Prepper-Mindfulness

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OK, so strange post today. It’s about my New Year’s Revelation. (Sort of.)

In Australia, December-to-February is our Summer, and therefore, it’s also our Fire Season. While downloading some data sheets on how best to prepare our property against the threat of a fire, I was pulled up short by a comment that noted “being prepared” is not just about having the right resources at the ready – it’s about YOU being physically and mentally prepared to handle a crisis.

The emergency service website was blunt – if you don’t think you can withstand the physical and emotional onslaught of fighting a fire at your property – then don’t – evacuate before the fire reaches your property and leave it to someone else who is more capable.

The reason it caught me off guard is that with a thud-clang, I realized that I have spent the last 3 years desperately trying to survive a life that was messed up by chronic pain and illness, and as such, I was NOT in any way, shape or form, physically or mentally ready for an emergency that existed outside of my own body.

I’ve spoken in the past about how, as a sick person, you need to “be prepared… but, like, really prepared” and place your medication in different locations at the ready, as well as having emergency contact details on a metal fob on my key chain (and another on my handbag) in case I can’t speak when I have a hemiplegic (stroke-like) migraine melt down. In this sense, I would get a tick from the ‘Preppers’ (those people who actively prepare for emergencies).

But, I was also writing at the end of last year about how I want to lose some weight so I can get more mobile (“7 minutes of movement over 7 days“). And whilst my mind is willing, my motivation is often low; I get lazy because the idea of exercise doesn’t interest me, so there’s no hurry-up-fire in my belly. I’m guessing that earns me a preppers-cross (there’s no time like the present to get fit).

So, for 2026, I’m going to shift my focus from surviving migraines, to preparing for a Mini Zombie Apocalypse.

Stay with me.

I don’t see myself going full-prepper mode. I think it’s wasteful to start stockpiling food that might go off before it’s eaten, or thinking of everything and everyone as a potential threat in a doom and gloom world, and I have absolutely no interest in moving into a subterranean bunker. What’s more, I can’t imagine myself learning how to pickle homegrown fruit or sew my own wound shut, let alone how to shoot a gun or gut a rabbit…

But… I do want to imagine a newer version of me that is relatively self-sufficient, able to stay calm under pressure and capable of walking a decent distance if my car breaks down in the bush on the way to the family farm (I’m looking at you flat tire!).

I guess I’m tired of thinking of myself with an ever-present vague cloud of victim-mentality hovering nearby.

I also really don’t like the idea that I would have to evacuate my home in an emergency because I am not able to withstand the pressure. (I’m mature enough to recognize that life is more important than possessions, and that if I don’t have the right safety equipment, water volume, or brute strength, I gotta get outta there, but it makes me sad to think I might be labelled “too fragile” to cope with the event.)

Visualizing the sorts of characters, such as Katniss Everdeen or Tris Prior, that would have the ability to survive a dystopian event, they’re all pretty kick@$$ cool. The reality is, even migraines aside, I have a dodgy hip and a frozen shoulder, so I am ridiculously removed from the likes of Lara Croft the Tomb Raider and her back-flipping, somersaulting energy.

But I don’t have to be HER. I just have to be a slightly stronger version of ME.

So, after a quick tour of several websites about how to prepare for an end of world event, it became obvious that we all already do it, in greater or lesser degrees. We have emergency contact numbers on our fridge, take out car insurance, keep a First Aid Kit stocked up, and before we leave the house, we check the weather forecast and that we have $50 in cash tucked into the back of our mobile phone. Every day, hustling, hustling, we recognize that managing risks is a standard, and reasonable, part of our lives.

Being alert, but not alarmed, makes sense.

Now, as natural disasters are becoming more frequent and intense, it also makes sense to have bigger plans in place.

Red Cross Australia has a great website page with helpful hints on how to make an emergency plan, ‘are you prepared’ quizzes, and a survival checklist: Emergency preparedness guide | Australian Red Cross

But this blog is a site that loves mindfulness – so it’s to that component of being prepared that I’m now turning.

By practicing being calm on a day-to-day basis, there is a higher chance that you can remain calm in an emergency.

Moreover, for me, the Tai Chi exercises that I do most days to relax my mind and body are actually rooted in ancient martial arts movements. While “touching the clouds” I’m also improving my balance, slowly increasing my muscle strength, and helping sharpen my attention and memory.

