
about the 18-wheelers, I never heard that before so that's... wow what a thing. But
it raises a very interesting point because one of the things Dave told us
was, you know, if people in your community and people in your neighborhood
start dropping dead, like this was probably January, February when we first
started talking about it, he was using this kind of as a metric. He said that's
that's when things are serious. That's when you really need to start thinking about not leaving the house.
Because we didn't know enough about it yet.
For a lot of our listening audience and a lot of people who we have like 13, 14 hosts
here at PBN, a lot of people who do do shows they don't live in New York City and what I never thought about until just now is
Even their reality was much different like I live in a young neighborhood in the south less population by far than New York
so we didn't have anything remotely looking like
18 Wheeler morgues parked out front of neighborhoods blocks
like 18 Wheeler morgues parked out front of neighborhoods blocks. So Dave's metric, I never thought about this, but Dave's metric can look different in different places. And
that's really important to consider. I never thought about that until you mentioned the
amount of people dead there.
Yeah, the geography is very, you know, very different. And also, it's interesting.
One of the things that I thought was really important
when you say not relying on government,
not waiting on government, one of the things
that the chairman of our department, Andy Beveridge,
did, he had just retired.
But anyway, one of the things that he did was
put together, basically ran a calculation
to show that if our school closed,
how many lives we would save.
Because we were waiting for, yeah.
Which was really important and started
communicating with the chancellor.
And there was one of our professors
reached out to the media and, you know,
basically, you know, trying to network
to convince our school to close early.
And our department actually transitioned online early,
you know, before we had the official go-ahead
because there wasn't anything that we have to say
to our students that, you know,
is worth risking
your life over. You know, so yeah, because a lot of kids in the Queens College area,
we have a very diverse community, and this speaks again to the geographical, you know, differences,
they tend to live within extended families. So by having a young person, even though people were
saying, you know, young people are okay, blah, blah, blah, blah,
you know, in the beginning when they were saying all of that,
having a young person come to our classroom,
you know, catch COVID from someone and bring it home to his or her grandparents,
definitely problematic.
You know, so when you say, you know, that the the people kind of stepping out,
people thinking about what they can do.
There's a variety of ways, right, that when we think back on it, that we all did try to do what we can to help protect and save other people,
which is important because people always think about preppers as isolationist, you know, with people, oh, I don't want, it's just me and mine. And I would argue that, you know, they certainly served as important
information resources, you know, providing, you know,
help, advice, support, and goods when people needed them.
Yeah, definitely. Yeah, you're opening my eyes up to this thing that I think comes
from, I think some things in the prepper community certainly come from
Overwhelmed and I think one of the things is big cities and
You're you're opening my eyes up to this fact that there's a lot of information
To glean and there's a lot of good information
when it comes to looking into big city disaster response because I think a lot of a lot of people in our
community just kind of write big cities off you know what I mean and in in doing
so we don't pay attention to the things that you're saying right now you know we
don't yeah we might just say well you know they're in New York they're
screwed you know what I mean that kind of thing or thank God I'm not there or something along those lines and
There's a lot there's yeah, there's a lot that you guys have to handle and a lot that you probably learned
going through this that
We just didn't even wrap our head around a lot of people, you know
Most people maybe not most people but a lot of people didn't wrap their head around a lot of people, you know, most people, maybe not most people, but a lot of people didn't wrap their head around. Yeah, that's a very interesting take. Yeah, it's, you know,
the idea of, again, you know, referring to Marlon, one of the things that he said was,
I think you put it best, he said, you know what, my neighbors, you know, really haven't talked to me
in five years. But then all of a sudden, you know, the pandemic rises and everyone's texting me.
I had no idea they even had my number, you know, and now that I did happen here.
Yeah, yeah, right. Me too.
You know, everybody's you know, I'm everyone's best friend.
But, you know, but the idea was, you know, and he said, and I didn't.
I wanted people to to to hear me and I wanted to help people.
Certainly I didn't wanna do it under duress,
but I didn't want it to be in the moment.
I wanted people to seek me out earlier,
but I'm glad that I did.
Sure.
Glad that I made me glad that he was helpful to people
and he was glad that they reached out
But like you said we all had those, you know those experiences
I mean, we definitely had
people reach out as neighbors
You probably too who didn't know there were
Benefits included, you know what I mean?
Like people who didn't know anything about my background or anything like that who reached out and just said if you need anything
You know reach out. Let me know I had more than one neighbor have that conversation with me and I thought wow
that's pretty cool because
You know, they they're probably not as prepared for this as I am and they're reaching out to help. That's a good thing
Yeah
And in one of the interesting things that you know people't think about in terms of the city was that there were people, again, independent preppers who had organized within their apartment building a help network, who already had sort of things in plan, things,
but who were already, Preppers, already thinking about,
what can we do as an apartment building
to help one another as a community?
