If you spend enough time prepping, you start to notice a pattern. Preppers are serious about buying supplies, serious about planning, and about talking through scenarios. What often gets less attention is how those plans and supplies perform under stressful situations.
The truth is, real disruptions rarely show up when you are ready for them. They interrupt meals, shorten sleep, and pile problems on top of one another. When that happens, your ability to function depends less on what you own and more on what you have already experienced.
This is where practice under deprivation becomes important. Not extreme suffering and not reckless behavior, but deliberate exposure to hunger, fatigue, limited resources, and inconvenience. Those experiences teach lessons that will be useful when the time comes.
How to Know You are Ready
When you practice skills or test systems under ideal conditions, you only learn how they work at their best. You do not learn how they behave when you feel worn down, distracted, or frustrated.
Comfort gives you extra patience, clearer thinking, and the ability to redo mistakes without consequence. In a real crisis, those buffers disappear quickly. If you have never operated without them, even simple tasks can feel overwhelming.
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Think about how many times you have tested something after eating a good meal or during a calm afternoon. That experience still has value, but it represents only one version of reality. Emergencies usually arrive at the worst possible moment.
That’s why the best thing to do is to start practicing when conditions are less forgiving. This way you learn what slows you down, what irritates you, and what actually holds up when you do not feel your best.
Using Your Gear the Way You Would Actually Need It
Many people own excellent equipment that has never been used under pressure. Owning tools creates confidence, but confidence without experience can be fragile.
Before you spend another dollar on equipment, it’s worth slowing down and being honest with yourself about what you can actually do if something stops working.
If the water coming out of your tap disappeared tomorrow and the only source nearby was questionable at best, would you know how to make it safe?
The problems start when sediment, algae, or runoff clog systems that worked perfectly during a demonstration. Many people do not realize how often water filters need attention until they depend on them day after day, or how quickly performance drops once water quality changes. For this reason, it’s an excellent idea to get a smart water box or a device that can pull water from the air. These are some of my favorite devices, and I hope you’ll see their value too.
Moreover, a generator that starts and runs for twenty minutes feels reassuring, but that does not answer the harder questions. Small mechanical problems that would normally be ignored suddenly matter. If something fails, you either understand the machine well enough to troubleshoot it, or you do not. So, limiting your own electricity for a few days has a way of clarifying what you actually need and what you only think you need.
Also, cameras, alarms, and lighting behave very differently when they cannot run constantly or when maintenance gets delayed. Some setups draw attention rather than reduce it. Others fail quietly. Until you have lived with those systems under restricted power and without constant monitoring, you are mostly guessing about how useful they really are. But with the right anti-looter kit, these things won’t happen – click here to see what I am talking about!
Training That Reflects Real Conditions
Shooting at the range when you’re well rested helps build fundamentals, but it doesn’t mirror how you’d perform when conditions aren’t ideal. Lack of sleep and low energy affect grip, balance, and decision-making, even for seasoned shooters. Training under those less-than-perfect circumstances, on occasion, gives you a clearer picture of what you can actually handle.
Firearms training becomes more realistic when mild physical stress is introduced. That might look like shooting after a long workday or taking a short hike with weight before stepping onto the line. The point isn’t to push yourself to exhaustion, but to become familiar with how performance changes when you’re not at your best.
So, before stockpiling more guns, ask yourself:
- Could you safely handle and operate your gun under stress?
- Would you be able to make sound decisions when you are are tired or your focus is compromised?
- Are you able to identify when not to shoot just as confidently as when to act?
If you’re unsure, that’s not a weakness, but a clear opportunity to build real competence through better training.
But keep in mind that any serious training should always happen under proper supervision. Skill means very little without safety. That’s the exact foundation of the self-defense course we created for you. Led by Terry, a Green Beret with decades of real-world experience, this course emphasizes firearm safety, sound judgment under stress, and practical defensive skills that translate beyond the range.
Find out more about gun practice and safety in the video below:

Fasting as a Practical Way to Train
You do not need to push yourself into extreme deprivation to understand how limited food affects your body and judgment. Even modest, intentional fasting can teach you a great deal about how you function when calories are not guaranteed.
