How To Survive to 100 Years Old During the Post Apocalypse

The post apocalypse isn’t a movie montage with acoustic guitars and found families. It’s starvation, stupidity, betrayal, and the slow grinding realization that most people were dead weight before the world ended.

If you want to live to 100 years old after everything collapses, you’ll need to accept one harsh truth: survival is lonely, bitter, and unforgiving. The weak die early. The careless die loudly. And the optimistic usually die first.

This isn’t about heroics. This is about outlasting everyone else.

Step One: Accept That Civilization Is Gone (For Good)

One of the biggest killers in a post-apocalyptic world is denial. People cling to the idea that “things will go back to normal.” They wait for governments that no longer exist, rescue teams that were never coming, and systems that collapsed under their own incompetence.

You don’t survive to 100 by waiting.

You survive by understanding that civilization was fragile, bloated, and overdue for collapse. There is no cavalry. There is no reset button. The faster you accept that the old world is dead, the faster you stop making fatal decisions based on nostalgia.

Survivors adapt. Everyone else reminisces until they starve.

Step Two: Stop Trusting People Blindly

Before the apocalypse, people were already selfish, short-sighted, and dangerously ignorant. Remove laws, comfort, and consequences, and you don’t get cooperation—you get predators.

If you think “community” will save you, ask yourself this: how many people around you were useful before everything fell apart? How many could grow food, purify water, repair tools, or shut up when silence mattered?

Exactly.

Living to 100 means being selective. Alliances should be temporary, transactional, and constantly reassessed. Trust is earned through consistency, not shared misery. Anyone who talks too much about unity usually wants something from you.

Keep your circle small. Keep your expectations smaller.

Step Three: Master Boring Skills (They Keep You Alive)

Forget tactical fantasies. Survival to old age depends on boring, repetitive, unglamorous skills that never trend on social media.

You need to know how to:

  • Grow calorie-dense food in poor soil
  • Preserve food without electricity
  • Filter and boil water endlessly
  • Repair clothing, tools, and shelter
  • Treat basic injuries without hospitals
  • Walk long distances without destroying your joints

Living to 100 isn’t about being dangerous—it’s about being durable.

The apocalypse rewards people who can wake up every day and do the same miserable tasks without complaint. If you need excitement, you won’t last.

Step Four: Calories Are Everything (Moral High Ground Is Optional)

You don’t live to 100 by eating “clean.” You live to 100 by eating enough.

Calories are survival currency. Fat is not your enemy. Protein is not optional. Anyone who wastes food to prove a point will be dead long before old age becomes a concern.

You should prioritize:

  • Long-term calorie storage
  • Animals that reproduce quickly
  • Crops that don’t require constant babysitting
  • Eating parts of animals people used to throw away

Ethics change when hunger is permanent. That’s not cruelty—that’s reality.

Step Five: Avoid Violence When Possible (But Be Capable of It)

Violence shortens lifespans. Every fight risks injury, infection, and retaliation. People who glorify combat usually don’t live long enough to regret it.

That said, weakness invites violence.

If you want to reach 100, you must project capability without constantly proving it. Know how to defend yourself. Know how to escape. Know when to disappear rather than “win.”

The smartest survivors are the ones nobody notices until it’s too late to bother them.

Step Six: Build for the Long Haul, Not the Headlines

Temporary shelters kill people slowly. Exposure, bad posture, and untreated injuries compound over decades. You don’t need luxury—but you need sustainability.

Focus on:

  • Weather-resistant shelter
  • Proper sleeping arrangements
  • Warmth without constant fuel consumption
  • Redundancy in tools and systems
  • Minimal reliance on scavenging

Scavenging is a young person’s game. If you want to be alive at 80, you’d better have systems in place by 40.

Step Seven: Protect Your Body Like It’s the Last One You’ll Ever Have

Because it is.

There are no replacements. No surgeries. No miracle drugs. Every injury is permanent damage to your timeline.

Stretch. Rest. Avoid unnecessary strain. Learn how to lift, carry, and work efficiently. Pain ignored today becomes disability tomorrow.

Survivors who last decades treat their bodies like irreplaceable machinery, not expendable tools.

Step Eight: Prepare for Mental Decay (It’s Coming)

Longevity isn’t just physical. Isolation, grief, and monotony erode the mind. People crack. They take risks. They stop caring.

You need structure. Routine. Purpose—even if it’s arbitrary.

Read. Write. Track seasons. Teach yourself something pointless just to keep thinking. A dull mind makes fatal mistakes.

The apocalypse doesn’t just kill bodies—it rots attention spans.

Step Nine: Expect to Be Disappointed Constantly

People will fail you. Plans will collapse. Crops will fail. Weather will ruin everything you worked for.

If you expect fairness, you’ll break.

Living to 100 requires emotional calluses. You don’t rage at reality. You adapt, adjust, and keep going. Anger is fuel—but only if you aim it inward as discipline, not outward as chaos.

Step Ten: Outlive the Noise

Most people won’t make it 10 years. Fewer will make it 20. By the time you’re old, the world will be quieter—not because it’s peaceful, but because most voices are gone.

That’s when patience pays off.

You survive to 100 not by being special, but by being relentless, cautious, and deeply unimpressed by human nature.

The post apocalypse doesn’t reward optimism. It rewards preparation, stubbornness, and the refusal to die just because the world thinks you should.