So that's something that people don't think about
because whenever there's a disaster,
we were all thinking what, that there was gonna be
some horrible thing and we were all gonna have
to flee the city, right?
Fortunately, Preppers prepared for both circumstances,
bugging out and bugging in, right? all going to have to flee the city. Right? Fortunately, preppers prepared for both circumstances,
bugging out and bugging in. Right? So the thing was, you know, there were some apartment buildings
where things were, you know, where things were already set in place to help people.
You know, there were preppers there who, you know, could, you know, provide advice and
a sense of, I don't want to say control,
because certainly there's a level of unpredictability
in any disaster, but kind of a sense of calm.
A sense of stability, I think is the perfect word.
And that was needed everywhere, not just in New York.
But New York was tough.
We were the cities, excuse me,
we were the country's epicenter and within New York,
we were also the epicenter,
we also had our own epicenter within an epicenter.
The hotspot for us for quite a while, you know,
was, you know, Queens.
And, you know, we saw hospitals overwhelmed.
I think that what happened to us as a microcosm is a good,
and this is why I wrote about it,
a really good case study
of really how challenging the pandemic was in one geographic area where they kind of
experienced all the things that could go wrong.
Yeah. Well, that's it. And I hope that lesson isn't lost. I guess that's kind of listening to you and thinking about your books.
That's kind of exactly what comes to mind is if you have these books, then you can be reminded,
and people do need to be reminded that no matter what the outcomes were, long-term, now we're years
away looking back and all that kind of stuff, it is important to know that this likely will happen again in terms
of pandemic and we have a serious amount of knowledge now to figure out like how to better
manage it, you know, and I hope the general population took a little bit of note as well,
not just government and you know medical and all that, but then you know there's I mean I'd
love your thoughts on this you know at the end of the day there's only so much
storage space for stuff in terms of the medical response there's only so much
budget line item budget for certain things and medicines there's no way of
knowing what you're gonna need in advance so there's no matter how good
the government gets or the medical establishment
gets at responding to things, there's so much unknown with pandemics. It's like you almost
have to have that built-in bug in, wait for things to level out sort of timeframe and
plan built in, don't you think?
Yes, yes. And I think that that for preppers,
I think it's that, you know, given your lifestyle, given what you think about, there's a sense of
a resolve that people have and understanding a bit more patience with the difficult. Yeah, I think.
And you know, New York, we're the land of immediate gratification. You can have what you want whenever you want it.
24 hours a day.
Right.
And, you know, we're, we're the place of pleasure and vice.
And, and so I think that it was a real challenge, you know, not necessarily
for preppers, but for some people to realize, okay, hold on, I have to slow down.
I can't have what I want.
You know, I have to first back up for a moment
and think, what do I need?
Right?
That's a whole, yeah, that's a whole different,
you know, a whole different mindset.
I think that,
let me explain it this way.
When I first started doing this research,
people used to always, they still do it,
but now, you know, I understand. People would always like corner me at, this way, when I first started doing this research, people used to always, they still do it. But now, you know, I understand, people would always like corner me
at, you know, you know, if I'm at the pub having a
drink or a cocktail party, you know, some, some
whatever social situation, people would always corner
me when they are still do, when they find out, you
know, that I study prepping. And they always want to
talk with me about, and I don't mean preppers, I mean, not, you know, people who don't prep,
they always want to talk with me about what I'm doing, what I'm worried about.
Right. And then they want to share. Yeah. What they, you know,
what they're thinking about doing or have done.
And what I realized was, you know, it's also too, for some people,
many people like an issue of control. If they feel like they always wanted like the okay, you know, yeah, you're
going to be just fine, you know, but you can't guarantee that you can do the best that you
can. You know, when the crazy thing about New York is that, you know, with the start
of this, you know, 21st century, New York has encountered, and I even have a chart in both of my books,
every single category of disaster
that preppers worry about,
from finance to natural disasters,
to pandemic, to technological,
to the great recession, all of it.
And it takes a certain amount of hustle
to be able to respond to that.
And like you said, it's not really about stacking up things
in your home.
It's about being able to just kind of mentally
go the distance.
So one of the things that was interesting for me
in doing this research and when attending online meetings
and speaking with other preppers was
that there was this huge huge
I'm gonna say unexpected
Outcome and that was that preppers also were provided emotional support to one another and that doesn't mean that they were
Weak, you know, but somebody loses their jobs. Certainly they want to talk about it, you know, go money, unless, you know,
you're one of the H and W preppers, you know, it's, it's going to disappear.