How to Practice Fasting
One of the simplest approaches is a 24-hour fast, which includes the overnight period. This might mean eating dinner in the early evening, then skipping all meals until dinner the following day. During that time, you continue with normal activities, drink water, and avoid strenuous exertion beyond what you would realistically face during daily tasks.
Another option is intermittent fasting, which works well for people easing into food restriction. Common schedules include eating within an 8-hour window each day, such as late morning through early evening, or skipping breakfast consistently and delaying the first meal until midday.
But before you start your fasting period, we strongly advise you read this first:
You can also combine fasting with light, purposeful activity. Doing chores, maintaining equipment, organizing supplies, walking your property, or practicing basic skills while fasting gives you a clearer picture of how hunger affects productivity and focus.
When you begin doing this, make sure you have a food plan that aligns with your specific health conditions, as it can be risky for individuals with diabetes or low blood sugar. It’s also important to consult a healthcare professional beforehand.
The Health Benefits of Fasting
When done sensibly, fasting offers real health advantages even under normal conditions:
- Improved insulin sensitivity, which helps regulate blood sugar and energy levels.
- Reduced joint inflammation.
- Improved digestion and reduced constant hunger signals.
- Greater mental clarity once the body adapts to periods without food.
Why Fasting Matters in a SHTF Scenario
From a survival standpoint, fasting does more than build discipline. It prepares your body and mind for realities that emergencies impose without warning:
- You become accustomed to operating with fewer calories, reducing panic when food is limited.
- Your body adapts to using stored energy more efficiently.
- You gain confidence in your ability to function without constant meals.
- Decision-making improves because hunger is no longer unfamiliar or distracting.
- Rationing becomes more realistic because you understand your true needs.
- Energy crashes become predictable instead of surprising.
Good Nutrition Shouldn’t Be Optional
When people plan food storage, calories tend to get most of the attention. They matter, but they’re not the whole story. Over time, the quality of what you eat has a direct effect on how well you function.
A lack of proper nutrition can take you out faster than the crisis itself. You don’t have to be starving for things to go wrong. Poor-quality food slowly wears you down, weakening strength, slowing recovery, and dulling mental clarity. These changes are gradual, which makes them easy to miss until your performance has already dropped.
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Using your stored food during training is one of the most reliable ways to see if it actually works for you. It shows how your body responds and whether your diet supports sustained effort, not just survival. That feedback gives you time to make better choices while you still can.
It’s also important to understand how to handle different health situations related to nutrition, such as digestive issues, heart problems, or any other illness that could weaken you in a SHTF scenario. You don’t have to be a doctor to know all of these things, all you need is THIS BOOK and the willingness to practice what you learn.
Home Doctor was written by Dr. Maybell Nieves, a physician renowned for developing innovative and practical ways to treat patients after Venezuela’s economic collapse, when hospitals and pharmacies ran out of medicine, supplies, electricity, and even running water. Her hard-earned knowledge and real-world experience are all captured in this book.
Final Thoughts
Spending time relying on stored food, limiting electricity, or working through fatigue creates familiarity with conditions that emergencies impose without warning. Familiarity reduces panic and improves decision-making.
When things go wrong, you will not suddenly become more capable than you were before. You will operate at the level you have already practiced.