What I like about prepper-thinking (even if it is only briefly) is that you can muster up a feeling of being more in control. You can imagine a crisis unfolding, and rather than slip into panic mode or start woe-is-me-ing, you can use mindfulness in a proactive way. For example, you might:

+ take a moment to ground yourself in the present (remind yourself; you are capable – your prior mindfulness practice has improved your mental fortitude and made you resilient),

+ breathe slowly and deeply (moving forward you want to be proactive not reactive, so calm your nervous system right down in readiness),

+ scan your surroundings for risks (but in a realistic rather than catastrophic way – think clearly and stay focused),

+ do a quick body scan to determine what (if anything) is injured of affected by what is unfolding,

+ stay in the present moment (don’t start thinking about what you coulda-woulda-shoulda done; you are where you are, so, what can you do in the here and now?)

+ remember you are part of a wider world (so check if those around you are ok and lend assistance as required),

+ when the event is over, use mindfulness to help you manage the aftermath of the stress and trauma.

Circling back to Red Cross, they have a “Prepare Your Mind” page to help, and they use 3 steps (it feels like a bit of a missed opportunity they didn’t use the anacronym AIM (I do love an anacronym (see more of mine here))):

"anticipate / identify / manage"  with three overlapping circles in a venn diagram

[Image source: Prepare your mind | Australian Red Cross]

*

For me, prepper-mindfulness is about imagining yourself as the kind of person who will cope under pressure, who others might turn to in a crisis, and who can get sh!t done when your world is literally (or just metaphorically) falling apart… shoulders back and chin up friends!

That said – if that’s not you (now or potentially ever) – be kind to yourself – no judgment or negative trash talk should be directed your way, stay focused on what is within your ‘circle of concern‘ and let the rest go.

With any luck, you are as #blessed as I am, and the chances of a catastrophe are slim… (whilst recognizing that smaller, ‘everyday traumas‘ can still happen).

So, as 2026 unfolds, imagine me air-boxing, doing a first aid refresher course and keeping my home-grown herbs alive on my windowsill (because that remains an issue for me 2 years since blogging about it (here))… and maybe, by the end of the year, I will have gotten over my squeamish tendencies and tried to catch and gut a fish (yuk)… otherwise, it’s half-dead-zombie-parsley as an apocalypse-dinner for me and mine!

Take care taking care out there, Linda xx


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44 responses to “Prepper-Mindfulness”

  1. The Oceanside Animals Avatar

    Java Bean: “Ayyy, our Dada is apparently well-prepared for the zombie apocalypse as well โ€• he has not one but two swords on the walls of his office, because ‘blades don’t need reloading’.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh! Don’t mess with Dada! Swords do not need reloading but they can still cause some serious (close contact) damage!!

      I have a samurai sword (I asked my family to buy me a sword when I graduated my PhD – that’s what they do in some Nordic countries to show you successfully defended your thesis – instead of a thin rapier, I got a samurai sword), if I took it off the wall I would probably lose my own toe!!

      Like

  2. Sue Dreamwalker Avatar

    I think if confronted with such an event.. Be it fire, flood or what ever, our instincts would be to get to safety first… So any type of prepping in the home wouldn’t be that much good… However you did give me a chuckle in my minds eye as I envisioned you Kick boxing the air in a Kung Fu Fighting mode lol.. ๐Ÿ™‚

    On a serious note though, you are in Australia more prone to those horrid Fires that soon can sweep out of control and destroy everything in its path… How do you prepare for that, I would not like to even think about it.. But as you say.. You have to be mentally prepared if you are preparing to defend your property..

    Now I have some extra cash, enough staples, and we do grow our own veggies, but if the world turned upside down in an instant.. would any of that matter? I think panic would set in first and rational thinking later.. As much as we would like to think ourselves prepared .. So your sentence..