Right.
Yeah.
You know, so the, yeah.
So, so that people could, you know, um, uh, could lean on, you know, each other
because there certainly were, you know, dark, you know, dark times.
Um, one of the things that I talk about in the book
and one of the reasons why I wrote the book is that,
someone said to me, I was at an event last week
and someone said, yeah, I don't know if I really,
I mean, it was a beautiful sunny day, so I totally got it.
And they found out, they realized
that I'd just published a book.
And they said, what's it about?
And I explained and they said, I don't wanna read anything dark about the pandemic.
I wanna forget all about that.
And then I thought, you know what, that's the problem.
We can't, we can't.
Because the Contagion, that movie with Matt Damon.
Oh yeah.
That was the most downloaded movie.
It was a book became a blockbuster again in 2020.
Even though that movie was so old because people were trying to learn.
Right.
And in the book, you know, look, the pandemic, if I had to say in a sentence, affected all
of us, right?
Everything from the ordinary to the sacred.
Definitely.
And that's what we need to think about.
Yeah.
Yeah, and look at all possibilities that way.
You know?
And the bristling against the building
of fortified communities, I guess,
is because of the prepper stigma and that kind of thing.
But it really does just seem like we've I guess is because of the prepper stigma and the you know that kind of thing, but
It really does just seem like
We've reached a point as a society where we are capable of doing this
You know what? I mean like we don't need to look to the past and and say well We never had to do it that way before or this is the way we used to do it
like I do think that where we're at with preparedness in general and probably some homesteading as well is like
We need to get more creative about what?
What a regular community should look like and be capable of and not look to the good old days or anything like really get
Imaginative and say if we could set up the communities
Perfectly for the next pandemic like what would that look like communities in new york communities and you know, wherever it doesn't matter
But what should it look like?
you know because I think people really get get hung up in like this is what a community is and what it's capable of
In compared to like a comparison comparing it to communities of old or something like that instead of thinking like with all the technology
With all the information that we have now
What could it really like how how fortified can a community be for disaster?
Because one thing we know and is they're coming, you know, I mean they always come they're gonna keep coming
It doesn't matter if it's a pandemic or whatever it is, you know
I remember seeing the the hurricane Sandy and being like I never
You know, I remember seeing the the hurricane Sandy and being like I never
Never crossed my mind that that island could flood like that and then you say it out loud and you go Oh, yeah, it's an island. Probably floods pretty bad from time to time, you know
It usually doesn't and that's yeah scary thing and I think that's what fools, you know, that's that that's what fools people
Um, I think that you've made an excellent point,
and I would like to add an example to it. When you were talking about, you know, trying to figure out
how the language I would use to be, would be to move forward, to take a look at what a prepared
community would look like. One of the things that preppers, just like the rest of the world discovered that when it came to
educating their children, okay, that, you know, they're not experts, right?
And the trouble was, you know, with, you know, kids learning from home, what did we discover?
We were reminded of the significance of the digital divide, right?
The fact that, you know, the kids who could continue to do well in school
were the kids who had technology, who had high-speed internet access, right? And who
could attend classes via Zoom, right? As Preppers, we're thinking we're not going to have, you know,
in terms of the training, think always back to basics, right? Not the fact that you're
going to be stuck in a place, but in terms of technology, it's still going to be available,
right? And so we need to think about that as well. What would we need, you know, to, again,
people have learned, I hope, you know, this, you know, this lesson, you know, because when you're
thinking about packing your bug out bag, you're thinking about leaving, right? When you're thinking
about bug, bugging in, you're thinking about store, you know, stores, you're thinking about packing your bug out bag, you're thinking about leaving, right? When you're thinking about bug, bugging in,
you're thinking about store, you know, stores,
you're thinking about food, you're thinking about medicine.
You're not thinking about, you know, a surface tablet,
you know, a Chromebook, you know,
you're not thinking about high speed internet.
How is your child going to learn?
You're not thinking that at all.