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This weekend will be a real life SHTF scenario due to the weather. I didn’t have to fight the crowds at grocery stores and gas stations. We have food supplies, water, gas generators and fuel and solar powered generators, a gas log fire place and plenty of wood if needed for heat. I will take a few days off and relax while others suffer the consequences of not being prepared
Howdy from high in the desert swamp,
The article was nothing if not timely. I sat across the highway looking at the major grocery store in this county. Cars are parked all over. They’re parked on the side roads and people are walking in. There’s cars in front of the store waiting to pick somebody up because there’s no place to park in and that line goes across the parking lot and down a side road at least a quarter mile. I just sat here watching that. How quickly we forget Covid. This event is nothing unusual. The news has been hyping this for close to a week. Today there’s breaking news with the forecaster talking about potential life-threatening cold. It’s supposed to be in the mid to upper 20s. For maybe 35 hours. Nothing is frozen. We haven’t had a freeze. I sat here, wondering what my emotion was watching this. It wasn’t disbelief because I’ve seen this before. It wasn’t really contempt for the stupid. It was bigger than that. The deception that has been thrown on people since the 60s is right there in that parking lot. Chaos confusion, anger, fear everything the left-wing lunatics have been spreading came to fruition right there in that parking lot and in that store. If any of you reading this wonder why you do what we do sometimes, there you go. If you’re new to this site and you’re laughing or wondering if this is worth the effort? Trot yourself down to that parking lot and get in that quarter mile long line and that’s only very short term 30-35 hours. Wait till there’s two weeks, two months, unforeseen time limit?? Shortages. No power which has happened here quite a bit. I sat there and looked at that and realized this is a very small portion of the county. Others are at work others have worked graveyards and they’re asleep. What happens when everybody wants to eat? What happens when everybody needs water? I drove home and I hugged my dog. Apparently we’re the only two people in this county that have any sense. I have told several people about what I just saw. The more I said it the more disgusted I got. This has been in the plan since the 60s to have people absolutely dependent on electronics. Dependent on stores. Dependent on government. If something like this happened when I was a kid the only way to have known was we didn’t have lights. Other than that, we had stuff stored up canned up and frozen. That was a normal way of life. Today was absolute panic shopping. So if anyone is wondering if it’s worth it or who are these prepping people? You can read this response and look at your own grocery store and imagine the parking lot completely full cars parked wherever there’s an empty space of concrete or on the grass. The line is across the front of the store and down the side road for quarter mile and everywhere you look at the front entrance is people. In a very minor way this must have been how Noah felt. The storm is raging. I’m on a boat. I have food, water, supplies, the nutty people who didn’t pay attention or believe this would happen don’t and are shouting, fighting, scared and mean. I can sit here for an extended time. I quite certain someone will thumbs down this. They will also be the one at your door wanting in when it gets really rough. The Bible warned everyone these days are coming and not just 35 hours but years.
Remember the Alamo
Remember Pearl Harbor
Remember 9/11
Remember North Carolina
Remember to have your soul prepared
Chaplain Dan, let it out bro…like you I observe how people act during stressful times, panic and chaos is right, ignorance and procrastination are multiplied in our day. But I wouldn’t give it two weeks before the SHTF, more like 3 days. Thank the Lord He gave us discernment and wisdom to prepare for the worst, as He did Noah, but we don’t have 100 yrs to build. And if anyone thumbs down you, they must be touched in da hed.
Howdy neighbor, semi neighbor anyways… I reside rurally, over 150 miles from any metromess AO… in fact, my county population is less than most of the suburb cities around those metromess AO’s… and I reside rurally, and have been for the past 3yrs… I came from one of those over populated messes… I was up there during the Snowmageden … but I had also been prepping since 1998… I’ve seen all what you just described back during that weather event and during COVID… luckily I didn’t and still don’t, have to deal with all that… I’m way better off than most, in that I don’t have to hit the stores before or during this coming weather event… I do have a little sympathy for those that just don’t get it, very little sympathy… I can visualized what’s going on at those grocery stores right now… sad, but it happens everytime… they just don’t learn, its crazy… oh well… I’ll pray that no one looses their life during this event and that neighbors check on neighbors, especially the senior’s …freezing to death in todays society should be non existent… and hopefully everyone does survive… I do remember the Alamo, 911, NCarolina, and all the rest, and I especially remember 911 and who was responsible…Live long and prosper…
NBC warfare drills in the NAVY were brutal but taught us how to react if the real deal occurred.
Been there, done that. USS Hepburn FF 1055. Fucker, Fighter, tin can rider. 1980 – 1985.
Stay out of the woods if you are getting freezing rain …I have seen trees just start falling down all over from the weight of the ice on the limbs . Stay warm and wait it out safe inside your home .The weather is very nice in the Pacific N.W. I might go out and get a tan .