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Thread: Prepper FAIL!

  1. #1
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    Prepper FAIL!

    I am heartily ashamed of myself right now, but hopefully my mistake can encourage some of you to be better prepared.

    This evening was taking my girls to meet their dad, for his visitation, and we came upon a horrible accident. Hydroplane city, with the fresh sprinkle of rain on the interstate, and a holiday weekend, people headed out of Nashville, end of week traffic, it was the perfect storm of car accidents. Probably 5-6 cars (one was a truck pulling a uhaul trailer) at different stages of fender-bender land, and two more banged up beyond that. And one horribly wrapped around a tree. The SUV was completely mangled, with about 8 adult men trying to wrench open doors and pull people out. Someone was helping a woman who was in the ditch, holding a small child with a large bandage to its head. Many people were stopping and pulling over, rushing to help.

    Naturally I pulled over and popped the trunk, with a FF/EMT husband I have a very respectable trauma/first aid kit, in a good sized Rubbermaid container. My theory on this is that even if there is a bunch of stuff in there that I personally am not qualified to use (though my hubby could, being a first responder, FF, former medic, etc), there is always the chance that a dr, nurse, or off-duty ems professional will stop, and I'd rather have the stuff than not. To my horror, I opened the trunk to find.....it was EMPTY! His fire bag was in there, with his fire gear, but the kit was GONE.

    Yesterday he had cleaned out the car, the trunk, did a full detailing of the inside and out, the trunk, the works. I guess all those animal crackers under the booster seats finally got to him. Today he took "Sherman" to work (the Suburban that's older than I am) so I could take the car and the kids. Well, somehow, the first aid stuff never made its way back into the car. I knew not everything had made it back in, because I had to put the carseat base back in there before we left. It never occurred to me to check the trunk...

    Of course I called him and asked where the HELL the kit was, ya know, my own special way of making a bad situation worse. Oy. I just felt so HELPLESS, and felt like such a complete IDIOT for not being prepared. I know better, dammit!

    I was only pulled over less than two minutes and heard the sirens, so we got out of the way. As I continued to my destination, several more EMS vehicles went flying that way. I said a prayer, and told my girls that whenever you see the ambulances go by, you are supposed to say a prayer for them and whoever they are "rescuing".

    So....there you have it folks! I hope you all have at the very least a basic first aid kit in your vehicle. Doesn't have to be fancy, anything is better than an nothing. Might not be a bad Christmas gift idea for friends and family, also, to have a half way decent first aid kit for their vehicles. You never know when you will need it, and not have it!

  2. #2
    Does NOT use a snake bit sucker kit on snake bits

    Evolver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4suchatimeasthis View Post
    I am heartily ashamed of myself right now, but hopefully my mistake can encourage some of you to be better prepared.


    Naturally I pulled over and popped the trunk, with a FF/EMT husband I have a very respectable trauma/first aid kit, in a good sized Rubbermaid container. My theory on this is that even if there is a bunch of stuff in there that I personally am not qualified to use (though my hubby could, being a first responder, FF, former medic, etc), there is always the chance that a dr, nurse, or off-duty ems professional will stop, and I'd rather have the stuff than not.
    This statement should get the Statement of the Month Award. High five on your thinking girl!!! We buy all types of Doctor gidgets and gadgets stuff to have on hand even though we aren't qualified to use the stuff just for the above^^^ reasoning.
    You don't need to be the strongest
    or the most intelligent to survive
    but by having the right tools and
    the adaptability of change
    is where you will prevail.

  3. #3
    For the Love of Cats


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    even in the worst situation, if you are completely unpreppared, you can still help by comforting someone, talking to someone, or just helping direct traffic.

    Yep hubby did a baddy, he cleaned your car for you... but if it is your ride, shouldn't you be responsible to check it over and be 'complete'? My wife hit the ditch last winter, stalled and sat shivering for 45 minutes until I got to her... when I asked where her winter kit was, she said she took it out a few weeks ago to put her bike in. Vehicles are one thing that I have found work the best when worked as a team. I keep trying to streamline her kit so it doesn't EVER have to come out, but it is an uphill battle *sigh*
    Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day!
    Light a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life!