But we certainly realized, you know,
that that was something, you know
So when we think about a fortified community, uh, we would think we apparently need to think about access to technology
Certainly, you know what we because we know what to do if we don't have it
But if the world's moving on that's part of being fortified, right? Right. Yeah
I think it also in the same vein open people's eyes up to oh
What happens when we have to react to this
Education system, which is also a meal system Which is also a babysitter so that I can go work and my wife can go work and not have to think about it
For you know, six hours a day whatever it is that the kids at school after care before care all that
there's a huge infrastructure that was set up so that everybody could go to work and make lots of
money and immediately when the pandemic hit I mean I worked from home thank god so it didn't
really affect us at all but lots of people out there in the world had to go oh well I need
someone at home with the kids now you know what what I mean? That was a yeah, that was a serious figuring out and I saw I was lucky enough that I worked at our dining room table
And my son who was in my other my youngest was in preschool, which actually they never closed and then the um
The my son who was in grade school at the time was doing the digital
uh learning
And he just did it right next to me at the table. So that
was really cool. But what I heard a lot of were kids who were lying about being home
alone and he was in third grade and it was very clear that they were home alone. They
weren't paying attention and the teacher would sometimes ask, could you go get your mom and
they would work around that with
pre-planned lines. You know what I mean? You could tell that mom and dad is in the shower.
Yeah, something along those lines. And it really opened my eyes to that. Like, I felt
really bad because I realized everybody in that house is in a bind that's unimaginable.
Right? I've got to leave you here because I've got to go to work. You've got to learn.
You've got to do your best here.
I got hopefully some kind of meal plan set up for you so you can eat easy
lunches, that kind of stuff. And it was just like,
all that was pulled out from under people too. And they were just, you know,
and that's something you can hardly even prepare for really, even as a prepper,
unless you make massive career change in order to be available all the time and be at home.
But yeah, those things we, those things I think do get overlooked and forgotten pretty quick.
Yeah, you've made an excellent observation. I think also,
babysitting like you said, this is what your child does.
So you go out and earn money in that moment.
It was a big challenge.
But also, too, for poor communities,
and you hit on this.
Sometimes that's two meals a day.
Oh, yeah.
You know, breakfast and lunch.
And so there was access to proper nutrition.
There were a lot of kids who were already hungry even hungrier
which
Yeah, that was a tough one. I don't know how they handle it in new york. They handled it pretty well here in richmond
there was deliveries and stuff like that, but
Yeah, I mean i'm sure there were communities all over the place where yeah, just kind of like whoop. I guess i'll go hungry today
All over the place where yeah, I'm just kind of like whoop. I guess I'll go hungry today
Yeah, well James remember when we would saw you know, you know across the nation all those cars in line to get oh, right Yeah, remember that was terrible. Yeah, you know, yeah, that was terrible. I remember
in then
You know in in the city and of course what happened a lot of in this again, you know, gets the idea of,
you know, not, you know, government and, you know, nonprofits, you know, can't, you know,
can't solve all because you started to have, you know, food pantries be closed, which led to
increase the, you know, the pain that people were feeling because, you know, that they weren't open
because of COVID. They didn't have enough laborers, so they couldn't distribute food. They couldn't collect and distribute food, which made things, you know, even,
you know, even more challenging. One of the things that we did at Queens College, which when I say
we, I wasn't a part of this, but I thought that this was really, really, really amazing, was that,
because people don't really think about college kids, right? We think about elementary and we think about,
and what they did was they put together a mobile pantry
and you could, and it was basically a food truck
that would drive to your neighborhood
and help supply groceries to your family
if you were part of the Queens College community.
I wonder how many other colleges did,
probably plenty of them and we don't know. I mean, like a lot of you
know, with the hurricanes is that with hurricane, hurricanes
that hit North, you know, North Carolina, all that devastation,
you know, in the south, there were southern schools that came
and helped like Lake Forest, you know, certainly helped, you
know, there were college kids who went out and did things. So
when we think about resilience, I think we're, we're all really thinking about it. And you know, preppers are at the front line for, you know, being conduits for change and for information resources for leadership.
open and those grooves well greased so that in a situation like that we say fire up the grocery bus again.
We have that plan in place.
That's probably a good thing and probably something we shouldn't forget because it's
trauma.
It is trauma.
So people automatically think put it behind you move on type of thing and there's a lot
to be left.
But the third third I don't
want to call it like the third part of your latest book but you it's broken
into class resilience and sheltering in place and I wanted to know if you had
what kind of you know best takes you had with the sheltering in place that you
learned from people or that you yourself experienced or wrote about in the book.
Because it is, I mean, I always talk about it, you know,
bugging out is cool and good to have a plan and all that kind of stuff.
But we've been through a lot over my lifetime and sheltering in place is what people do. You know what I mean?
The vast majority of people go, I'm staying home and we're going to weather
this storm as long as we can.
It's not like a legion of people bug out every time
Something bad happens. So I'd be interested in your
Takes on that. I think the important thing it to remember too is it costs money to bug out
You need somewhere to go especially if you have a family and not everyone has you know safe, you know
Safe houses, you know risk are you? Yeah, it is it is definitely risky. In terms of best takeaway, the best takeaway is always of course, to be prepared, right? You know, just, you know, don't you know, you have a stash of N95 masks, don't throw them away, keep them, right? You know, the idea of, of
of not being complacent.