If that makes you bitter, good.

Bitterness lasts longer than hope.

Utah Power Outages And How to Stay Safe With No Electricity During SHTF

When the power goes out unexpectedly—especially for days or even weeks—many people realize just how dependent they are on electricity. As a lifelong prepper and someone who cares deeply about helping others get through tough times, I want to offer you both practical skills and compassionate guidance. Whether you live in a cozy Utah suburb or out in the red rock country, preparing for blackouts isn’t paranoia; it’s wisdom.

The truth is, Utah has unique challenges during power outages: harsh winters, vast rural areas, and increasing pressure on infrastructure from population growth and climate instability. If the power grid goes down during an SHTF (S**t Hits The Fan) event, being ready can mean the difference between discomfort and disaster—or worse.

Let’s go through five essential survival skills to help you thrive without electricity, three creative DIY power hacks, three must-have products, and the five worst cities in Utah to be stuck in during a blackout. Then, we’ll talk about how to put it all together into a sustainable plan for your household.


5 Essential Survival Skills for Living Without Electricity

1. Firecraft and Heating Without Power
If the power goes out in the middle of a Utah winter, especially in the high-elevation zones like Park City or Logan, keeping warm becomes a life-or-death priority. Learn how to safely build and maintain indoor and outdoor fires. Stockpile dry firewood, invest in a wood-burning stove or indoor-rated propane heater, and know how to ventilate properly. Always have a carbon monoxide detector on standby with backup batteries.

2. Manual Water Sourcing and Purification
Your taps won’t run forever when there’s no electricity. Wells need pumps. City water systems can lose pressure or become contaminated. Every household should have at least one gravity-fed water filtration system (like a Berkey or DIY ceramic filter). Learn to collect rainwater, find natural water sources, and purify with methods like boiling, iodine tablets, and solar stills.

3. Food Preservation and Non-Electric Cooking
Once refrigeration is gone, spoilage happens fast. Learn to can, pickle, and dehydrate food. If you haven’t tried solar ovens or rocket stoves yet, they’re efficient and perfect for Utah’s sunny days. A Dutch oven and cast-iron skillet over an open flame or hot coals will also serve you well. Don’t forget: learning to make bread from scratch using natural leavening like sourdough is both comforting and sustaining.

4. Non-Electric Communication
Cell towers may stay up for a while on backup generators—but not forever. Learn to use and maintain ham radios or CB radios for local communication. Have printed local maps and know your community’s geography in case you need to travel for help or trade.

5. Security and Situational Awareness
During a long-term blackout, desperation can grow fast in urban centers. Practice situational awareness. That means knowing your neighbors, keeping a low profile when distributing supplies, and securing your home. Training in self-defense, installing manual locks, and developing a home perimeter plan could keep your family safe when tensions run high.


3 DIY Electricity Hacks for Blackout Survival

You don’t need to rely on the grid to power a few essentials. Here are three DIY hacks to produce or store electricity in a blackout:

1. Build a Bicycle Generator
A stationary bike connected to a car alternator or small generator can be a great way to generate small amounts of power—enough to charge phones, small batteries, or LED lights. You’ll need a voltage regulator and some basic tools, but there are many tutorials online to guide you.

2. DIY Solar Power Bank
Combine a small portable solar panel (20–100 watts) with a deep-cycle marine battery, charge controller, and inverter. It’s simple and scalable. You can store enough power to run a fan, charge phones, or even keep a small fridge cold for a few hours a day.

3. Thermal Energy Conversion
Use thermoelectric generators (TEGs) to convert heat from a stove or fire into usable electricity. They don’t produce a lot, but it’s enough to power LED lights or a USB-powered device. This is particularly useful in cold climates like Utah, where you’re running heat sources daily in winter anyway.


The 3 Most Important Survival Products When There’s No Electricity

If you only had three survival products to rely on during a major grid-down event, these would give you the highest chances of staying safe and healthy:

1. Multi-Fuel Stove or Rocket Stove
Cooking, boiling water, and warmth—all without power. A rocket stove is efficient, burns small sticks, and works in all weather. Better still if it runs on multiple fuels like wood, propane, or alcohol.

2. Gravity-Fed Water Filtration System
Clean water is survival priority #1. Systems like the Berkey can filter thousands of gallons of questionable water without electricity. For long-term SHTF, this could save your life.

3. LED Lanterns with Rechargeable Batteries
Safe, long-lasting lighting is essential, especially when candles are too risky or short-lived. Use rechargeable AA or AAA batteries and charge them via solar panels or bike generators.


5 Worst Cities in Utah to Lose Power During SHTF

When considering which cities in Utah would be hardest to survive in during an extended power outage, we’re looking at population density, elevation, climate severity, infrastructure weaknesses, and social dynamics. Here are the top 5 you want to prepare especially well for:

1. Salt Lake City
High population, heavy snow in winter, and a complex urban infrastructure make SLC extremely vulnerable. If stores are looted and fuel runs dry, people will be desperate. Suburbs might fare slightly better, but urban chaos can ripple out fast.

2. West Valley City
Utah’s second-largest city, West Valley has a similar problem—high density, minimal local agriculture, and large apartment complexes that become heat traps or iceboxes without power. Security concerns are also more significant here.

3. Ogden
Known for rough winters and older infrastructure, Ogden’s electrical systems aren’t as robust as they should be. It’s also a hub city, which means traffic bottlenecks and resource shortages happen fast.

