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- What you will find hereThis web site is devoted to empowering you, the reader, to care for your loved ones and yourself when there’s no other choice. Thank you for visiting and may God bless you richly in 2016 and beyond. – Doc Cindy … Continue reading →
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Protected: Spreadsheet of Best Deals on Medications for Stockpiling
Posted in Medical archives, Medical Professionals Only, Prescribing - MPO, Stockpiling medications
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Seven Antibiotics to Stockpile and Why – SurvivalBlog post
The following article was written for SurvivalBlog, Friday, February 18, 2011. The full article may be found at: http://www.survivalblog.com/2011/02/seven_antibiotics_to_stockpile.html
Dr. Koelker now serves as SurvivalBlog’s Medical Editor
* * *
Assuming your personal physician will help you stockpile antibiotics for TEOTWAWKI, which should you request? Is there a logical reason to have amoxicillin on hand rather than doxycycline?
Here’s what I would suggest and why.
No antibiotic is effective against every type of microbe. Certain ones will kill aerobic bacteria, others are used for anaerobic bacteria, still others are effective against resistant strains, and certain people are allergic to or intolerant of various antibiotics. The following are all generics, running about $10 for about a month’s treatment.
- Amoxicillin is the old standby for most respiratory infections (probably most of which are viral and don’t even require antibiotics). It is excellent for strep throat and some strains of pneumococcal bacteria. It is also safe for children and pregnant women. It is well-tolerated, causing little stomach distress or diarrhea. The drawbacks are that some people are truly allergic, and many bacteria have developed resistance to amoxicillin (especially staph) through overuse among both humans and animals. Anyone truly allergic to amoxicillin should substitute erythromycin or another antibiotic. (more . . . )
Read the rest of this article at: SurvivalBlog at: http://www.survivalblog.com/2011/02/seven_antibiotics_to_stockpile.html. Also, see below for a valid comment on this article by a registered pharmacist.
***
I was reading your article about antibiotics on SurvivalBlog and found it very informative and to the point. I would like to chime in on a couple of points… first, I give doxycycline a little more attention because it is very effective for the tick-borne diseases and also for plague and it is very cheap. Important when we all have to start tramping around more in the woods and in gardens. Second, metronidazole is currently unavailable, at least for the time being. I have yet to see a release date from our pharmacy wholesaler. (Nobody seems to have a good answer for why it is unavailable, there was a recall in recent months but it was only 1 manufacturer and shouldn’t have caused this much trouble. IMHO.) Again thank you for a very informative and useful article, I hope I don’t sound like a “armchair coach”.
LV, RPh
[Doc Cindy adds: Thanks, LV. Good points.]
Related articles
- Seven Antibiotics to Stockpile and Why, by Cynthia J. Koelker, MD (survivalblog.com)
- 7 Antibiotics for Your Medical Stockpile (lewrockwell.com)
Posted in Acute diseases, Antibiotics, Bronchitis, Medical archives, Medications, Pneumonia, Preparation, Prescription Medications, Skin infection, Sore throat, Stockpiling medical supplies, Stockpiling medications
Tagged Allergy, Amoxicillin, Antibacterial, Antibiotic, Bacteria, Health, Survivalism, TEOTWAWKI
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Protected: Would you prescribe meds for stockpiling?
Posted in Medical archives, Medical Professionals Only, Medications, Preparation, Prescribing - MPO, Prescription Medications, Stockpiling medications
Tagged Drugs and Medications, Generic drug, Health, Pharmacy, Prescribing, Prescription drug, Stockpiling medications
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It’s 2012 already – Part 3
This post is third in a series by Edward W. Pritchard. To read more of his writings please visit: http://eddwardwpritchard.blogspot.com
* * *
it’s 2012 already – Part 3
fiction
edward w pritchard
- Image via Wikipedia
Many disaster movies in our time spend a few obligatory frames trying to describe what it’s like to flee from your home in a large natural disaster. Be it meteor, volcano, or earthquake, in the movies there is always somewhere to go to find sanctuary.
What if your decision to move was not rational, but instinctual and ancient. Suddenly you have to move out of your house now. You don’t know why, but bad air is coming, and to breathe it is to die. Don’t think. Just keep moving, step after step. Success in your tribulations is time’s duration. You are divinely granted a few more breaths; but you must suffer and you must not plan or aspire. You only are driven to move.