And I guess, you know, I don't think preppers rely too much on their laurels, you know?
I think that, you know, it's,
people are always trying to figure out what they can change,
you know, what they can improve.
In terms of best takeaways,
things that people did really well,
I think would be the exchange of providing mutual
aid to one another, both preppers and non-preppers. I think that we saw really how important that
was.
That's a good one, yeah.
Yeah, for sure. And then I also think, too, rethinking home. And when I say rethinking,
in some ways, this is almost about homesteading. One of the things that I thought was really interesting that New
Yorker preppers were good at because they live in small spaces, they're
either used to reimagining things and being able to quickly pivot. In other
words say, okay this corner now this is going to be the school, you know, this is
going to be, you know, the idea of being able to you know, think quickly and you know to
reimagine, you know
Your home was huge that was yeah. It was yeah, I remember firsthand going through that. Yeah
The gyms closed that became a big thing, you know now we need a gym in our little house
You know, I mean, I don't live in a mansion. So it was like, where are we going to put that at?
Right, right, right.
But that's a great point.
Yeah, and I think, again, creativity and ingenuity,
I really do think that that's a best takeaway.
One of the coolest things that I saw with the pandemic
was having school outside at the start and at the end of the pandemic was having school outside,
at the start and at the end of the pandemic,
walking down the street and seeing the street closed off
and it being just classrooms.
Oh, that's sweet.
I never heard of that either.
Yeah, it was super.
I mean, it was super cool.
The idea of thinking outside of the box that
way. Yeah. And you're trying to better understand, I would say better coming together as a community.
Like for example, one of the things that has changed about the East Village, which is near
where I live, one of the things that has started is there now some community fridges.
So in the event, because of course people had lost jobs
and people wanted to donate,
but you know, food pantries were closed
and people wanted to help each other.
So they would establish in, you know,
a certain small business,
our certain area and actual refrigerator
and then dry goods where people could come
and pick up, drop stuff off and pick stuff up
without contacting one another.
I mean, without contracting something.
And that's the state.
That innovation is-
It's the pandemic.
We didn't hear enough about that innovation in New York.
No, no.
Yeah, no, we didn't.
And it was, you know, and it was,
when I pull out all these good,
these wonderful things that sounds so sweet
and so charming and it sounds like Mayberry, and there was, believe it or not, a certain
extent of that.
But there were also times where it was really scary.
Like we decided it was very hard to get, you know, again, we had a big regular size freezer
in our apartment, even though it took up a lot of space. And
we had, you know, you know, a thing, but you know, every once in a while, we would need to, you know, go out and get things. And
grocery store closest to us. You know, they weren't taking care of their employees, they didn't have proper, you know, proper
and have proper protection. So we walked a mile to the grocery store.
And during that mile, there were areas
that were once very safe, miles nothing.
I'm walking a mile, I've seen nothing really.
It's just a few blocks in the city.
But the whole point was there were some areas
that you had to avoid because there were people
just sitting out in what would have been
of a really affluent area
in certain sections just sitting in, getting high,
taking heroin, shooting up.
So you had to avoid that kind of stuff.
So routes changed and parts of the city changed,
and you had to be aware of that and make plans around that.
Yeah.
I mean, in our apartment building, be aware of that and make plans around that. Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, in our apartment building,
I think by the end of March, early April,
there were, I think, 15 apartments on the floor
and there were only three occupied.
Wow.
Yeah.
So a lot of people left, you know,
a lot of people who were affluent left.
Yeah.
You know? And that's, yeah. And that's a whole nother thing. Yeah, so a lot of people left, you know, a lot of people who were affluent left. Yeah.
Yeah, and that's a whole other thing.
But, oh, and in terms of education, you know, I think that the best takeaway would be, you
know, trying to make sure that you have technology set up for your child and that you, in the
event there's no technology, that you have textbooks from the actual grade grade so that
they can keep on doing what they're supposed to
Which yeah, there's some I wish I had them right here in arm's length
But there's some great books that I bought in the beginning of that year 2020. They were I
Want to say they were a hundred and twenty days learning. I think that's what the title was or something like that
It was something along those lines and they have them for every grade
You know what I mean? And I figured
At the very least, you know
If what I was thinking is if school closes and everything's done and I'm teacher or my wife's teacher
We can at least have these books that have paperwork in them
You know worksheets and that kind of stuff and then also be primed with you know
We can expand on it just being you know, worksheets and that kind of stuff, and then also be primed with, you know, we can expand on it, just being, you know, people, adults teaching what would have
been a third grader at the time, you know what I mean? So having those, and they're
super cheap. That's the big thing about it. I think they were like 15 bucks, something
like that, 15 bucks, and it had every day planned out. They still sell them on Amazon.
