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Friday, January 27, 2012

Learning Emergency Prep the hard way

During Carl's Christmas vacation we (I) decided to go through our 72 hour kits.  After rearranging the furniture (Carl says I'm nesting), we pulled out our backpacks and went through them.  During the process, Connor became very adamant that he pack his own bags to get ready for an emergency.  We didn't think much of it until 15 minutes later he reappeared laden down with about 8 bags full of...stuff.  Carl tried to explain that the idea is to pack only what you need and only what you can carry but Connor insisted it was all necessity and that he absolutely could handle it.

Ever eager to teach his children to figure things out for themselves, Carl decided we (they) would have a practice run.  They sat in the family room and pretended to watch tv until I made a siren sound indicating they needed to grab their bags and "run" (walk across the yard 10 times).

I laughed hysterically as I watched Connor trudge across the yard dragging his several bags, even carrying one in his mouth.  Tyler seemed to get the idea because all he had was a backpack and a small bag.  Eventually, Connor had to drop bags.  Tyler offered to carry one of them but in the end Connor learned exactly what Carl had hoped, that it might be a good idea to reassess what was a "need" and pack a little lighter.

3 comments:

Lirpa said...

I love this story & Carl's teaching method! Cord & I learned the hard way when we were evacuated from our apt bldg at 2AM one morning & watched all night as nearly the whole block burned to the ground (fortunately we just had building damage). Anywho, we learned what was REALLY useful in those bags & what we wished we had. Pack extra socks--when you get evacuated, putting on socks & lacing up tennis shoes is not the fastest method out, but then your toes freeze! Cash for a meal or two--we didn't need/want to eat those 2000 calorie bars, but we wanted to go to 7-11 around the corner after a few hours & have something warm (chances are the whole world hasn't collapsed, just possibly yours, & food is still available), & thin, dense(like fleece) blankets will keep you warm, give you something to sit on, etc. Also, buy a fire safe or safety deposit box for valuable papers/goods you can't take with you. Then hope you never need any of these tips (we've had to use our bags twice since then)!! :)

Sarah Mejias said...

That was awesome. Way to teach a point mom and dad :) Loved the pics too of the experience.

Dyanna Stephens said...

That is an awesome way to get that point across... I may have to try that.