Here’s something I wrote before about the start of the journey.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
the movement of vast amounts of people
fiction
edward w pritchard
The noxious vapors drifted slowly, North to South, at no more than seven miles per hour, but to not keep moving meant death to human and most larger animals. Steadily, day after day, I stumbled forward. My strength was long gone and my will shattered, but blindly I stumbled, on and on, going to where I don’t know or care anymore, but driven to move and escape the burning of the lungs and confusion that stopping caused, even if one stopped only for a moment in a desperate attempt to regroup or plan a new exit strategy.
The vapors continued to drift South and although alone, I stayed with the pack and patiently continued forward.
* * *
What would you carry as you left your house in this scenario? If you were an astute business man before, maybe asthma medicine, for everyone’s burning lungs – it might become the new currency. Cognac, VSOP to prop up sagging morale and to keep the memory of civilization alive for a few more weeks – while the flask endured. And a watch, keep track of the time, for this ordeal has to eventually, mercifully, end soon.
The Physiology of Water and Fluid Balance (Part 2 of series)
The following is second in a series contributed by Pete Farmer, who holds advanced degrees in research biology and history, and is also an RN and EMT.
* * *
Having examined the physical and chemical properties of water in the first installment of this series, let us turn our attention to less-theoretical concerns, namely the physiological role of water in humans, hydration in extreme environments, and related matters.
Water governs or supports nearly every aspect of our anatomy and physiology – including acid-base chemistry, electrolyte balance, intra- and extracellular transport mechanisms, cell structure, and much more. Almost without exception, the biochemistry of the human body takes place in water. If deprived of it, the reactions which sustain life falter, and then cease altogether.
The human body is typically composed of approximately 55-70% water by weight, and may range as low as 45% or as high as 75% depending on numerous variables. These include hydration level/fluid intake, age, sex, weight, state of health, level of activity, weather and climate (ambient air temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity and wind), altitude, stress level, toxic burden and metabolic waste load, solute concentrations within various body spaces, and many other factors.
Diffusion governs the movement of many substances within the body and in nature. It is defined as the passive movement of molecules or particles along a concentration gradient, or from regions of higher to regions of lower concentration – until the concentration is constant. Put a drop of colored iodine solution in a glass of clear water, and the iodine will spread until the water is a dilute, uniform color. This is a simple example of diffusion.
A special form of diffusion common within biological systems is osmosis, which is the movement of water/fluid from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration, across a semipermeable membrane (i.e., one which allows the passage of certain, especially small, molecules or ions/charged atoms but acts as a barrier to others). A solute is defined as a dissolved solid substance in solution. For example, pure water contains no solutes, common sea or salt water contains dissolved solids such as sodium chloride (NaCl) and potassium chloride (KCl). Divided by a cell or other semipermeable membrane – such as a capillary wall – found in the body, water will flow by osmotic diffusion from the pure water compartment into the compartment containing salt water (i.e., containing solutes), until the concentration is equalized in both compartments. Salts, proteins, and other substances which cause the osmotic diffusion of water in solution are termed osmotically-active. Why is this important in everyday life? Read on: osmosis has very consequential, real-world effects vis-à-vis survival hydration – which are covered below. For now, the most important lesson is to remember that in the body, water follows salts.
Internal fluid balance is homeostatically-controlled in a dynamic equilibrium. Fluid balance is maintained within functional range by a complex system of biochemical checks-and-balances and feedback mechanisms. The hormones Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH, also known as vasopressin) and Aldosterone play major roles.
Changes of the concentration of solutes in the blood, indicative of water excess or depletion (dehydration), are sensed by specialized cells in the hypothalamic gland called osmoreceptors. Dehydration – caused by excessive sweating, hemorrhage, vomiting or diarrhea, or insufficient fluid intake – triggers the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), which causes blood vessels to constrict, elevating blood pressure. The release of the hormone aldosterone from the adrenal glands causes reabsorption of sodium and water into the blood, also elevating blood volume and pressure. Antidiuretic hormone (also called vasopressin or ADH) is secreted by the pituitary gland when specialized pressure receptors in the blood vessels detect a decrease in blood plasma volume and pressure. ADH acts upon the kidneys to cause increase reabsorption of water back into the bloodstream following filtration, thereby concentrating urine. The activation of the above systems triggers the sensation of thirst. Once sufficient blood volume and pressure is restored, usually by fluid intake, feedback control down-regulates these systems.
Infants have the highest percentage of H2O by weight – about 75%; this figure declines with age. In the adult male, water accounts for about 60% of weight; in the adult female, about 55% – the difference due mostly to the generally higher level of subcutaneous adipose tissue in females compared to males. Adipose tissue contains almost no water; therefore, as adipose tissue as a percentage of body mass increases, the relative percentage of water weight decreases. Fat people have a smaller proportion of water than do lean people.