Maybe I'll link to them down in the show description for the
listeners
They have every you know a day today Monday do this is this and this type of thing you can buy them for social studies
Math science all that kind of stuff and they just seemed like the best answer at the time just in case you know to have those
Yeah, and and that could be you know
civil unrest that could be economic whatever know, civil unrest, that could be economic, whatever the
situation is, if you think that education is going to be affected, they're a good little secondary
option for sure. Yeah, that's a good, yeah, that's good. And one of the things that we're doing,
speaking of the post-pandemic world, one of the things that we're seeing now is, you know,
unfortunately, the effects that, you know, the pandemic has had on
our students in terms of, you know, their ability to read and write. Yeah. Oh, for sure. Yeah, that's,
you know, that's a whole can of worms. It is. It is. And that's just something that we, you know,
have to, you know, contend with. Yeah, no doubt about it. So, where do you get your books
Yeah, no doubt about it. So you're where do you get your books if people want to buy them?
Well, you know, that's a good The best advice that I have and I'm not you know
Remember I teach you know at the college level the advice that I would
Would do is to take note of the textbook that they have at the beginning of the semester
You can order these on Amazon. You can rent these you know, you know, I mean your book. Oh
My book. Oh my book
Yeah, both. I'm so worried about my student. Yeah
Yeah, my book. Thank you so much. My book is available on Amazon. It's available in Barnes & Noble
Yeah, they can search it out there. You'll find it. Yeah, it's I wasn't sure if it was an educational
exclusively or not right no no it's not it's available on Amazon and you can get it is from the e the ebook and the paperback are of course are
you know substantially cheaper so it'd probably be it'd probably be best to
search your author title right Anna Marie Bounds yeah yeah yeah yeah Anna
Maria Bounds yes and on Amazon and I also have a website which is Anna Maria Bounds dot com.
Okay, there you go.
Yeah. And that will bring you to a link to yeah, no, bring it.
Yes. And it'll bring you to, you know, a link to purchase the book.
I'm is our time over.
I'm so sorry. This is a wonderful interview and I'm learning so much.
I mean, it doesn't have to be over, but it's over.
It's over. And if we, you know, if you need to stop recording, that's okay.
But there is something that I want. I would like to hear from from you about, and I would like us to talk a little bit about the current uncertainty that we have about the US economy, the moment that we're in and how what you think are some good strategies.
And, you know, I'd like to talk about, you know, this is something that everyone needs
to be concerned about, you know, whether you, you know, voted for the president or you didn't
vote for the president.
You know, this is a very extremely stressful time.
You know, these these the possibility of these upcoming tariffs.
And this is what we get, you know,, there's now talk of of a recession and you
There's a lot to be concerned about in terms of how you prepare your family for a moment like this and what you do
One thing I would do right off the bat is
That our word you just live in that our word to be honest with you
Because that thing comes up every other week anymore doesn't matter who's but seems like the last I don't know 12 years of my life
We've been on the brink
Whenever I like we're on the brink of something for so long that it's driving you crazy
You've got to just get it out of the vocab, you know what I mean?
We're on the brink of a recession forever. So then prepare like there you're in a recession
You know what? I mean, that's just it like the I'm always thinking about
You know what I mean? That's just it like the I'm always thinking about
The the things that you can bring into the fam into the household the things that you can grow and raise for the household I think those are good places to start
One of the things that's really helped and I'm not everybody's receptive to this kind of stuff
But it is it it has changed dramatically And I always recommend it to our audience is, um, when I was young and you,
you went thrift shopping, you were like rummaging through trash.
You know what I mean?
And it was really weird.
And it was one of those things where it was like, I don't even know
if I want to tell people when you go thrift shopping now.
You're thrift shopping in 2025 America, which is, you know, I wore it once
and send it to the thrift. I never used it and it
stayed in the box and sent it to the thrift. So like if you're really hard pressed, like thrift
shop, go to the thrift stores in your area, you'll be surprised. It's not what it was even 10 years
ago. So many people have so much crap. We buy so much crap and most of it just winds up either in
the trash or at these places and
I mean, there's just so many things there
I go to a thrift shop where you can have any you can buy any book you want for like a dollar or two dollars
And it doesn't matter how new it is hard back doesn't matter
$2 that you and once you start doing that
I'm not saying you know go buy your next pair of shoes at the thrift store
but like once you start doing that it it totally breaks you down from going and spending
$35 on a book or something like that. You know what I mean that that doesn't mean that much to you. You're like
Oh my god, like I need spoons
I'm go to the thrift shop and get spoons instead of buying a four pack of spoons from Target for $40 or whatever it is
and get spoons instead of buying a four pack of spoons from Target for $40 or whatever it is.
