The Prepper Broadcasting Network - The Strange Truth: Prepping is Peace of Mind
Episode Date: April 26, 2024@PBNLinks | Linktree...
Transcript
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Visit FireEdge.org today. Thank you. Welcome to episode 8 of The Strange Truth.
I'm your host, Carl B.
I just want to say, you know, welcome to PBN.
And I hope that after listening to this podcast, you know, if you're new, you will check out the network,
prepperbroadcasting.com, that you'll go to the website and check it out.
There's a lot of resources there in every aspect of prepping. You know, it supports the preparedness lifestyle.
There's lots of, you know, live shows that you can listen to pretty much every night.
You can go and check out the schedule. And, you know, we've got some good people on.
Every Tuesday, we've got Ryan Buford and Colin Buford, Next Generation.
They talk about anything prepping and they test things as well.
So you'll be able to check that out.
On Wednesday nights, we've got our intrepid commander james walton
and he you know he discusses anything from really important social issues to uh anything prepping
um uh we have dnd on thursday um and, you know, anything, gunsmithing, firearms, um, you know, tactics,
uh, you know, Thursday is the, is the time to tune in.
On Fridays, we've got, um, Dave Jones, the NBC guy.
Um, you know, NBC means nuclear, biological, and chemical.
And, uh, you know, Dave is, Dave is, as I like to call him,
he's a fountain of information.
And he always has some really interesting projects
that he's doing, prepping projects.
So it's always pretty cool listening to what's going on with Dave.
And on Friday, we've got Jordan, Jay Fergie,
with a family affair.
More prepping tips.
You know, just a lot of information
on really smart things that you can do
to get yourself prepared for emergencies.
On Sundays, we've got Stephen Menking.
You know, if you want to hear the Lord, the word of the Lord,
you can tune in on Sundays, and Stephen usually has some really good insights into anything biblical and a really good sermon
that really is a great way to begin your week.
Tuesdays, we've got Future Dad and Ben Cochran on the Patriot Power Hour.
They discuss anything like what's going on socially as
well as economics, right?
I always listen to them because there's always some really good economic analysis of what's
going on with our economy.
analysis of what's going on with our economy. And if that's your area of interest,
I would encourage you to tune in on Tuesdays
and get your information.
So there's a lot of stuff on PBN,
a little bit of everything for everyone,
as well as the articles.
And you can become a member where you have even more access you can join the continuity and that way you can
even you can you know you can you can make contacts and and it's a lot of fun
so there's a lot going on in PBN every night and during the days you can tune in and get the daily audio caches um
and usually that's you know they they they tell you what's what's going to be happening during the
um during the rest of the day like who's going to be on probably what they're going to be talking
about so if you kind of want to get a little bit of a head start, a little bit of information
on what might be on on a certain day, then you can listen to the daily audio caches as
well.
So there's a lot going on in PBN and I encourage you to take a look at the website and please
pass these, um,
podcasts around. Uh, you know, if, if, if there's someone that you, that you know that,
you know, would love to get into prepping and, and they might be on the fence about it, um,
you know, uh, go through, uh, the podcasts and, uh, and, uh, you'll, I'm sure that you'll find something that you can share with them that
might help them to get themselves started.
Today's topic is why prepping is peace of mind.
It's an important one and we're going to do a deep dive into this topic tonight.
I want to talk about this because I think that a lot of times people get into prepping
because there's some anxiety about something, right?
Something has got the spider senses tingling, right?
My inner nerd there, you know, Spider-Man, right?
gotten, you know, someone's attention and they decide to start to, or they decide that they might need to do something to either protect themselves, their loved ones, to harden their
lives a little bit, to have some kind of plan, you know, if there's an emergency. And a lot of times people do, it's usually an anxiety-driven thing
to actually get into prepping.
But the healthy thing is
once, I guess, you get to a specific point in your preps,
then you should be able to begin to relax and, you know, with that understanding
that you've done what you need to do, uh, to, to, uh, plug that hole in your life, right? Um,
that preparedness, uh, you know, that preparedness hole in your life, that aspect of your life now is as solid as you
can get it. So, if there's anyone out there right now, if you're new to prepping and you're still a
little anxious, I just want to encourage you to look at what you've probably already done,
okay? Look around, look at the food that you've put away, look at if you've probably already done. Okay? Look around.
