SURVIVAL IS A TEAM SPORT
IMPROVE YOUR CHANCES BY ENHANCING THE SKILLS OF THOSE AROUND YOU.
BY DANA BENNER
An instructor at a Fieldcraft Survival (
FieldcraftSurvival.com) training event leads a class on basic survival skills.
(Photo: Fieldcraft Survival)
What do you do when your GPS stops working? Here, Fieldcraft Survival (
FieldcraftSurvival.com) instructors give an orienteering class so students can eliminate their reliance on technology that might not be available after a disaster.
(Photo: Fieldcraft Survival)
I really hate labels. Labels have a tendency to give people generalized views … and often, erroneous assumptions.
Take the word, “prepper.” What is a “prepper” anyway? And, how about a “survivalist”? These two words mean different things to different people. Both carry connotations, often negative, and can promote an “us-against-them” mentality.
So, what do they mean, and how can we drop those divisive labels and work with others inside and outside “the community”?
PREPPER VS. SURVIVALIST
Merriam-Webster defines a “prepper” as “a person who gathers materials and makes plans in preparation for surviving a major disaster or cataclysm (such as worldwide economic collapse or war).” Going by this definition, if you stock up on extra food and fuel in the days prior to a hurricane, plot an escape route in case of a wildfire or have a supply of sandbags in preparation for a flood, you’re a prepper.
Members share the work- as well as the benefits-by pulling together on maintenance chores at the Groveton Fish & Game Club in Groveton, New Hampshire.
“LONG AGO, PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD KNEW THAT IN ORDER TO
SURVIVE, THEIR GROUP NEEDED TO WORK TOGETHER AND LEVERAGE
EACH PERSON’S STRENGTHS AND EXPERTISE … THIS IS HOW WE MUST
ACT TODAY AND WORK TOGETHER.”
To many people, “prepper” stirs up images of fortified underground bunkers, caches of weapons and people who’ve watched way too many episodes of The Walking Dead or Mad Max. This image, which has been endorsed by some who claim to be part of the prepper community, has helped fuel its negative stigma. In actuality, true “preppers” are nothing like this.