4. Provo
Though home to BYU and a somewhat community-minded population, Provo’s growing tech sector and urban sprawl make it dependent on the grid. Winters can be harsh, and there’s not a ton of backup infrastructure.

5. Park City
Tourism and wealth mask a survival challenge here: high altitude, deep winter snow, and dependence on electric heat. When vacationers leave, residents may find themselves cut off from help due to snowed-in roads and empty shelves.


How to Prepare and Stay Safe

Now that you know what skills to learn, products to get, and what areas are most at risk, it’s time to form a simple, clear plan.

Step 1: Create Layers of Redundancy
Don’t just rely on one flashlight or one water source. Have backups. If your solar panel fails, you want a hand-crank option. If your propane runs out, you want a wood option.

Step 2: Practice What You Learn
Reading about survival is great, but try going one weekend a month without electricity. Cook all your meals on a rocket stove. Use only non-electric lighting. Try to wash clothes by hand. You’ll discover weaknesses in your plan that you can fix now, while it’s still easy.

Step 3: Build a Support Network
No one survives alone forever. Get to know your neighbors. Find like-minded folks in your area who are also prepping. Build a barter system or a shared emergency plan. In Utah especially, many communities are already tight-knit—you just need to lean into that.

Step 4: Stay Calm and Lead by Example
When SHTF, people will panic. But you’ve prepared. Keep your cool. Help those who need it without putting your own household in danger. Your calm presence might be what inspires others to organize instead of descend into chaos.


Final Thoughts

Living without electricity is not only possible—it’s how humans lived for thousands of years. With a little knowledge, a few tools, and a lot of heart, you can thrive even when the lights go out. Whether you’re in a city or tucked into the mountains, your readiness could mean everything for your family and even your community.

Be wise. Be kind. Be prepared.

Texas Power Outages And How to Stay Safe With No Electricity During SHTF

If you’ve lived in Texas for a while, you already know that we can experience extreme weather from every angle—burning summers, ice storms, flooding, and even tornadoes. Unfortunately, each of these natural events can quickly spiral into a larger emergency, especially when the power goes out. The infamous Texas Winter Storm of 2021 taught us all just how vulnerable our power grid really is. So if you’re reading this, you’re likely the type of person who doesn’t want to be caught off guard again. That’s smart.

I’m here to help you prepare, not panic. When the grid goes down—whether from weather, cyberattack, aging infrastructure, or overload—you need to be able to survive, adapt, and protect your loved ones. No electricity doesn’t have to mean no hope. With the right skills, tools, and mindset, you can make it through even the toughest blackouts.

Let’s walk through five essential survival skills you’ll need when the lights go out, three clever DIY hacks for generating some power on your own, the top three must-have survival items to keep on hand, and finally, which cities in Texas are the absolute worst places to be when the grid fails.


5 Survival Skills to Know When Living Without Electricity

1. Off-Grid Cooking & Food Prep

When the power goes out, so does your electric stove, microwave, and fridge. Being able to cook food without power is critical. Invest in a propane camping stove, rocket stove, or build your own solar oven using a cardboard box and foil. Know how to use cast iron cookware over an open flame safely. And don’t forget the value of shelf-stable foods—beans, rice, canned meats, powdered milk.

Being able to preserve food without a fridge—by smoking, salting, dehydrating, or fermenting—is another underrated skill. It’s not just about eating, it’s about eating safely.

2. Water Purification and Storage

When electricity goes down, water pressure often drops or gets contaminated. Learn to collect rainwater and purify it. You should have water filters like LifeStraw or Sawyer Minis, but also know old-school methods like boiling, using bleach drops, or building a sand-charcoal filtration system.

You can DIY a water cache using 55-gallon food-grade barrels. Plan for at least one gallon of water per person, per day, for a minimum of two weeks.

3. Staying Warm (or Cool)

Texas weather isn’t just inconvenient—it can be deadly. In winter, without heat, hypothermia becomes a real risk. Learn to insulate a room using blankets, foam board, or mylar emergency blankets on windows. Set up a safe heat source like a Mr. Heater Buddy (rated for indoor propane use with proper ventilation).

In the summer, know how to cool down with old-fashioned tricks like cross-ventilation, wet cloth wraps, shade shelters, and battery-powered fans. Heat stroke can kill just as easily as frostbite.

4. Lighting & Situational Awareness

Once it’s dark, your world shrinks. Have a system for lighting: solar lanterns, candles, headlamps, and flashlights with rechargeable batteries. But also learn how to maintain night vision, avoid light discipline mistakes (which can attract attention in bad times), and move silently in low light.

Your eyes and ears are your best defenses when everything else is down. Learn to listen to your environment.

5. Community Bartering & Security Basics

Survival isn’t always about going it alone. When the grid is down for weeks, bartering may become necessary. Learn basic trade value (like what a bottle of bleach or a pound of rice is worth in hard times) and build trust with neighbors beforehand. At the same time, know how to secure your property discreetly and safely. Motion-activated solar lights, reinforced doors, and simple early-warning tripwires can go a long way.

You don’t need to become Rambo—you just need to be prepared, alert, and protective of your space and people.


3 DIY Electricity Hacks During a Blackout

1. Build a Solar USB Charger

Using a small solar panel (5-20W), a charge controller, and a USB output module, you can create your own solar phone charger. These parts are widely available online or from hardware stores. Great for keeping phones, radios, or USB lights running when the grid is down.

