Here are some tidbits from me to you. This post covers practical war preparedness steps for everyday families: building a pantry, securing finances, making a communication plan, protecting your health, and keeping your household emotionally steady, all written from the perspective of someone who has lived through the Cold War, Vietnam War, the Gulf War, 9/11, and beyond. As newlyweds, Mark was sent to Basic Training in Fort Ord, California, in 1969, during the Vietnam War.
I’ve been alive since Harry Truman was president. I grew up practicing duck-and-cover drills in an elementary school classroom, not entirely sure what ducking under a wooden desk was supposed to accomplish against a nuclear weapon, but doing it anyway because the teacher said to. I watched the Vietnam War unfold on our first color television set. I’ve lived through more national emergencies, more moments where the whole country held its breath, than I can count on two hands.

So when people around me start asking what they should do to prepare for a potential war, whether it touches our shores or not, I feel like I have something useful to say. Not because I’m an expert with credentials on the wall, but because I have been paying attention for a very long time.
Here is what I’ve learned. Take what fits your situation. Leave what doesn’t.
If We Have a War: Tidbits From Me
1. Start with your pantry, not your panic
The single most practical thing any household can do is build a steady, rotating supply of food and water. This isn’t about survivalist fantasy; it’s about being the kind of family that doesn’t need to sprint to the grocery store the moment something scary happens on the news.
Aim for four to six weeks of shelf-stable food that your family actually eats. Canned goods, dried beans, rice, pasta, cooking oil, salt, and whatever else is on your regular table. Rotate it: use the oldest cans first, replace what you use. Water storage matters too; one gallon per person per day is the standard guidance. I sure wish the world would realize one gallon per person isn’t going to cut it. I get thirsty just thinking about it. Please store four gallons per person per day. Let’s get real, you want clean underwear, water to provide hydration, water to do your cooking, and we need to maintain proper personal hygiene?
A manual can opener is not optional. Neither is a battery-powered or hand-crank radio. Manual Can Opener and Battery-Powered Radio or Hand Cranked Radio.
Buy a little extra food each week rather than doing one large panicked purchase. This is calmer and cheaper, and it means your pantry grows organically without drama.
“A prepared family doesn’t look like chaos. It looks like a full pantry, a written plan, and people who know what to do.”
2. Get your paperwork in order
This is the step most people skip, and it’s one of the most important. Know where your vital documents are. Birth certificates, Social Security cards, passports, insurance policies, medication lists, health records, account numbers, all of it should be in one place you can grab quickly, ideally in a waterproof bag or a fireproof box. Waterproof Bag
Make digital copies and store them somewhere accessible, a secure cloud folder or a thumb drive kept with a trusted family member in another location. If you have ever tried to replace a birth certificate in the middle of a crisis, you know why this matters.
While you’re at it, review your finances. Carry a small amount of cash. ATMs go dark in emergencies. Credit card systems go offline. A few hundred dollars in small bills tucked somewhere safe isn’t paranoia; it’s the same logic as keeping a spare tire in the trunk.
Be Prepared for a Hurricane + Free Printable Emergency Binder Contents
3. Make a communication plan that your whole family knows
When I was raising my children during the Cold War years, we had a plan. Everyone knew it. If something happened and we got separated, we had a meeting place, a backup meeting place, and a phone number for a relative in another state who could act as the family relay point.
That structure still works. Designate an out-of-area contact; someone in a different city or state, whom everyone in your household knows to call if local lines are jammed. Agree on two meeting places: one near home, one farther away if the neighborhood is inaccessible. Write it down. Put it in every person’s wallet or phone case. Children old enough to read should know it by heart.
Don’t assume your cell phone will work. Texts often go through when voice calls can’t. Know the difference, and have a backup.
4. Tend to your medications and health needs
If you take prescription medications, talk to your doctor about keeping a small emergency supply. Many physicians will work with you on this, particularly for maintenance medications. A 30-day buffer can make an enormous difference if supply chains are disrupted or pharmacies are overwhelmed. 90 days is even better.
Keep a written list of every medication, dosage, and prescribing physician in your emergency documents. If you wear glasses, have a backup pair. If anyone in your household uses medical equipment, understand its power requirements and have a plan for outages.
First aid supplies are basic and often overlooked: bandages, antiseptics, over-the-counter pain relievers, a thermometer, and any allergy medications your family needs. Know how to use what you have.
5. Think through your shelter situation
In most scenarios, including economic disruption, localized conflict, civil unrest, and even certain natural disasters, staying in your own home is the safest option. Know which room in your house would serve best as a shelter space if needed: interior rooms away from windows are generally recommended. Know where your utility shutoffs are. Understand your home’s vulnerabilities. 4 in one Tool and Carbon Monoxide-Natural Gas-Propane Detector
If evacuation ever becomes necessary, know your routes. Have two planned. Understand where you would go and how long it would take to get there. Fuel your car when it reaches the halfway mark rather than waiting for the low-fuel light; gas stations have lines during emergencies.
6. Protect the children’s sense of safety
I raised children during some genuinely frightening times in this country. What I learned is that children aren’t protected by ignorance; they’re protected by calm, honest adults who give them age-appropriate information and something useful to do.
Tell them the truth in words they can manage. Reassure them that adults are paying attention and taking care of things. Give them a small job: filling the water jugs, knowing the meeting place, and helping organize the pantry. Children feel safer when they feel capable.
Limit the news that plays in front of young children. You’re allowed to turn it off. In fact, you should.
7. Tend your community ties
Every serious crisis I have lived through has confirmed one thing: neighbors matter. The people on your street are your first line of mutual aid. Know who among them is older, who lives alone, who has young children, and who has medical needs. Check on them. Let them check on you.
Community isn’t a soft word; it’s a survival strategy. In every disaster I’ve read about, and some I’ve witnessed, the neighborhoods that fared best were the ones where people already knew each other before anything went wrong.
8. Guard your own steadiness
This is the one nobody wants to talk about, so I will. Watching frightening news around the clock is not preparedness; it’s punishment. It doesn’t make you more ready. It makes you more anxious, more reactive, and less capable of clear thinking.
Set news limits for yourself. One or two check-ins a day from reliable sources is enough to stay informed. The rest of your day should still include meals with people you love, work that matters, sleep, some form of movement, and whatever makes ordinary life feel like life worth living. Don’t sacrifice those things on the altar of constant vigilance. They’re the whole point.
I’ve lived through genuinely terrifying moments in history. We are still here. The thing that got families through hard times wasn’t perfect information or perfect preparation; it was steadiness, practicality, and the decision to take care of each other. That’s still the whole game. Start Small. Start today. A full pantry and a written plan are worth more than any amount of worry.
Final Word
I’ve lived through a great deal in my 76 years, and if there’s one thing I know for certain, it’s this: the people who come out the other side of hard times are not always the strongest or the wealthiest or the best equipped; they’re the ones who had adequate preparations, stayed calm, stayed connected, and took care of each other. That’s what I’m asking you to do. Don’t wait for the worst to happen before you start paying attention. Get your house in order, check on your neighbors, hold your family close, and don’t let fear dictate your decisions. You have more in you than you think. We all do. Thank you for reading, and thank you for caring enough to prepare, not just for yourself, but for the people around you who are counting on you to show up. Now go do something about it and help others do the same. May God bless this world, Linda
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