Home > 5. Learning
“The more you know, the less you need.”
Building essential survival knowledge and core skills — and mastering them over time — will help you to pull through when a disaster strikes.
Stay away from trouble / abstain from risky behavior. “Don’t do stupid things, with stupid people, at stupid places, at stupid times, with stupid gear.”
Apply a rigorous Health & Safety analysis before doing anything: "What can go wrong? What other people did wrong in that very same situation?"
Lower risks in potentially dangerous situations, e.g. always wear a seat belt or a life jacket, stay in well-lit areas at night in cities, etc.
Be aware of your surroundings at all times, i.e. maintain situational awareness, 'keep your head on a swivel'.
Find all exit points, hiding places, and dead ends of locations you visit or stay in.
administer first aid and long-term wounds care to yourself and to others
find, collect, purify, and store water
start a fire
pick a campsite and build a shelter
signal for help and communicate with hand signals, Morse code, radios, smoke, etc.
become proficient in the use of all your own gear, especially sharp edge tools
use hand tools and power tools to repair and build stuff, i.e. learn the same basic skills mastered by a plumber, welder, carpenter, auto mechanic, boat builder, aircraft engineer, electrician, locksmith, cobbler, clothes maker, computer and phones tech, HVAC and appliances repairer, etc.
scavenge and upcycle items to be found around you
manage fear, pain, exhaustion, stress, depression, reverse of fortune
follow your exit plan while remaining flexible in case of roadblocks or new opportunities (visit the planning page).
navigate the wilderness (sandy or rocky terrain, swamps and marsh lands, swollen rivers, snowy mountains, icy lakes, hot deserts, tropical jungles, raging oceans) and urban environments (parkour) during the day and also at night
find your way when lost (orientation) with or without GPS assistance, day and night
read and predict the weather
pick locks and break into buildings or vehicles (for emergency purposes)
escape from upturned or submerged vehicles
drive various types of vehicles (bikes, cars, trucks, boats, planes, helicopters, etc.) in different conditions (defensive driving).
handle pets, farm animals and wildlife
make friends and become part of a community, including speaking foreign languages
motivate yourself and others to keep the will to survive and to not lose hope.
blend in or hide in order to avoid unwanted attention (become "The grey [gray] man", camouflage)
negotiate with others
defend yourself using:
. avoidance (running away)
. levels-of-force analysis (What should I do: try to defuse the situation? Restrain others? Use violence?)
. conflicts de-escalation methods
. violence when necessary: fight with your body (martial arts) and/or weapons.
locate, identify and collect wild edibles (foraging)
capture animals using traps, snares, nets, fishing lines, sling, harpoons and spears, bows and arrows (hunting)
grow vegetables and raise small livestock (chickens, rabbits)
cook food already processed or edibles collected in the wild
preserve raw and cooked food.
Unfortunately, none of the above skills are taught to kids at school – and rarely by their parents at home – nowadays. The Boy (Girl ) Scouts, or the military, seem to be the only places still delivering this type of knowledge.
Become familiar with the challenges faced by survivors of disasters, the mistakes they've made, and the ways they succeeded in beating the odds.
Between a Rock and a Hard Place by Aron Ralston
Lost in the Jungle by Yossi Ghinsberg
Touching the Void by Joe Simpson
Goodbye Sarajevo: A True Story of Courage, Love and Survival by Atka Reid and Hana Schofield
Hotel Rwanda, based on the life of Paul Rusesabagina
SHTF Survival Stories: Memories from the Balkan War by Selco Begovic
Survival in the Killing Fields by Haing S Ngor
The Pursuit of Happyness by Chris Gardner
Resilience: Hard-Won Wisdom for Living a Better Life by Eric Greitens
Survival books, paper maps, and printed material are bulky and heavy, but they don't require any electricity or electronic device to be accessed. Unlike YouTube videos or digital PDFs stored on a computer that might break down or run out of battery.
Example of manuals and technical library:
Bushcraft 101: A Field Guide to the Art of Wilderness Survival by Dave Canterbury.