2. Bicycle Generator Setup

Convert a bicycle into a pedal-powered generator using an alternator or a DC motor. You’ll need a voltage regulator and a battery to store the charge. This DIY setup can power small devices or recharge batteries with a good workout.

3. DIY Mason Jar Oil Lamp

If you’re caught without flashlights or solar lanterns, you can make an oil lamp using a mason jar, olive or vegetable oil, and a cotton wick (or even a shoelace in a pinch). It won’t replace your entire lighting system, but it can provide a surprisingly steady light source.


Top 3 Most Important Survival Products to Have Without Electricity

1. Portable Power Bank (Solar Rechargeable)
A high-capacity solar power bank or battery station like a Jackery or Goal Zero unit allows you to keep your essential electronics (phone, radio, flashlight, fan) running. Make sure it’s solar rechargeable and test it regularly.

2. Water Filtration System
Whether it’s a gravity-fed Berkey filter, a LifeStraw, or Sawyer Mini, you must have a reliable way to turn contaminated water into drinkable water. Boiling is great—but what if you’re low on fuel?

3. Emergency Radio (Hand Crank + Solar + Battery)
Communication is critical in a crisis. A NOAA weather radio with AM/FM and shortwave capabilities keeps you informed. Bonus if it includes a flashlight and USB charger.


5 Worst Cities in Texas to Be in During a Power Outage

Some places in Texas are just tougher to survive in when the grid fails. Factors like population density, climate extremes, lack of infrastructure, or crime risk make these cities particularly hazardous:

1. Houston
Hot, humid, and sprawling, Houston becomes almost unlivable without AC. Crime increases during outages, and flood risk adds another danger.

2. Dallas
High population, extreme summer heat, and ice storms in the winter. Dallas has seen grid strain before and would struggle in long-term blackouts.

3. El Paso
While drier and safer than some cities, El Paso relies heavily on power for water pumps and cooling systems in a desert environment. Summer heat can be punishing.

4. Corpus Christi
Hurricane-prone and vulnerable to grid instability. Water contamination and evacuation problems make this a tough spot during power-down events.

5. San Antonio
Large and rapidly growing, San Antonio’s grid is already under pressure. With extreme heat and limited shade, it poses a serious survival challenge during summer outages.


Final Thoughts: Resilience Starts With Mindset

The truth is, we can’t always predict when or why the lights will go out. But what we can do is take control of how we respond. Preparing for a power outage isn’t just about gadgets or gear—it’s about mindset. Think long-term. Think “What can I do today to be better off tomorrow?”

Start small. Practice one survival skill a week. Add a few key items to your home every month. Talk to your neighbors. Run a mock blackout scenario with your family. It’s not paranoia—it’s responsibility.

The more self-sufficient you become, the more peace you’ll feel. And if the day comes when everything does go dark, you’ll be the one who knows how to light a fire, filter the water, cook the food, and stay calm in the storm.

Stay safe, stay prepared, and never underestimate the power of knowledge.

New York Power Outages and How to Stay Safe With No Electricity During SHTF

When the lights go out, everything changes. If you’ve ever been caught in a power outage—especially a long one—you know how quickly our modern comforts can disappear. For those of us living in New York State, where population density, weather extremes, and infrastructure vulnerabilities converge, losing power isn’t just inconvenient; it can be downright dangerous. Whether you’re in the heart of Manhattan or in a small upstate town, being prepared means more than having a flashlight and a few cans of soup.

Let’s talk about how to stay safe, smart, and sane when the grid goes down, especially during a situation where everything hits the fan (SHTF). From hard-earned survival skills to practical DIY electricity hacks, this guide is here to empower you with both knowledge and confidence.


5 Survival Skills for Living Without Electricity

Living without power can feel like stepping back a century. But people lived that way for thousands of years, and so can we—with the right mindset and skills. Here are five critical abilities every New Yorker should learn before the lights go out.


1. Fire Craft and Off-Grid Cooking

Cooking is one of the first hurdles you’ll face in a blackout, especially if your stove or microwave relies on electricity. Being able to start a fire safely is a foundational survival skill. Learn how to make a Dakota fire hole—an efficient, smokeless fire pit—and how to cook over an open flame using cast iron. If you have a propane grill, keep extra tanks stored safely. Bonus points if you know how to cook with a solar oven, which works wonders in summer.


2. Water Procurement and Purification

In a prolonged power outage, municipal water systems can fail, especially if the pumps rely on electricity. You’ll need to locate alternate sources of water (like rainwater or streams) and purify them. Learn how to make a gravity-fed water filtration system using activated charcoal, sand, and gravel. Always keep a stash of water purification tablets, and know how to boil water over an open fire if needed.


3. Food Preservation Without Refrigeration

Food spoilage is one of the biggest threats when the fridge dies. Learn traditional methods of preservation like canning, pickling, smoking, fermenting, and dehydration. For example, salt-cured meats can last weeks unrefrigerated, and fermented vegetables can supply essential nutrients long after the fresh stuff is gone.


4. Manual Sanitation and Waste Management

Let’s be honest—when the toilet won’t flush and the water stops running, things get… uncomfortable. In urban areas especially, this can quickly become a health hazard. Learn how to create a sawdust toilet (composting toilet alternative), manage gray water safely, and maintain personal hygiene with minimal water. Keep a well-stocked sanitation bucket system with heavy-duty trash bags, baking soda, and bleach.