So, you know, integrating those as you talked about with like lifestyle and those kinds of things, I think integrating preparedness into your lifestyle is a good first step because
look, the CEOs of Target and Walmart are already talking about the fact that this is going to be
tough. You know what I mean? That they're in two to three months, we're going to see the effects of what's happening with tariffs
and so on.
And that's a great window.
Like you said, don't rest on your laurels at this moment,
because that's a great window to do something about it.
At the very least, you can figure out,
what am I going to need in the next two to three months
and beyond?
What's fall going to look like?
What's maybe Christmas going to look like? That's you know, maybe christmas gonna look like that kind of thing if things go real bad
And you can get a head start on it, you know, and so much of prepping is
foreshadowing
You know what? I mean so much of it is being able to say
We we kind of know where things are gonna go and if we overdo it
What's the big deal like they say you just bought all your Christmas
presents in the summer.
You know what I mean?
Or a good chunk of them.
December comes along and you're just like, sweet.
I can just go to the light shows.
Exactly.
I can actually have fun rather than fight for a parking space.
But no matter how you look at it tariffs or no tariffs, we're in the we're in a massive
rebuild of whatever
manufacturing it's clear that like the
Manufacturing in America is a thing and we want to bring it back and even if we bring it back
We don't know if it'll go a hundred percent. Well, you know what I mean? So I think we're just in a time of serious
well, you know what I mean? So I think we're just in a time of serious makeover here in the United States and every step of that's gonna be fraught with peril.
It's sort of like, you know, look at the country as a like a business that's
that's changing in a big way. Like we're having this major change in our business.
Well, you know, there's gonna be some instability, there's gonna be some things
that work, some things that really don't work. And, you know, the difference is, of course, a business has its working
capital that it can pull off of. And for us, it's us, you know, it's what do we
have? So yeah, it's, it's a lifestyle thing. You have to treat it as a lifestyle
thing. It's not a let me prep real quick for this thing and then stop prepping.
And then, you know, believe it or not, we have a ton of people right now i don't know if you're this plugged in that you felt this or not but we
maybe not so much going into the summer with everything that's happening plus the wars but
on at the beginning of the year we call it the trump slump in the prepper community that's what
we call it the trump slump because it happened in 2016 too. But, um,
probably all the way up until March, like traffic to, um,
regular prepping blogs, our podcasts, um,
you know, anybody who's selling sort of prepper centric stuff,
they all were complaining. They're like, man, traffic's so down. It's so down.
It's crazy. Like, like they're, they, people think everything is saved.
You know what I mean?
And we got to be aware of that no matter who's in power because it's not that easy.
It's not, if it was as easy as putting one guy in power and everything's fine, then we
would Caesar it.
You know what I mean?
And we would have a good life.
But you know,
Yeah, no, certainly.
That's certainly not the case.
Yeah. I, you know, I agree with you. It's funny. I love thrift stores too. You know, it's, it's kind
of, it's, it's, it's kind of a treasure hunt. It's fun. And it's a very, and it's a very different
game. Like you said, like when I was a kid, you know, I was interested, you know, I considered
myself, although I was probably more of a nerd than anything, like a punk rocker. So I would go and
try and find cool clothes. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeahift store. But now I'm like, oh, hold on.
This still has the price tags on it. This is amazing. Yeah. So I definitely get...
So I think that one of the interesting things that the preppers are doing, and I think a lot
of the mainstream community right now,
given their anxiety about the economy,
is they're definitely saving more.
And when I say saving more, they're doing things,
holding off major purchases,
are buying something right now,
before the tariffs kick in that they think
they might really need it.
Also, doing things like, we used to think about gold
money, right? But someone used a phrase that I think is really
great. Stay afloat money.
That's a good one. Yeah. Yeah. And you know, and increasing,
you know, you know, adding to that, you know,
you know, another good one, too, outside of the thrift and the
prepping community didn't have anything to do with this
But it's the by nothing communities
There yes, and I think yes. Yes the gifting communities and I think that I actually might
Write about those because that's very important, you know people
You know
Not just donating things that they no longer need, but the idea of being able to put,
I don't know, are you a member of one of them?
Mom, my wife is, I am not.
Oh yeah, so it's incredible.
