
As the year winds down, it’s the perfect time to pause and honestly evaluate your preparedness journey. In this episode, I share three powerful reflection questions designed to help you examine what truly moved the needle in your preps this year—and what might have been little more than busy work. If you’ve ever felt like you’re spinning your wheels or wonder if your efforts are focused on the right things, this conversation is for you as you start prepping in 2026!
I also tackle a tough topic that might ruffle some feathers: the difference between preparing for probable scenarios versus fantasy-level events. The truth is, if most of your energy goes toward that one catastrophic possibility, you might be ignoring the everyday disruptions that are far more likely to affect you. Plus, I close out with a quote from Albert Einstein that perfectly captures why preparedness isn’t just about you—it’s about the people whose lives depend on your readiness. Listen to the episode to hear all three reflection questions and start your year with clarity.
Topics Covered
- Why the holiday season is an ideal time for preparedness reflection
- The danger of settling into a rut with your preparedness efforts
- The current feeling that “everyone and everything seems on edge” heading into 2026
- How threat assessment should evolve with experience rather than staying static
- The “fantasy prepping” trap and why it keeps people from building real resilience
- How preparing for common events (hurricanes, storms) covers most of what you actually need
Reflection Questions from this Episode
- Looking back at the beginning of this year, what was your biggest preparedness concern, and does that same concern still top your list today or has your perspective shifted?
- When you think about the preparedness actions you took this year, which single step gave you the most genuine peace of mind, and which ones felt more like busywork in retrospect?
- What percentage of your preparedness efforts this year went toward planning for unlikely catastrophic events versus building capacity for the likely disruptions you actually face regularly?
Of Interest
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