Look at the food that you've put away.
Look at if you've gotten animals and you've started raising animals.
If you began sometime last year and you were able to plant a garden and get started on that, producing your own food.
and get started on that, producing your own food, right?
You know, it's all about, you know, I think the bottom line in prepping,
the real bottom line is some sort of self-sufficiency.
Your ability to react when there is an emergency, right? That you're not just frozen or you just don't know
where to begin. If you are a prepper, old or new, I think that you've already crossed that Rubicon.
You know, okay, if something goes down, if something, you know, starts, right, is occurring,
If something starts, is occurring, I think that you already have the mental and in some cases the physical things in place so that you can take care of yourself and your family.
So if you're new, I just want to welcome you to prepping.
If you are an old hand at it, then I say, okay, keep on going.
All right.
And as I said, pass this website around, PBN, right?
Pass it around.
And if you know someone who's on a fence, then try and encourage them to begin. You know, the first step sometimes is usually the hardest
one. And a lot of people are a little jaded by the word prepper, right? Because, you know,
all the strange press that preppers have gotten in the past.
I think that 2020 made everyone a prepper, right?
Most, a lot of people, okay?
I think it certainly woke up a lot of my friends.
You know, you start getting phone calls from people who you would never dream would even be calling, right?
But all of a sudden, they wanted to know how to store water, or they wanted to know how
to store certain foods, and how to start a garden, and everything else, right?
Because it got a little scary last year, especially
when all of this started. I think it made a lot of people, I think it woke up a lot
of people to the possibility that maybe life isn't as solid as it appears to be right um you know uh we do have pretty for the
most part pretty solid lives we get up every day we go to work we we know pretty much where
every day is pretty much going to a certain extent but there is that uncertainty factor too. And I think that a lot of people
got woken up to that uncertainty factor, you know, last year, you know, because of COVID and
everything that was going on. All of a sudden, things that seemed very concrete and certain
were not certain anymore, right? You know, your job wasn't
the same anymore. You know, you would go into a brick and mortar building every day to do your
job. And all of a sudden, you know, you're working from home, and you're doing all your business over
a computer. Life's changed. You know, gone are the days when you could, you know, go to the cinema, you know, or without any issues or, you know, just regular, you know, go to church or, you know, attend a ball game.
You know, regular things got shelved put on the side at least for a while
and uh and if you are if you were one of those people that woke up last year then i say
congratulations to you um you know there's still a lot of people out there that you know i mean
the covid came and it was like a slap, right?
It was like a slap.
And a lot of people went, whoa, right?
They went, oh my goodness, I can't believe this is happening.
And they started looking about them and they started looking at ways that they could protect their family and themselves.
And there's still a lot of people
out there that still didn't take the warning. And if you know someone like that, then maybe
you can convince them. Or if you were someone like that, now you've decided to take that step, I say congratulations to you. You know, it should be about peace of
mind. It shouldn't be about creating more anxiety in your life. Okay? If you find that, instead of more, you know, more calm, you're becoming more agitated, then I say that you're probably going
about it all wrong, okay? You know, sure, there is a definitely, especially when you're getting
started, most likely, right? Because, you know, if all of a sudden, okay, I've got to get,
I got to start storing some food, I've got to figure out my water issues, I've got to,
you know, start prepping my finances. And, you know, you start really start insulating yourself,
you start taking care of these areas in your life that needed a little bit more attention,
taking care of these areas in your life that needed a little bit more attention, then I would say yes.
At first, there might be that anxiety, but if it's gotten to a point where, you know,
you're getting burnout or, you know, you can't sleep at night, you wake up with cold sweats
or something like that, or you're just always focused on the negative things,
the negative things all the time.
You know, you're listening to all these podcasts and you're reading all these websites
and you're getting a little bit more agitated every day,
then maybe you need to take a step back.
Okay? Take a step back.
It's not supposed to be creating more anxiety in your life. It's supposed to be
easing anxiety in your life. And I think that that's the yardstick to use.
If you're going out and you're stocking your pantry and you're feeling good about it, you know, you look at the stuff that you've put away and you realize that, okay, I've got enough here for three months.