5. Situational Awareness and Community Communication

When the grid goes down, you lose not only power but also connection—no internet, no news, and possibly no phone signal. Train yourself to rely on local radio, ideally a hand-crank emergency radio. Form neighborhood alliances and have a community plan. Understand the signs of civil unrest or worsening conditions and how to respond calmly and smartly.


3 DIY Electricity Hacks When the Grid Goes Down

You don’t have to be an electrical engineer to generate a bit of power during a blackout. Here are three practical, do-it-yourself hacks that can bring light, charge your devices, or even run small appliances in a pinch.


1. DIY Solar Charger with USB Output

With a small solar panel kit (available online or at hardware stores), you can build a basic solar charging system for phones, radios, or flashlights. You’ll need:

  • A 10-20W solar panel
  • A solar charge controller
  • A 12V battery (like a deep-cycle marine battery)
  • A USB car adapter

Connect the panel to the charge controller, then to the battery, and plug in your USB adapter. This can keep your essential devices running for days.


2. Bicycle Generator for Small Power Needs

If you’re handy, convert an old bike into a pedal-powered generator. You’ll need a bike stand, a belt or chain drive, and a small alternator or motor. This setup can generate enough electricity to charge a battery pack or power a few LED lights. It’s also great exercise and a morale booster during dark times.


3. Saltwater Battery Lamp

When resources are scarce, even salt and water can make a difference. Using magnesium and copper plates (or coins), you can make a rudimentary battery with saltwater. Connect enough of these cells in series, and you can power an LED. It won’t light up your whole house, but in an emergency, every little bit of light helps.


3 Most Important Survival Products Without Electricity

While survival is mostly about mindset and skill, having the right gear can make a night-and-day difference. If I had to choose just three must-haves for a no-electricity scenario, these would be it:


1. Multi-Fuel Camp Stove (e.g., MSR WhisperLite)
Reliable, versatile, and portable, these stoves can burn white gas, kerosene, or even unleaded gasoline. It’s your best bet for cooking or boiling water safely when the power is out and fire pits aren’t an option.


2. Solar Generator (like Jackery or Bluetti)
A solar generator is a quiet, clean way to power essentials like a CPAP machine, lights, or small appliances. Look for one with at least 500Wh capacity and a foldable solar panel. It may be an investment—but in a long-term blackout, it can be a lifeline.


3. Headlamp with Rechargeable Battery
Hands-free lighting is more useful than a flashlight, and using a rechargeable model with a solar bank or hand crank makes it even better. Always have backup lights and extra power sources available.


5 Worst Cities in New York to Be in During a Power Outage

Not all places in New York are created equal when the grid goes dark. The following cities pose unique challenges due to their infrastructure, population density, crime potential, and lack of immediate resources.


1. New York City
No surprise here. The Big Apple is deeply reliant on electricity for everything—transportation, water pumps, elevators, and communication systems. A prolonged outage could result in gridlock, water shortages, looting, and a breakdown in services. If you’re in NYC, you must have a robust bug-in or bug-out plan.


2. Buffalo
Heavy snowfall in winter combined with aging electrical infrastructure makes Buffalo a risky place for long-term outages. Frozen pipes, inaccessible roads, and limited local resources can make it extremely challenging to stay warm and safe.


3. Albany
The capital city is a central hub, but its aging grid and colder winters make power outages especially tough. Hospitals and government systems may get backup generators—but residential areas might not. Additionally, it’s prone to flooding, adding another layer of risk.


4. Rochester
Another cold-weather city with a high dependency on the grid. Its older buildings and infrastructure are not well-equipped for extended blackouts, especially during storm season. Food spoilage and heating become urgent concerns here.


5. Yonkers
Close to NYC but with fewer resources, Yonkers faces the double threat of population density and limited emergency services. If an outage leads to cascading failures in sanitation, water, or policing, residents could be left fending for themselves.


Staying Safe, Staying Smart

Preparedness isn’t about fear—it’s about confidence. When you have the skills, tools, and mindset to meet challenges head-on, you’re not just surviving. You’re thriving under pressure.

If you live in New York or any other urban or semi-urban area, take the time now—while the lights are still on—to build your resilience. Practice your fire-starting skills in a controlled setting. Stock up on clean water, batteries, canned goods, and medical supplies. Make sure your family knows the plan.

Don’t wait for FEMA or the city to come knocking. When the grid goes down, you’ll be glad you took the time to prepare.

Stay safe, stay aware, and above all, stay kind. In the darkest times, a little light from a helping hand can go a long way.

The SHTF Wake-Up Call: How to Prepare for a World Where What You Have Is All That Matters

The SHTF Wake-Up Call: How to Prepare for a World Where What You Have Is All That Matters

If you’re still sitting around, thinking that everything is going to be fine and that some miracle will come along to save you, then it’s time for a serious wake-up call. You’ve been warned, and if you haven’t taken action yet, you’re a fool. When shit hits the fan (SHTF) for real, you won’t have time to run to the store and pick up a few cans of beans. You won’t have a backup plan that depends on someone else’s help. The hard truth is, what you have on hand will be ALL that matters. That’s it. You think you’re prepared? Think again. You can’t survive on optimism or hope alone.

So, let me make it crystal clear: You better have your act together now, or you’re done.