    Cat's are food... not friends!

    If you're going to fight, then fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp into Noah's arc... and brother, it's starting to rain.

  4. #4
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    I agree, Sniper, and I take full responsibility for not having the kit in the car. That's pretty much my point, and I sure don't want to come across as blaming my husband. That man works harder than anyone I know, so that I can stay home with the kids, and if he was kind enough to clean out the car, then I am grateful for not having to do it myself! I should have dbl checked the trunk, no excuses!

    Sigh....live and learn, hopefully!

  5. #5
    Claims to have NEVER worn pink. Likely story.

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    I'm sure that was a pretty bad situation... What is truly useful in that situation, if you are qualified, is to establish triage prior to the medics arriving... saves them time and lets them get to working on PT's faster...

    Preppers, I HIGHLY suggest you take AT LEAST first responder class... It is relatively affordable, here its only 200 or so dollars... with that training you may well save a life, and if anything its great to have if you live in a rural area...
    It is, of course, obvious that speed, or height of fall, is not in itself injurious ... but a high rate of change of velocity, such as occurs after a 10 story fall onto concrete, is another matter.

  6. #6
    Crotch Rocket


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    prepper FAIL!

    I'd call it, at worst, an oversight or human error than a failure of any sort. What I saw in your account is

    1. You've assembled physical assets.

    2. You know what you can/ cannot do with those assets.

    3. You're able react rationally and decisively during the unexpected.
    Notice the final two are mental. That's way more crucial than any amount of equipment you can/ do carry.

    The injured still received help/ care, learning occurred, and everyone in your vehicle made it home safely. That's more of a win.
    Consilio et animis

    Essayons!

  7. #7
    I'll most likely shit myself



    bacpacker's Avatar
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    Totally agree with MIT here. You folks will remember to check your loads after changing things for any reason.

    It also serves as a great reminder to all of us to check things out regularly, and always after making changes.

  8. #8
    Bacon Spam

    rentprop1's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4suchatimeasthis View Post
    My theory on this is that even if there is a bunch of stuff in there that I personally am not qualified to use (though my hubby could, being a first responder, FF, former medic, etc), there is always the chance that a dr, nurse, or off-duty ems professional will stop, and I'd rather have the stuff than not. !
    I have said this 100 times on Prepper forums and it usually gets overlooked...good job and quick thinking, even if you didn't get to help out

  9. #9
    Damn the propane, save the bacon!


    LUNCHBOX's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Twitchy View Post
    I'm sure that was a pretty bad situation... What is truly useful in that situation, if you are qualified, is to establish triage prior to the medics arriving... saves them time and lets them get to working on PT's faster...

    Preppers, I HIGHLY suggest you take AT LEAST first responder class... It is relatively affordable, here its only 200 or so dollars... with that training you may well save a life, and if anything its great to have if you live in a rural area...
    I agree completely with Twitchy on this. I was lucky enough to get this course offered to me for free through our dept. Get it if you can.


    4suchatimeasthis, don't beat yourself up to much on this...most people wouldn't have even thought to stop. You tried and that is more than most.
    Be ready now, you won't have that chance later.

  10. #10
    Claptrap's Problem Solver



    The Stig's Avatar
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    I wonder how many people....

    ...have a first aid kit in their homes, let alone one for the car?

    ...would have pulled over to attempt to help?

    ...would both pray and encourage their children to pray for those in need?

    ....would care enough about a stranger to be upset that you couldn't help out?

    ....would be introspective about their own shortcomings and instead dump the entire blame on their spouse?

    ....would be willing to share the "lessons learned" with strangers on an internet forum?

    I'm not sure where I see the "fail" in all this.
    If you think that come SHTF you are gonna jock up in all your kit and be a death-dealing one man army, you're an idiot - izzyscout

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