If there's an emergency and my family and we need to bunker in or, you know, something to that effect and you're beginning to feel good about it, then you're doing it right.
Okay?
If you're still looking about you and you're still kind of spinning your wheels and you're
becoming more and more agitated, then maybe you need to take a step back.
And that's probably where sometimes it's good to have someone to reach out to.
If there's someone in the prepping community that you can reach out to, that would be the time.
Or if you have a significant other, another person in your life, then maybe you need to reach out to that person
as well, right? It's supposed to be easing anxiety, not creating anxiety, okay? Now,
you know, the preparing a lifestyle is a lifestyle, okay? I just want to say that it is a lifestyle. Once you really get
into it, it's, it's not necessarily something that you, you do and just kind of walk away from.
Okay. Okay. I've got my food and now I'm done. Right. Um, you, because usually it's, it's something where it just becomes a way of life.
And I think that as long as it doesn't get out of control, then you are on the right path.
When you're prepared, you handle emergencies a lot better. Preparing is, you got to think
of it as a kind of insurance, right? That you're paying into. When you put that extra
food aside, it's insurance. When you prep your cars properly and make sure that the maintenance is done on them, it's insurance.
When you put that extra water aside or you make plans, you buy a great filtration system and you make plans,'s insurance against you know hard times right
bad times if they come there's nothing wrong with that and that's the thing i i really want to say
especially to uh you know if to new people and even to the old hands right there's nothing wrong
in anything that we're doing we're just just making sure that if something occurs, then we can handle
it properly. We can handle it correctly. Okay? You know, I think that the person who
lives their life without any kind of insurance, right? They're the ones who are living, they're living
dangerously, right? Because things happen in life, right? I'll use the analogy of car insurance,
right? So you pay into car insurance and, you know, you put that money into that car insurance, right? And if you're a really good
driver, you go for years and nothing occurs. Life, you get through every day driving around
and nothing occurs. And then one day, right, something just comes out of the blue. Somebody just rear-ends you or runs a stoplight
and your car now is totaled, okay? If you've got insurance, you know, as long as you survive,
right? If you've got insurance, then your car will be paid for, at least.
Okay?
Your car will be paid for.
If you have no insurance, you're out of a car and in a lot of trouble.
Right?
And that's what prepping is.
Prepping is insurance.
Now, let's take a look at some of the areas that we prep. And for the new people, anyone listening to that, right, to this right now, well, you know,
there's some areas that we prep, that we tend to concentrate on. Food, water, energy, power, right? Energy means that, you know, can you,
can you run your freezer if the power goes out? Or can you charge your tools or your,
you know, your computers if the power goes out, right? That's important.
goes out. That's important.
Finances. The medical aspect of your life.
Egress. I say egress. Egress means
your car or
another location, a safety location.
Your home. You prep your home.
Communications, right?
I know that on PBN, we're doing the ham radio training,
you know, getting ready to take the test practice, right?
And I believe that's happening on Element.
It's something that I think I will get into myself too.
My wife bought me a ham rato years ago for Christmas.
It must have been, what, maybe about six years ago.
And I have always kind of said to myself,
I really need to get this, you know, get my call sign, get licensed.
But it's never happened.
And I think one of these days I'm going to pop into Element
and hopefully, you know, being part of that community, I can, you know,
I can actually just get it done. Communications is important. Physical fitness, I know that this
is a big deal with James. James, you know, he's, he's always talking about and giving advice about physical fitness and why it's important.
And he's definitely got a point, right?
Some form of physical fitness is important if you are a prepper.
if you are a prepper.
For the true preparedness practitioner,
prepping is a whole life experience,
a whole life practice.
It is something that once begun,
it becomes a way of life.
Prepping isn't seen just as something else is done,
like just kind of a hobby, right?
It becomes a way of life.
It just happens unconsciously after a while.
You know, you go into the store and you pick up that extra bag of rice.
Spring comes around, right?