The problem with most people today is that they’re completely blind to the real threats we face. They walk around, heads buried in their phones, oblivious to the fact that this whole society could collapse in the blink of an eye. But it’s not just some far-off apocalypse I’m talking about. I’m talking about economic collapse, social unrest, grid failures, natural disasters, pandemics, and everything in between. The kind of world where your food, your water, your shelter, and your ability to protect yourself from the chaos around you will depend entirely on what you’ve managed to gather and the skills you’ve learned.

That’s right. Skills. Skills that you better start mastering now.

Here’s the thing: when the grid goes down and the grocery stores empty out, you won’t be able to waltz into your friendly local convenience store to grab a snack. And let me tell you, unless you live in a rural area and have prepared for the worst, you won’t be seeing those preppers with “lots of ammo and supplies” coming to save you. It’s every man for himself, and you will quickly realize just how unprepared you are if you don’t start taking this seriously.

So, let’s get into it. If you want to survive the collapse, you need to have the right skills in your back pocket. Here are 15 critical SHTF survival skills you need to master before it’s too late.

1. Water Filtration and Purification

If there’s one thing that’s more precious than gold when SHTF, it’s water. You can go without food for weeks, but you can’t survive more than a few days without water. Stockpiling water is smart, but you also need the knowledge to purify any water you come across. Learn how to boil water, use filtration systems, and make DIY purification methods.

2. Fire Starting

A fire isn’t just for cooking or warmth. It’s a beacon for rescue, a deterrent for predators, and a signal to others. Learn how to start a fire with limited supplies. I’m talking about using flint and steel, magnifying glasses, fire starters, and even primitive methods like rubbing sticks together. If you can’t make fire, you’re screwed.

3. Food Preservation

Stockpiling food is essential, but do you know how to make it last? Canning, dehydrating, and fermenting food are all necessary skills. If you’re relying solely on canned goods, you’re setting yourself up for failure in the long run. Learning how to preserve your own food can make the difference between life and death.

4. Self-Defense

Let me say it loud and clear: the world isn’t going to be a safe place when SHTF. People will become desperate, and desperation breeds violence. If you don’t know how to defend yourself—whether that’s with a firearm, a knife, or your bare hands—you’re putting yourself at extreme risk. Learn how to use weapons, but also know how to fight without them.

5. Shelter Building

When your home is no longer safe, you’ll need to know how to build a shelter. Do you know how to construct a lean-to, a tarp shelter, or even use natural resources for protection? If you’re stuck in the wilderness, your survival depends on your ability to stay dry, warm, and protected.

6. Hunting and Fishing

You’re not going to find a butcher shop to supply you with steaks once society falls apart. Knowing how to hunt, fish, trap, and forage is vital for long-term survival. You need to have the skills to put food on the table in a world where hunting for a meal isn’t just a recreational activity.

7. First Aid and Medical Knowledge

When help isn’t on the way, you better know how to take care of yourself. You need more than just a basic first aid kit—you need to know how to use it. Learn basic field medicine, including how to treat wounds, fractures, infections, and even how to perform CPR. The human body is fragile, and when it goes wrong, you’ll be on your own.

8. Navigation

If the GPS goes down, are you prepared to find your way? Learn how to read a map and use a compass. In a collapsed world, you’ll need to be able to navigate through urban areas or the wilderness. Whether you’re running from danger or searching for a safer place, the ability to find your way will be crucial.

9. Bartering

Cash is worthless when the economy collapses, but goods and services still hold value. If you don’t understand how to barter, you’re going to be at a serious disadvantage. Learn how to negotiate and trade supplies or skills to get what you need.

10. Composting and Growing Food

When you can no longer rely on grocery stores, you better know how to grow your own food. If you can’t grow your own crops or raise livestock, you’ll quickly run out of resources. Learn how to compost, plant, and maintain a garden. It’s one of the most valuable survival skills you can have.

11. Mental Toughness

Let’s face it: survival isn’t just about physical skills; it’s also about mental resilience. If you lose your nerve when things get tough, you won’t last long. You need to stay calm, think critically, and be able to make tough decisions when everything around you is falling apart. Mental toughness will be your secret weapon.

12. Improvised Weapons

When ammunition and weapons are scarce, you need to know how to improvise. A sharp stick or a hammer can be just as effective as a firearm in a pinch. Learn how to turn everyday objects into weapons for self-defense.

13. Electricity Alternatives

You won’t have access to the grid when it goes down, so you better know how to create your own power. Solar panels, wind turbines, and hand-crank generators are all viable options. You also need to know how to repair basic electrical systems.

14. Communication

When cell towers and the internet are gone, you need to know how to communicate without relying on modern technology. Ham radios, signal fires, and other low-tech methods will keep you connected when everyone else is in the dark.

15. Mental Health Care

When society breaks down, your emotional and psychological state can make or break your survival. Depression, stress, and anxiety can destroy your ability to function. Learn techniques for maintaining mental health during chaotic times. You need to stay strong, calm, and focused.


3 DIY SHTF Survival Hacks

Now, let’s talk about some simple, DIY hacks that can save your life when SHTF. If you’re relying on a pre-made kit, you’re already behind the curve. Here are three hacks you need to know:

1. DIY Water Filter

You don’t need an expensive water filtration system to clean dirty water. Create a simple water filter using sand, gravel, charcoal, and a piece of cloth. Just layer these materials in a plastic bottle, and it will filter out the bigger contaminants, leaving you with cleaner water. It won’t purify it entirely, but it will make it much safer to drink.

