Quote:
Originally Posted by
newfoundland 
I am intrigued HeatherLyn. Why do you keep so much food in reserve? Do you live a long way from the shops? Is it harsh winter weather or maybe you live in an area where there are natural emergencies like huricanes? And you lucky123, is it the same for you? I have a sense that you are preparing for something, but what is it? You have both obviously thought long and hard about stock piling food. I hope I don't sound to inquisitive.
don't know why they (personally) do, but there are lots of reasons why folks prepare in general. Huricane Katrina is a good example - so was the Northridge Earthquake in CA - my hubby lived at ground zero for that and they were without power and water for almost a month - but because they were prepared (food, water, gasoline, generator, etc.) they were able to stay in their house while lots of folks in northridge weren't able to - and lots of folks lost things due to looting.
we're in the process of moving from CA to MO and let me tell you, moving a farm and two businesses is *expensive*... having 2 people/4 months of food on hand has really helped financially ease the stress. my hubby has been using those supplies while he remains in CA to complete our business there.
some folks do it on general principles - if there is an emergency or civil unrest (for instance the Los Angeles riots) it provides a buffer of security, allowing one to stay home, protect and provide for their family at lowest risk. some do it for religious reasons - the mormon church has always encouraged preparation. some do it because they're OCD and compelled by anxiety. some do it to take advantage of sales and bulk buying, along with reduced impulse buying and increased food planning so they're making the best financial choices and saving money. some do it because they fear the end of the world - for religious or cultural reasons.
it's really a bit shocking to me that more people *don't* prepare. in the northridge quake, my hubby's was the only family within 3 blocks that was able to stay in their house, noone else had the ability to stay put for a month without access to public services, groceries, government help. a month is really not so long a time to have to do for yourself, and yet extremely few people were able to do it.
consider how quickly you'd be unable to provide for yourself if you worked and lived in an area that was shut down by any sort of infrastructure emergency - hurricane, earthquake, tornado that shut down power and roads and water. it sounds extreme, but it happens more than you think. a few years ago MO had a record ice storm which took out power lines and some folks were without power for about 3 weeks, more recently that was true in new england - an adventure if you're prepared, and a disaster if you're not. what if you and your spouse were both out of work at the same time? what if the local water supply was compromised? what if the roads were impassible? what if the stores were empty because of people's panic?
I live in a farm community, although I don't come from a farm family. farm families have always put up supplies - you grow it / harvest it / slaughter it / preserve it when you have it, and you use it the rest of the year - it's what human beings have done for thousands of years, prior to the quick-mart on every other corner making us lazy and permitting us to live on impulse instead of on planning.
I think personally it's "what if" that motivates me, along with a general sense of anxiety. there are things I can control, and things I cannot... however if something *does* go badly wrong, whatever the reason, and I'm suffering because I have not controlled what I can, I will feel like an idiot. people may think what I do now is paranoid, but if something *does* happen, that paranoia is suddenly going to look a lot like prudence.