And spring is coming around now. And, you know, all preppers' attention attention a lot of preppers now are turning to
their gardens um you know they go into the stores right and and they're all looking at the seeds
they're going online and they're looking at the seeds right and they're and they're and their
supplies their gardening supplies right um when you live this way then yes it's it's a way of life right and eventually you'll
start seeing all the benefits of the lifestyle and that's what i want to uh you know i i want to say
to if you're not a prepper yourself and you're just listening to this, you know, you do start to see the benefits of the preparedness lifestyle. And there are some benefits, right? You know, there are
some really big constants, right, in everybody's life. Your job, your family, bills, your health,
right? You know, and of course, there are problems that come up along the way, right?
You know, and of course there are problems that come up along the way, right?
You can't be a human being without issues coming up, right?
It's as sure as death in Texas, right?
You know, there's going to be that rainfall in your life.
Prepping prepares you to deal with all of those. It prepares you just to ride out the bad times.
A well-organized private life also helps even with the more public life as well.
Good organizational practices like attention? Like attention to detail,
right? It's transferred to a job, for instance. Being able to think critically to solve problems
in an innovative way is also an ability that is valued in a lot of jobs, right? you know one thing with preppers homesteaders right is is this phenomenal ability
to to solve problems uh you know because if you're homesteading and if you're living off grid right
uh home repair all the repairs you're responsible for, you're responsible for your own food production, right?
There's a lot of things that will come up that you're going to have to solve it on your own,
especially if there's no, you know, if there's no help around, right? So you you develop uh this ability uh to think critically to solve problems
and uh you develop you start developing all these different skill sets that um ordinary person, you know, just won't, they won't have, because they've not lived and prepared the
way that you have, right, for hardships or you have this ability to fix a problem, okay,
to fix a problem, okay, to actually try to fix a problem, that you become, you know, you become that go-to person. You'll find that a lot of people will begin coming to you when there is an issue
they want help with because, you know, you're going to be the person that,
Because you're going to be the person that will be able to help them solve that problem.
And this is not just about homesteading and everything else.
It's about being at work.
You're the person that a lot of times, that you might be that go-to person uh you
know to uh to help with uh an issue a difficult issue at work right um preppers uh
uh preppers uh have to put aside right enough food they've got to put aside, right, enough food.
They've got to put aside enough money.
They've got to be really careful with your money.
And that's one of the things that you're going to quickly realize if you're new.
Okay?
If you're just listening to this podcast and you're new,
you realize that, hey, you realize that prepping, regardless if you're doing it even on a cheap side, it does require some amount of funds.
Now, a lot of preppers scavenge around and find things that they can use.
They can substitute certain things for other things and and as i say they're very innovative you know we're very innovative people right we can
we can we can we can figure out a use for almost anything pretty much right but uh
your finances uh you're gonna find that you're to have to make sure that they're in order.
If you're going to seriously get into this lifestyle.
Right?
You will find that, you know, all of this preparation will tide you over.
Right?
Especially if you end up losing a job.
Right? right uh especially if if you end up losing a job right uh you know if your finances are if you had put your finances in order and you know you've you've done a few things like
socked away a year's worth of food and or something to that effect then that's one less
thing that you have to worry about right until you Until you get another job. You have that, you know, you've created that space in your life that you can,
it gives you options, you can function because things aren't completely, completely desperate.
Okay? You know, if you've put aside some savings, if you've paid down your bills properly, if you've put aside enough food to last a couple of months to a year, or in some cases, some preppers, they have food for years.
If you are producing your own food, for instance, too, then yeah, you know, if you lose your job, then you probably have a little bit of a cushion.
That the person who has never really put any money aside or really saved anything or put any food aside or done anything to that effect because they've been pretty much living from paycheck to paycheck.
Sometimes you're even living beyond their means.
Preppers don't live beyond their means, please.
Okay?
I would say if there's something that you need for one of your preps, okay?
The only reason you should be putting that on a credit card is if you know that you can pay that down.
Okay?
You know, and, you know, if you really want to be the gray man now, and since they're tracking everything,
then I would say, if you can do all your business and mostly your business in cash,
do your business in cash.
Okay?
The less of a trail you leave behind, the less of a footprint, the digital footprint,
the less of that footprint you leave behind, then the better off you're going to find yourself to be.
Okay? then the better off you're going to find yourself to be.
Okay?
So, you know, it's all about, you know, thinking smart.
Now, preppers, right?
If you have a family, right?