2. DIY Solar Still

If you’re out in the wilderness without access to clean water, a solar still can help. Dig a small hole, place a container at the bottom, and surround it with plastic sheeting. Place a small stone in the center of the plastic to create a low point, and the sun will cause the water to evaporate, collect, and drip into the container. It’s a slow process, but it can provide clean water.

3. Fire Starter with Cotton Balls and Vaseline

When you don’t have matches, and you need to start a fire, make your own fire starter. Soak cotton balls in Vaseline and store them in a waterproof container. When you need to start a fire, just light one of these balls. The Vaseline will act as an accelerant, giving you a fast and hot flame to get your fire going.


If you think all of this is overkill, fine. Keep living in your fantasy world where someone else will save you when the world falls apart. But remember this: when SHTF, what you have is all you’ll have. No backup plans, no help from anyone. It’s time to wake up, get real, and start preparing. Or you’ll be one of the ones begging for help when it’s already too late. Your survival starts now, not tomorrow.

South Dakota’s Ultimate Campsite Guide for Preppers

Survivalist’s Guide to South Dakota’s Best Campsites

As a survival prepper in South Dakota, finding the right camping sites is crucial for honing skills, testing gear, and ensuring you’re prepared for any emergency. The Mount Rushmore State offers a diverse range of terrains, from dense forests to expansive prairies, making it an ideal location for survival training. Below are 30 of the best campsites in South Dakota that cater to preppers seeking solitude, natural resources, and a true wilderness experience.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW TO SURVIVE A FAMINE

1. Roy Lake State Park

Located in Marshall County, Roy Lake State Park is a haven for those looking to practice water-based survival skills. With 100 campsites and access to fishing and boating, it’s perfect for testing water purification methods and fishing techniques.

2. Hartford Beach State Park

Situated on Big Stone Lake, this park offers 87 campsites with electric hookups. The area is ideal for practicing fishing and water purification, with the added benefit of a boat ramp for easy access.

3. Lake Vermillion Recreation Area

In McCook County, Lake Vermillion Recreation Area provides 267 acres of wilderness. It’s a prime spot for practicing navigation and shelter building, with ample opportunities for hiking and fishing.

4. Oakwood Lakes State Park

Located in Brookings County, this park features 136 campsites and two lakes. It’s excellent for practicing fishing, canoeing, and water purification techniques.

5. Newton Hills State Park

With 1,063 acres of forested terrain, Newton Hills State Park is perfect for practicing shelter building and fire-starting skills. The park also offers hiking trails and cross-country skiing in winter.

6. Fisher Grove State Park

This park offers 22 campsites and access to the James River, making it ideal for practicing canoeing and water purification. The surrounding area provides ample opportunities for foraging and wildlife observation.

7. Custer State Park

Known for its bison herds, Custer State Park offers over 70,000 acres of wilderness. It’s a prime location for practicing navigation, wildlife tracking, and survival skills in a variety of terrains.

8. Badlands National Park

With its unique geological formations, the Badlands provide a challenging environment for survival training. The park offers limited camping options, making it ideal for those seeking solitude and a test of their skills.

9. Black Hills National Forest

Spanning over 1.2 million acres, the Black Hills offer diverse ecosystems and terrains. It’s perfect for extended survival trips, with opportunities for hiking, fishing, and wildlife observation.

10. Buffalo Gap National Grassland

This expansive grassland offers wide-open spaces, making it ideal for practicing navigation and shelter building in a prairie environment.

11. Sica Hollow State Park

Known for its dense forests and steep ravines, Sica Hollow offers a challenging environment for survival training. The park provides opportunities for hiking and wildlife observation.

12. Pine Ridge Ranger District

Located in the Nebraska National Forest, this area offers diverse terrains, including forests and grasslands. It’s ideal for practicing navigation and shelter building skills.

13. Spring Creek Recreation Area

Situated in the Black Hills, this area offers opportunities for fishing and hiking. It’s a great spot for practicing water purification and shelter building techniques.

14. Lewis and Clark Recreation Area

Located near Yankton, this area offers access to the Missouri River, making it ideal for practicing water-based survival skills and fishing techniques.

15. Lake Andes National Wildlife Refuge

This refuge offers opportunities for wildlife observation and fishing. It’s a great spot for practicing navigation and foraging skills.

16. Red Canyon Visitor Center

Located in the Black Hills, this area offers hiking trails and opportunities for wildlife observation. It’s ideal for practicing navigation and shelter building.

17. Angostura Recreation Area

Situated near Hot Springs, this area offers access to Angostura Reservoir, making it ideal for practicing water purification and fishing techniques.

18. Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge

Located near Waubay, this refuge offers opportunities for wildlife observation and fishing. It’s a great spot for practicing navigation and foraging skills.

19. Lake Thompson Recreation Area

Situated near De Smet, this area offers access to Lake Thompson, making it ideal for practicing water-based survival skills and fishing techniques.

20. Swan Lake State Park

Located near Viborg, this park offers opportunities for fishing and hiking. It’s a great spot for practicing water purification and shelter building techniques.

21. Big Sioux Recreation Area

Situated near Brandon, this area offers access to the Big Sioux River, making it ideal for practicing water-based survival skills and fishing techniques.

