Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Bedside Preps: Read Before Sleeping


Your nightstand – it’s one emergency preparedness location often neglected even though it is among the most likely to be used.

Consider this scenario: Your smoke detector screeches at 3 a.m. You check your bedroom door handle for heat. It isn’t hot, so you cover your nose and mouth as you head toward the front door where your evacuation kit (72-hour kit or “go bag”) waits in the closet. But thick smoke blocks your exit through the front door, and you have to feel for the walls as you run for the back door.

Safe outside, you want to call 911, but you always leave your cell phone charging on the entry table. A neighbor runs out to say he has called for the fire department, and only then do you catch your breath and realize you are standing outside barefoot with one foot bleeding. Your car is in the drive, and you’d love to hop in and move it away from the house while there is still time. But your keys are on that same entryway table.

Now, consider if the same thing happened and you had an infant to rescue before you felt your way to the back door. You would be standing barefoot outside holding your child with no extra blanket and no way to move your car and use it as shelter while you wait for the fire truck. 

You get the picture. If you cannot get to your “go-bag,” you may be left with no supplies for your most immediate needs. Here are suggestions for what to keep immediately at hand in case of emergency -- consider having at least the first 3 at your bedside tonight!

1. A pair of slip-on, sturdy-soled shoes.

2. A flashlight and a light stick (because you do not want to turn on a flashlight if you smell gas).

3. A spare car key, perhaps on a keychain with a mini-LED flashlight to take care of item #1. The key should hang from something with enough substance to grab onto easily in the dark. If you can get into your car, you will have shelter, transportation, and your car’s emergency kit (you do have one, right?).

(Side Note: Depending on how far your bed is from your vehicle, you may want to get in the habit of keeping your main key fob at your bedside. Test to see if the “panic button” on your key fob will set off your car’s alarm from your bedroom. If you ever wake to sounds of an intruder, you can press the panic button to attract attention and perhaps scare off the criminal.)

4. Purse or wallet and “everyday carry” kit. Your wallet contains your most-used ID plus financial resources. Doesn’t it make sense to have it within grabbing distance if you must run from your home during the night?

5. A cell phone such as an older phone still capable of dialing 911. Or make it a habit to charge your current cell phone on your night table.

6. Glasses if you wear them.

7. Loud whistle. Special emergency whistles that are small but quite loud can help rescue crews find you if you do not make it out of the house.

8. Dust mask (for smoke or debris dust).

9. Copies of important papers in a waterproof bag or pouch. Or, scan documents and save them on a thumb drive. Emergency situations are exactly the time you will need your insurance policy numbers, a copy of your birth certificate, financial account numbers, etc.

10. Mylar emergency blanket or pocket poncho. Provides some warmth and a little shelter from rain while outside.

Sounds like a lot of stuff, right? But most are quite small. One suggestion for organizing these things is to have a small tray on your nightstand to hold your mini flashlight, car key, wallet, glasses, and possibly your charging cell phone. The other items can be stored in an open tote with handles. If you are startled awake by a crisis, it takes mere seconds to dump the items from your tray into the open tote, grab the handles and run. A woman’s purse can serve the same function if it is large enough. A woman carrying a smaller purse can simply get in the habit of setting it inside the bedside tote each night.

3 comments:

  1. great ideas and I have some of these in place. But I did not know about the flash light and gas.

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  2. Thanks again, Steve, for reading and your comment. I try for ideas people can easily use. Lots of basic ideas and tips in my novels but also some out of the box things in each one. Like, did you know that most billboards are now printed on specially treated vinyl and the used ones make excellent tarp material? There are even companies that sell the used ones. The group in my series grab some off of interstate billboards in their post apocalyptic world.

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