You'll find that preppers tend to be very involved in the day-to-day activities and lives of their children and
their spouses, right? They monitor their children, right? They monitor what's going on in their
children's lives, right? And they tend to pass on lessons and skills, right? They're very concerned with the moral well-being of their children,
of themselves, of the person that they're with, okay? You know, words that are not in the regular world.
They're not there anymore.
Words like loyalty and compassion
and fairness
and honor.
There's a lot of people that think that, you know, those words,
you know, they're pretty antiquated, right?
You know, the way of looking at things is pretty antiquated.
You'll find that a lot of people in the preparedness community,
those words are what they are. They try to live by those
words. You know, they try to be honorable people. They try to be kind. You know, they try to teach a lot of these moral lessons to their children.
And I think that a lot of this is probably lost on people who are outside of the community.
You know, but yeah, preppers tend to be very, if they have families, their families are usually involved in what's going on.
And they tend to be, you know, a lot, you know, very tight knit.
You know, parents who are preppers, we just can't help it.
We're very involved with our children's lives.
With their schooling, what's going on in school,
because we do care about what they're learning
and how they're learning it
and the quality of their education, right?
And that's all important because we want to create good people, good, compassionate, kind
people who are not only just looking out for themselves, but they're looking out for others.
for themselves, but they're looking out for others.
You know, they don't want to be a burden to anyone, right?
That's, you know, they want to go out and carve their own future out, right?
You know, preppers, I think the mindset of most preppers, you know, that's what it is, right?
You'll find that, you know, these are people who are entrepreneurs or, you know, they'll be homesteaders or, you know, even if they have a regular nine to five, uh, you'll find that they're pretty much independent minded people who, who just kind of want to try and have a good
life, but they want it in the right way.
They want it in the, you know, in the correct way.
They'll, they'll work for it.
Um, they'll obey the laws. You know, they're moral people. They go to
church, right? And that's what I... it gets us right back to our topic where if
you're finding that you're being stressed out or you're having anxiety about because maybe you don't think that you're doing something right, maybe you just need to stop and look at your life in general.
What's driving that anxiety?
What's driving it? Is it because maybe there is a scenario that you're preparing for and maybe you're a little anxious about what you're thinking might happen?
you know if that's the case and then there are lots of people that you can talk to there's lots of people here in PBN that you can you can talk to you'll
find that actually talking something talking all of this through talking this
through with other people especially experienced preppers, right?
A lot of times that alleviates a lot of stress.
Because you have to kind of think of all of this as a journey.
And, you know, where are you on that journey right now?
Dave Jones has these levels, right?
And you should check it out on PBN, right?
These levels of preparedness, you know.
So, you know, where are you on that chart?
One, two, three, four.
I believe it goes all the way up to five, right?
Where are you on that chart?
And if you're just starting out, then I say, you know, take your time.
All right? You know, it's not a sprint, right?
It's supposed to be a gradual thing.
Okay?
Think of it kind of like a really long walk to a specific destination, right?
So, if you've prepped your home
and you're getting your supplies
and you're getting your family on board
and you're beginning this adventure,
this journey.
And if you're finding that you're having a lot of anxiety or being stressed out, then
you need to just step back from it a little bit.
Listen to PBN during the evenings when all the shows are on.
You'll find that everybody is going on their own journey in their own way.
There are certain things that people get stressed about from time to time,
whether sometimes it's something that lives you
know it's going on politically or it might be something going on in their personal life that's
that's stressful for them but that's why we have this community right that's why you can be part of
of this community or or if you decide to create a community at home or if you have a family
member or someone that you can just talk to and brainstorm and use as a sounding board,
then those are all great ways to alleviate that anxiety that sometimes comes up.
that sometimes comes up.
It's supposed to be peace of mind.
When you're putting that food away or that water away or you're prepping your vehicle
or you're acquiring those skills,
you know, those skill sets that you never had before.
Right?
I mean, that's what it's supposed to be like. So I get it. If you're new and you're a
little anxious about the whole thing, that's probably most likely normal. That's normal.
Okay. But, uh, you know, take a breath, take a step back. Okay. You know,
look at what you've already done. Okay. And yes, there might be more to do,
but you take your time
and you get yourself through it.
Okay?
I don't want anyone stressing themselves out.
Right?
It's not supposed to be,
you know, anxiety-driven.