22. Oakwood Lakes State Park

Located near Brookings, this park offers opportunities for fishing and hiking. It’s a great spot for practicing water purification and shelter building techniques.

23. Lake Poinsett Recreation Area

Tucked away in Hamlin County, Lake Poinsett is one of the largest lakes in eastern South Dakota. With over 100 campsites and year-round access, it’s excellent for cold-weather survival drills, fishing, and testing winter gear. The variety of game and nearby forested areas make it a strong candidate for extended primitive stays.

24. Shadehill Recreation Area

Located in Perkins County in the northwestern part of the state, this area is remote, open, and rugged — ideal for long-range bug-out practice. The Shadehill Reservoir provides a reliable water source, and the sparse human presence makes it a prime location for stealth camping or off-grid living experiments.

25. Snake Creek Recreation Area

On the banks of Lake Francis Case, this area gives you the opportunity to hone your fishing and boating survival tactics. With both primitive and modern campsites, it’s a good transitional training ground for going from comfort to bare-bones wilderness.

26. Llewellyn Johns Recreation Area

A lesser-known site near the North Dakota border, this quiet escape offers wide-open terrain with minimal foot traffic. It’s ideal for testing long-term shelter setups, solar gear, and food growing experiments in a prairie climate.

27. Beaver Creek Nature Area

Located near Sioux Falls but hidden enough to give you a decent taste of the wild, Beaver Creek is good for quick weekend bug-out drills. The creek is a great natural resource for learning advanced filtration and fire-starting techniques in wetter conditions.

28. Sheps Canyon Recreation Area

Nestled near Angostura Reservoir in the southern Black Hills, Sheps Canyon is a solid training ground for rocky terrain survival, water access issues, and dealing with varied wildlife. It’s remote, yet rich in resources — ideal for testing concealment shelters.

29. Union Grove State Park

Down in Union County, this peaceful spot offers dense forest cover and a quiet creek. It’s excellent for isolation training, practicing stealth movements, and working on nighttime navigation under tree canopy.

30. Brush Lake State Recreation Area

A real gem for preppers who like to stay off the radar, Brush Lake in Edmunds County is small, remote, and lightly trafficked. It’s ideal for primitive camping with minimal gear, foraging exercises, and small-game trapping tests. If you’re looking for a site that forces you to rely on instinct, this one delivers.


Final Thoughts from a South Dakota Survivalist

Out here in the Dakotas, nature doesn’t hand you anything — you earn it. Whether you’re getting ready for hard times, brushing up on self-reliance skills, or teaching the next generation how to live off the land, these 30 spots are tried and true. They’ve helped me test solar kits in windstorms, start fires in freezing rain, catch food when the fish ain’t biting, and sleep soundly under the open stars with just a tarp and a knife.

Use these places wisely. Don’t just car camp — simulate a real grid-down scenario. Leave the generator at home, cook over open flame, and carry water like it’s gold. Pack light, plan smart, and remember: it’s not about comfort. It’s about capability.

Stay sharp, stay silent, stay prepared.

How much emergency food should every American stockpile?

Most survival experts out there say every American, no matter your age or weight, needs a 72-hour supply for each person in your house.

3 days in other words.

But let’s be real. When was the last time an emergency packed up and left in exactly three days?

Exactly.

You gotta have at least a two-week supply of food.

And that’s for short emergencies.

But what about when the unexpected turns into the indefinite?

This is where things become more complicated.

In emergencies like these, where supermarkets become a memory and the grocery store aisles are bare, the rules of the game begin to shift.

And if you’re unprepared, you might as well lay down and accept your fate.

Let’s talk about what most folks neglect.

Preservation is your ally.

Learning to preserve food can be a game-changer.

Canning, dehydrating, and smoking are methods that can extend the lifespan of your food significantly.

Ever thought about pickling those cucumbers or making jerky from that deer meat?

This is the time to do so.

But you have to be careful!

This is what happens when you don’t can your food properly.

But don’t worry, if you’re not sure you’re able to can your food properly, you have more options.

Grow your own food!

In an indefinite emergency, becoming self-reliant is non-negotiable.

Take advantage of your backyard.

Even a small patch can produce a surprising amount of food. And don’t forget about herbs and sprouts, they can be grown even in a sunny window.

Bulk up on knowledge

Knowledge trumps everything.

The more you know, the safer you are.

This is why the emails you’re reading are so important.

Because I hold nothing back.

And I talk about everything that lets me survive in the world’s harshest conditions possible.

Keep learning about foraging, hunting, and fishing. Understand your local environment and what it can provide.

And stay curious. That’s important, brother.

Community strength

Humanity’s lived so long because we’ve stuck together.

Pooling resources, sharing knowledge, and supporting each other can make a world of difference.

The Mental game

This one’s tricky.

You can’t underestimate the power of a positive mindset.

The ability to stay calm, think clearly, and keep morale high is just as crucial as any physical preparation you’ve made.

This is how you build mental toughness.

Folks, preparing for prolonged emergencies ain’t easy.

And that’s why most folks don’t do it.

But I know my readers are not like most folks.

You guys are tough.

This is why I tell you these things.

Because I know you’re going to put in the work.

So keep doing what most folks aren’t willing.

And do whatever necessary to keep your family safe.

Also, I created a rather in-depth survival prepper TikTok account that you may want to check out!