Like, you know, my neighborhood here in the city
in Stuyvesant, you could say, hey, you know,
you can say, I would, you know,
I really need a ladder for today.
You know, I need this, I need that, you know,
in the community response, you know,
and they'll say, oh, I have this,
you can come by and get it. You know, again, you know, in the community response, you know, and they'll say, oh, I have this, you can come by and get it.
You know, again, you know, it's just like people,
what people did previously, right?
And there was some moment where we kind of missed that,
you know, we got, we became so, I'll say,
self-obsessed that we forgot how helpful
and kind we can be to one another.
And I think these gifting communities for sure. I, um, last week I was going on travel and I had some, you know, a lot of organic
groceries still in my refrigerator. So I just put out a note and someone came and
picked them up. They didn't go to waste. Right, yeah. And again, those things
also work really well because we have so much stuff that we don't use or we have used so little.
It's unbelievable. So you can find the thing that exactly you need literally for free in these communities.
And it's something someone's hardly ever used. And they probably are tripping over it saying, I got to find a place for this.
This has to go to storage or it has to go up in the attic. I got to put it under the house, whatever the situation is. And you know, it's just, yeah, there's, like I said, there's just that
that whole vision of what a community could look like to work together and to work with
each other outside of because really, I think the main symptom, Anna is the convenience
of the commodification of everything and the convenience that was
kind of brought on to us, I guess, through the latter 50s, 60s, and then built enormous,
right?
To the point where people decided, we don't need people, we need Walmart.
You know what I mean?
We don't need each other.
We need what Target has, what Kmart has.
They have everything I need.
I don't need anything from them
Like we were really brainwashed for a species that depended on each other for so long
We were really brainwashed pretty quick to be like we don't need the people
We just need the places that sell the things that I want, you know until they go away
Yeah until they go away then you're like, oh, whoa
So wait, yeah and in writing my um and writing my first um my first
book one of the things that um when we think about fortified communities that i think we need to
reconsider was the fact that they use the basement for bomb shelters and they just didn't use them
for bomb shelters they use them to store extra, you know, extra food
for the apartment building for the community itself. You know, but now, you know, they're
used to storage areas and you can rent that out. But there's something to be said for that,
you know, having, you know, items available, you know, for everybody, you know, in the, you know,
in the building, at least to be helpful, not necessarily that you can feed everyone forever.
That's not possible, you know, but there was there was some kind of an important community
component there that was was lost.
You know, the fact that there was, you know, there was equipment that was medicine, there
were food stores, all this just rotted, you know, it was rotated out, it was thrown away.
But we don't think, you know, we don't think that way anymore, which is a real, but I hope that you and I, you know, through today that we're,
we're changing the world.
Oh, there's no doubt about it.
Yeah.
There's no doubt about it.
We, one of the things that will probably my favorite thing about what we do here
at PBN is we get emails, we get, uh, you know, texts and messages through different messaging
apps that people real people telling us what they've done over the last three
years listening to us and how their lives are changed because of it you know
so it definitely has an effect there's no doubt about it people hear it people
see what you're doing and hear what you're writing about and they take
action not everybody takes action but there's a certain amount of people that
take action and it changes them you know just the sheer anxiety the sheer anxiety that
must go down from being completely unprepared in a moment like this to having basic preparedness
looking at the world the way it is right now has to be i mean we talk about mental health in this
country so much like it should go mental health preparedness, you know what I mean?
Yeah, you've made a good point I mean, you know we have now my
My colleague Chris Elliott does uses FEMA research and he's showing that
You know to analyze what he calls prepared citizens the number of people who do some level of
prepping. And I think about 20 million now.
But of course, it's growing, you know, those are documented, you know, documented people. And again,
there's plenty that we don't know about. But like you said, I think you really, and today talked about the idea of prepping being an expression of self-reliance
and mutual dependency all at once.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a good point.
Yeah, it works both ways for sure.
Well, Anna, that was phenomenal conversation.
Thank you.
We'd love to have you back anytime you'd like to come back.
New book releases or anything along those lines, you know
I mean we make we make room for guests all the time because everybody's got a good take, you know
Well, well, I appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you so much. I learned as you know, a great deal today and the most
important thing is I've kind of
I've got that good vibe that oh, you know reassurance that you know, we're all out, you know, you know, you know doing things and
and uh
Trying to help one another
I'll tell you well, i'll talk to you about something after we finish up that I think you would really like
All right
All right folks
It was a pleasure everyone. Thank you. Good luck with your preps.
Anna Maria Bounds, ladies and gentlemen, get her books.
Alright, we will see you on the other side. Adios.