It's supposed to be well thought out.
If you need to write your thoughts out,
create some kind of journal,
then you do what you need to do.
Now, it's interesting to me because prepping and conservatism now, right, is countercultural, right?
Prepping at its core is empowerment.
Prepping at its core is empowerment.
There's a lot of people who want to make it look like,
okay, these people are some paranoid, scared people just running around.
But prepping is empowerment, is insurance.
When your finances are taken care of properly,
it's one less thing.
If your car is well-maintained,
it's one less thing.
You know, when did we become pretty much a country where actually taking care of things properly became, you know, became the strange thing to do?
It seems like we're there now, right?
Where, you know, we've become, our culture is one where we kind of discard everything, right?
So you buy a television, it doesn't work anymore, we discard it.
It's easier to replace something than actually trying to either work on it or trying to fix it or figure things out.
And I don't think that that's been healthy for us because then it develops a mindset,
right? There's a lot of people who don't really cook for themselves anymore. It's probably
easier to order food than to cook for themselves, right? So they don't really have any real contact with their food
okay um now if you're a prepper right uh yeah you're storing your food you're you're knowing
where your food is coming from you you begin to you you begin to track down you know uh you know
food sources and and you get to know your local food sources
right food sources and you get to know your local food sources.
Right?
That alleviates anxiety.
You know, if you're the guy in town that has a garden,
you know how to grow your own food,
you know who your local farmers are,
and you have a relationship with those farmers that's one less thing
that you have to think about when there's an emergency
because you have your contacts already in play
so
it's definitely a counter-cultural thing that we're doing here
and and we're getting more and more people on board
you know there's always the naysayers right there's always the naysayers that say oh you
know well these people are paranoid or whatever it is. But those are the people who were rushing into the stores and grabbing toilet paper
here, you know, a year ago, right? When all the panic started over COVID. If you were
listening to PBN when all of this broke last year, as I was, right? These people were,
be end when all of this broke last year as I was, right?
These people were, they were concerned but they weren't panicking. It was
like, okay, this is what we're going to do. It was very measured
right? And they were actually able
to help other people. And that's the beauty
of being prepared.
Because you're able to act
and because you have prepared for
emergency situations, right?
Then when something actually occurs,
then you are able to act and you're not panicked.
Right?
You can act in a rational way.
You're not out there putting yourself at risk.
You know, this is the second time I'm referring to this, right?
But I saw that movie and it was the day after. And in that movie, right, you know, it was all about a nuclear exchange, right? And it was pretty bad.
people were waiting, what we would call kind of like a FEMA camp now, right? All these people were waiting, and they were all waiting on line to get food, and they were all, you know, they
looked half-starved and desperate and dirty and everything else. And I, you know, I looked at my
wife and I say, that's the reason why we prepare. So that we're not there.
We're not on that line.
A desperate, desperate family with nothing.
When everything is falling apart.
We don't want to be there.
So, yeah, it's definitely, you know, it's definitely a way to provide peace of mind for yourself, for your family. If anyone's listening to this right now, right, and if you're on the fence about it, right,
if you're thinking, you know, am I being a little paranoid here to begin this prepping thing?
You know, I would have to say to you, I'm saying
to you right now, the answer to that is no. It's sensible. It's smart. It's the intelligent
thing to do. You buy the insurance for your home. You buy the insurance for your car,
the insurance for your car, right? Prepping is the, you know, is insurance for your life, right?
Now, Dave, if you're listening to this, right, I have a few, um, show requests that that yeah i would really love uh for you to um to uh you know to chat about you know if you could do a show on them and one is uh greenhouse right uh you uh setting up the
your greenhouse um just the whole process of selecting um you know uh setting it up and when to start growing
uh food in the greenhouse and and everything uh concerned i know that you have uh you were
talking about uh setting up your greenhouse I would so much love to hear
if you could do a show on that. It'd be great. You know, I need help,
right? I am thinking about it, and it would be so cool to get Dave's take on that.
So Dave, yes, my sure request, Greenhouse.
It would be fantastic if you could help us on that. And I know that Dave was also thinking about a show on how he became, you know, how he became or what he did to become really financially sound.
And I am also really interested in hearing, you know, how he did it.