    ” Being Alert, not alarmed!” Makes sense… Sending much love and good luck with your prepper Mindfulness xx โค

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yeah – there’s how we imagine ourselves reacting, and then how we really do – but sometimes we can surprise ourselves (I’ve been in a couple of not so great situations, and I actually was more steely than I would have expected) – another blogger, Richard, had a great way of rephrasing my term: โ€œbe prepared, not scaredโ€ – and yes, I’m still going around the house fist pumping the universe for being great, and karate chopping my invisible adversaries as my mini-workout!! (my teen daughters are getting used to it and not rolling their eyes (as much))!!๐Ÿคฃ

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Sue Dreamwalker Avatar

        My sister is beating Leukaemia that way too.. By imagining all the bad cells returning to good ones ๐Ÿ™‚ xx Zapping them, and kicking them out xx

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          I’m reading a lot about this sort of thing at the moment – I used to be skeptical, but I now believe visualization is a very powerful tool (our brain apparently can’t distinguish between a memory / dream / reality / visualization – the more details and sensory input the more believable it is)

          Don’t laugh, but for me I imagine myself walking through sunlight at the park and strangers are clapping me for being so well as I walk past, head held high (instead of cowering with migraine pain in the dark) – it really does lift my spirit – I’m not sure if it will “cure” my migraine diagnosis but it has reduced my suffering and actually seems to be reducing the pain levels as I move into a better head-space (pun intended!)

          Let your sister know I’m sending her some zappy-happy-vibes to add to her visualization ๐ŸŒž

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Sue Dreamwalker Avatar

            THANK you… And I am not laughing… I do visualizations all the time ..n I also cured myself from a Fibromyalgia and Raynaud’s disease with positive affirmations and Qi Gong… Spring Forest Qi Gong… KEEP visualising Linda… I know of people who have cured brain tumours this way…xx MUCH LOVE XX

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              ๐Ÿฅณ๐ŸŒž๐Ÿฅฐ

              Like

  3. Julia Avatar

    It is good to be prepared mentally and be ready to deal with the physical world. Visualization helps you act when you need to act. When we were RVing, we had a gobag and were prepared to leave the RV behind. An RV is not something you want to be in during a flood or high winds! In each campground, we knew where the tornado shelter was and how to get there. We kept our weather alert on. Only once did we experience very high wind and golf-ball-sized hail. We were ready and ran to the tornado shelter when our alert went off. I am so glad we had a plan as our RV and truck suffered heavy damage.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      How frightening! Good on you for having a bag packed and ready to go – and yes – an RV would be a scary place to be in an emergency (in Australia, we just had a flooding event on the Wye River in the state of Victoria and several tents, cars, and caravans all got washed away (luckily no one was injured that I can read about but several people mentioned they only had time to grab the kids and run) amazing how we can be uprooted so quickly!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Julia Avatar

        After seeing the aftermath of such destruction on the news and videos, we felt the need to be prepared. We know our lives are more important than things.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          1000% – it is very tempting to be attached to all our things (I get it, we worked really hard to get them) – but we can’t replace our family and friends – people matter most!

          Tornados sound like a next-level fear-factor (I’ve seen some documentaries on them, and living in “The Alley” must take nerves of steel!)

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Julia Avatar

            It does. Weโ€™ve had several tornado warnings here and we only lived here for just over a year. Weโ€™ve lost several big trees to high winds.

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              Wild weather has always been here, but it does seem to be getting wilder! Sending lots of love your way – at home or on the road – stay safe my friend!

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Julia Avatar

                Thank you! When you mentioned fires, it made me think of the year the state of Colorado burned. It was a scary time.

                Liked by 1 person

  4. Dana at Regular Girl Devos Avatar

    Linda, I love how your compared prepperness to self-care!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      My mind goes some weird places – but I do think it makes sense – my hubby is a sailor and he always says “whatever happens you have to protect the vessel; it the boat goes down, everyone goes down” – sometimes I think a Mom is a bit like the family-vessel! We need to stay afloat so that the crew can keep going on! ๐Ÿ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Dana at Regular Girl Devos Avatar

        Agreed!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          ๐ŸŒž

          Liked by 1 person

  5. justrojie Avatar

    you’ve got this!! i think you’re pretty bad ass!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      ๐Ÿ˜„ it’s not at all how I imagine myself, but now that you’ve said it, I’m going to believe it! – thank you for the lovely gift of confidence๐Ÿ’

      Liked by 1 person

      1. justrojie Avatar

        Youโ€™re welcome!!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          ๐Ÿฅฐ

          Liked by 1 person

  6. cz09 Avatar

    You must read the
    “BECOMING BULLETPROOF” by

    Liked by 1 person

    1. cz09 Avatar

      by Evy Poumpouras

      Like

    2. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh – thank you – I just put my name down for it at the local library – looking forward to reading it – it sounds exactly like what I’m interested in at the moment – looking forward to reading it and providing notes – I’ll do a shoutout for you when I do!! L xx