So, yes, those are my requests to Dave Jones,
if he's listening.
And it would be wonderful to,
you know, if he could do some show,
give us some pointers on all of that, right?
So Dave, hopefully I'm not giving you
a lot of work to do.
I know that you're busy,
but it would be kind of cool
to hear your take on that as well.
Right?
busy but it would be kind of cool to hear your take on that as well right um so um other areas that preppers have to be serious about is their health right um you know uh your your health is
is is an important part of you know the preparedness um lifestyle and, you know, the preparedness lifestyle. And, you know, if a person is not in good health,
you know, if you're prepping and you know that you have a chronic condition, then of,
you know, preparing for that eases anxiety. Okay, you know, when the grid goes down,
and if you're diabetic, or if you need a a catheter or you have some specific health concern, okay, and if you've put things aside just in case there
is an issue, right, then, you know, I can't, you know, that's not adding to your anxiety,
right?
That's actually easing anxiety.
If they're in decent health, then you can always get yourself in better shape.
You can always get yourself in better physical health.
I know that James is really into into that as i said before and i and i know that
dave he chats about his winter routine of chopping wood right um which uh which is interesting right
i have my own personal routine of walking and running depending on the day, okay? You know, there's a little bit of weight training
thrown in as well there, right? Because you try to keep yourself, you know,
you know, in as good a condition as you possibly can without, you know, making yourself sick,
right? You know, you try not to overdo anything.
Okay?
And that in itself, too, helps to ease anxiety.
It helps to ease stress.
You know, we are living in stressful times.
Okay?
You know, I'm hoping that listening to this, you're like,
well, you know, I'm not acknowledging that.
But yeah, I am saying, I'm acknowledging that, you know, these are stressful times.
Okay?
I mean, regardless of what's going on in Washington, right?
Because the politicians are always crazy.
Right?
And they're a bunch of snakes.
And, you know, they're doing crazy things
in in the world of politics right now and and the media is the same right they're all doing
crazy things and saying crazy things and and and they're driving the anxiety levels up people right now. A lot of these sectors are not helping to ease people's burdens. A lot of times
they're actually adding to the stress in people's lives. But there are other avenues, you know, prepping is one way that you can,
okay, you can start to have a little bit of that control, right? There are certain things
beyond your control. Okay. You know, if we get into it with one of these big countries like China or Russia or North Korea or one of these really big countries that can hurt us economically or hurt us militarily,
there's nothing that I can do about that, right?
Or most regular people.
regular people but if if something bad comes down the pipe then then uh you know maybe we have a little bit of insurance that can get us through those hard times those bad times if the economy
tanks okay and if you've taken care of your bills and uh you've put aside, you know, enough savings, and if you've converted some of your dollars into, you know,
real physical things like land or silver, gold, or, you know,
something tangible, right, that you can trade or barter
if the currency is no good, okay, then that's something.
Right?
As I said,
when the pandemic came,
that was not in our control.
There's nothing we could have done about it.
But at least we were in a position
to ride it out
because we had plans in place.
We had specific, you know, we had some plans in place.
We had, you know, we had our food put by, you know,
most of us had our PPE ready to go for just such a thing.
You have to think of this whole lifestyle.
This whole lifestyle is about easing stress, not creating it.
So for all the listeners out there right now, I really want to drive this point home that if you are working yourself or getting yourself into a position of,
you know, if you're finding yourself stressed out, then you have to try and identify why you're, you know, what's the cause of the anxiety
and try to mitigate that cause somehow.
Okay?
I did an earlier show about, you know, disconnecting and reconnecting and renewing myself.
And just as a little update, right uh where that is concerned okay i have a re really restarted my my my um physical fitness
program i i have um really i am going to take this Easter Lent seriously.
I'm thinking of doing some fasting and reconnecting and praying and reconnecting to God that way.
Spiritually, I'm trying to renew that part of my life as well.
That was my little update there, right?
So if you find yourself, you know, in a state of serious anxiety, okay,
then reach out.
Reach out to someone. Okay?
This lifestyle that we're talking about tonight
is supposed to be a lifestyle of alleviating anxiety.
And if you find that that anxiety level is increasing,
then maybe something's off.
Okay?
Because you have to be available to the important people in your life.