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Julian Summerhayes Avatar
    Julian Summerhayes

    I can’t imagine having to live with the threat of losing everything to fire. And that risk is only increasing or going to increase. I hope things don’t take a turn for the worse and everything is OK. Thanks for sharing your approach for 2026 and apologies for not being around much on WordPress for a while. Take care, Julian PS. I don’t think it’s too late to say Happy New Year for 2026.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      The threat of fires is scary, but the chance of an everyday car accident is ironically much higher. Itโ€™s never too late to celebrate in anticipation a great year ahead! And no apologies needed – you do you, perfectly. ๐Ÿ’œ

      Liked by 1 person

  8. ali redford Avatar
    ali redford

    ย I just have to be a slightly stronger version of ME.

    That is perfect.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      thank you! I think it’s true for all of us – baby steps in the right direction still counts as progress!! ๐Ÿ’

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Becky Avatar

    I donโ€™t think I will ever survive a zombie apocalypse! But I love watching prepper videos.
    Our fire season sometimes start as early as spring like in late march early May. The last couple of years have been really bad.
    Hopefully your fire season wonโ€™t be too bad โ˜บ๏ธ

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yeah – I think I would die of fright in the first five minutes if the apocalypse is anything like the movies! In terms of fires, we just survived a 42 C-degree weekend (107F), but the state next door lost 100+ houses to some terrible fires… Crossing my fingers your fire season stays safe when it arrives. Best wishes, Linda xx

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Z.F. Thrimej Avatar

    Also liking that your post makes me think that prepping for a Mini Zombie Apocalypse could be called Mini Zombie Apocalypse Prep or MZAP (like MCAT is the abbreviation of Medical College Admissions Test).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      oooohhh… I knew you’d like anything zombie-related!! I love the abbreviation, especially since those big admissions tests can feel a lot like life and death situations!! Keep breathing and making your oreo-flavored poetry! L ๐Ÿ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Z.F. Thrimej Avatar

        You know it!! I will at least try, and thank you, Linda! ๐Ÿ˜€

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          ๐ŸŒŸ๐Ÿ˜‰

          Liked by 1 person

  11. richardbist Avatar

    Love the thud-clang moment…a perfect description of a jaw-dropping epiphany. ๐Ÿ™‚

    I think this is a really wise thing to do, Linda. Speaking from experience (I live in Florida, which is prone to hurricanes for six-months out of the year), it’s great to have some basic backups in place, know your evacuation routes, and simply think ahead a little bit so you have a better idea of what’s coming.

    I often say, “be prepared, not scared”, during the peak of storm season as a way to remind myself to keep my eyes open, but don’t overthink it.

    Good luck on your prepping, my friend! Be sure to store canned veggies (most people forget about them when prepping). ๐Ÿ˜‰

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      โ€œbe prepared, not scaredโ€ – that is so good – I’m totally stealing it!! ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿคฃ And yes – I quite like some of the canned veg – some others are a bit ick – always been horrified at canned ravioli and spaghetti to be honest (like whaaat?)

      Liked by 2 people

  12. daylerogers Avatar

    I love the idea of preparing for a mini-zombie apocalypse–it makes all kinds of crises sound more enticing and fun. I love your wisdom in moving away from the victim mentality and being a “prepper”. Your mindfulness practices make so much sense! There’s a disaster every place in the world waiting to make its appearance, and your suggestions are things everyone should print off and tack on their walls. Really well done. But you had me at mini-zombie apocalypse!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thanks! and you’re right – if you can keep a little lighthearted about it all it helps (so grateful that we can smile as we read and write about this topic – so sorry for those around the world who are going through much greater strife). Lots of love, Linda xx

      Liked by 1 person

    2. daylerogers Avatar

      I’m in total agreement with you–many are going through things so much harder than I am. But smiling in the midst of it, choosing to see hope, is always a better way.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

        It’s no easy feat to keep turning away from all the negative news – but I suspect that the media is leaning in too far – there are still plenty of good news stories out there if you pay attention. There’s no shame in being lucky, especially when you acknowledge it and are grateful for it! xox

        Liked by 1 person

        1. daylerogers Avatar

          Once again, your wisdom shines through, my friend. I appreciate your insights!

          Liked by 1 person

          1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

            ๐Ÿ’

            Like

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