And if you're too stressed out to react, if you're too stressed out to help them,
then you're no good to anyone.
Okay? So try to find, try to find a way to make
sure, you know, make, you know, you have to make sure that you're de-stressing. You have to make
sure that that anxiety level is coming down. And, that means less media, less television.
If it means eating better.
If it means
spending more time with family and loved ones.
If it means leaving work
at work. Because with some people that's very difficult
to do. They bring all that stuff home. If it means really learning how to leave work
at work, and when you're home, you're home, then figure it out. If you know that you need to start prepping and you haven't,
then begin.
Make that step.
Make that step.
All right?
This is supposed to be about easing your anxiety.
It's supposed to be about creating peace of mind.
Okay?
So you need to begin that journey.
I am not where I completely want to be on the journey.
Okay?
I find that I don't have that anxiety, right?
Because I know that eventually I will get where I kind of want to go, you know, in terms of mypping and and be more self-sufficient and everything else
and I and I approach it as it's more of it's more of an interesting quest for me
so it doesn't create anxiety in my life.
It actually brings me pleasure.
You know, in the spring here, right,
I'm going to be starting up my gardens.
I did gardening last year. Now I have a different plan
in terms of the way I'm going to be gardening.
I have a few friends who are going to be gardening.
I'm sure that there's going to be a lot of gardening stuff going on on PBN.
And I will be completely into that as well.
so you know I think if you do have that anxiety then maybe a change of
you know just a change of
perspective
perspective
will help you to see that it's more of a journey
and it's supposed to be one of fun.
It's supposed to be a journey
that you can share with other people.
And the added benefit of the lifestyle is the insurance it gives you.
Okay?
So, if you're new, I say welcome.
Welcome to prepping.
If you're an old hand at it, then hopefully you found some encouragement
just from listening to this podcast, right?
You know, if you were kind of like thinking of chucking this whole prepping thing,
then hopefully, you know, maybe just listening to this has convinced you to, you know, keep going.
You know, as I said, right, you know,
sometimes, you know, yeah, you have to take a step back to take a step forward, right?
And it's a quest, it's a journey for all of us.
And I think that anyone who's been doing this a long time,
I think that, you know, for the most part,
it's been very, it's a satisfying way of life.
It's a satisfying lifestyle choice.
It's nice knowing that you can go to your chicken coops and get your eggs.
It's very satisfying.
You know I have quails and I go out to their coop and I have eggs.
I looked at my garden last year and it was nice seeing my family eat the broccoli and tomatoes and
all that really healthy food that came from, from, um, my garden, from our garden last
year.
Yes, I think that we all, from time to time, do have, you know, we have our moments of anxiety.
And there's a lot going on right now in our country that creates a lot of anxiety out there.
But it really is, it really is supposed to give you peace of mind, not to take it away.
Concentrate on the things, the parts of this lifestyle that provide that to you.
Versus concentrating on the other aspects that don't.
So, that was a lot of things to think about, right?
You know, we try to provide a lot of support here at PBN. And I'm hoping that
if you're listening to this, you found it
useful. And
feel free to please pass on these podcasts.
You can go to
our archive and if there's something there that you know, you can go to our archive and if there's something there that, you know,
you know that will help someone else,
please pass it on.
Okay?
And refer, you know, and send them over to our website.
Send them over to PBN.
Right?
PrepperBroadcasting.com
Okay?
You know, there's a lot of good people here
willing to help.
Okay? Willing to help.
So,
that's it for
Episode 8 of The Strange Truth.
I'm Carl B.
It was a pleasure
to
speak with you
and
you know, prepping is supposed to be peace of mind.
And I'm hoping that if you are in the lifestyle and if you're doing it, then you are on your
journey to that goal, right? Where you can finally, you can say,
you get to a point where you can say,
you know what, I'm feeling pretty good
about the whole thing right now.
And that's where we want, you know,
I'm hoping everyone will get to,
in their own way,
in their own time.
Okay?
So, once again,
thanks for listening.
Thanks for supporting PBN.
And till next time. Teksting av Nicolai Winther Thank you for listening to the Prepper Broadcasting Network,
where we promote self-reliance and independence.
Tune in tomorrow for another great show and visit us at prepperbroadcasting.com.