In the healthy human adult at rest, daily water intake/gain equals water excretion/loss – around 2500 ml (2.5L)/day, or about 0.66 U.S. gallons.
Sources of water gain/intake = metabolic reactions (200mL), ingested foods (700ml), ingested liquids (1600ml). Sources of excretion/loss = GI tract digestion (200ml), insensible water loss – evaporative loss on skin surface, perspiration, and expired air (800ml), renal filtration/urination (1500ml). Sexually-mature woman lose an additional ~ 50ml/day due to vaginal secretions, and will also lose water during menstrual blood loss.
Electrolytes are defined chemically as any substance containing free ions (positively or negatively charged atoms) which allow a solution to conduct electricity. In practical terms, they are usually acids, bases or salts. All living things are dependent on an intricate and subtle balance of electrolytes within cells and also the extracellular fluids that bathe them. The most common and important electrolytes in the human body are sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), calcium (Ca2+), magnesium (Mg2+), chloride (Cl−), hydrogen phosphate (HPO42−), and hydrogen carbonate (HCO3−). Electrolytes allow the storage of electric potential energy within excitatory cells and tissues – such as skeletal and cardiac muscle and neurons. Unbalanced or insufficient electrolytes figure prominently in many illnesses and disorders, and if uncorrected, result in death.
Medically, there are at least three types of dehydration (fluid deficiency in the body) – due to the loss of electrolytes (primarily inorganic salts) alone, due to loss of fluid volume alone, or a combination of both. Differentiation between these should be left to a qualified medical professional, and will probably require a detailed physical exam, and diagnostic testing.
Dehydration is often accompanied by electrolyte depletion, especially in cases involving severe diarrhea or vomiting, prolonged heat exposure, burns and thermal trauma, prolonged fasting, anorexia nervosa/bulimia, and/or malnutrition and rapid weight loss; it is also a diagnostic indicator of many illnesses, such as diabetes types I and II, uremia, proteinuria (protein in the urine), and others. Uncontrolled or inadequately diabetes, for example, will manifest frequent urination (polyuria) and severe thirst (polydipsia).
A couple of other useful terms that pertain to the discussion of water balance: A diuretic is a substance which promotes urine formation or urination. Many commonly available foods, beverages, and over-the-counter dietary supplements contain diuretics, often stimulants such as caffeine. Alcohol, coffee, tea, caffeine-containing soda, chocolate, and dietary supplements containing now-banned stimulants such as ephedra are all diuretics. Common OTC cold medicines, containing stimulants such as ephedrine/ pseudoephedrine, also act as diuretics. In practical terms, those attempting to rehydrate themselves should avoid these to the degree possible. Lay readers may be familiar with so-called “water pills,” which are diuretic drugs formulated to cause excretion of excess body fluid in cases of hypertension and other illnesses involving fluid overload. Furosemide (Lasix) and hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) are commonly prescribed diuretic medications. Do not attempt to self-diagnose or treat hypertension or chronic illnesses related to fluid balance – these substances are to be used under the care of a qualified physician and pharmacist only. Nor should these compounds be use or abused to promote weight loss. Abuse of diuretic compounds can have serious or fatal consequences.
The Signs and Symptoms of Dehydration
Signs & symptoms of dehydration generally become noticeable after the body has lost 2-5% of its normal fluid volume. Mild dehydration is often manifested as:
- Muscle cramping
- Dry skin, eyes and mouth
- Dizziness upon standing (orthostatic hypotension)
- Thirst (appears relatively late as an indicator, as noted above)
- Urine is concentrated, dark-yellow in color, of pronounced odor, and urination is reduced in volume and frequency. Conversely, well-hydrated individuals have light amber or nearly clear urine.
- Constipation
- Decreased athletic performance
- Irritability, fatigue
Intermediate- or acute (5-15% water loss) dehydration is characterized by:
- Extreme lethargy and/or sleepiness
- Weight loss
- Headache
- Nausea
- Numbness or tingling in one’s extremities (paresthesia)
- Sunken fontanel (soft spot) in infants
- Dizziness upon standing (orthostatic hypotension)
- Altered mental status as above, except more severe – confusion/disorientation, hallucinations*
- Further diminished urine output or absence of urine
- Loss of consciousness/fainting
- Sunken eyes, little or lacrimation (tear formation)
- Possible lack of perspiration, elevated body temperature
- Increased heart rate, rapid and thready pulse, increased respiration rate
- At 10-15%, decreased skin turgor is evident (skin wrinkles and shrivels), muscle spasm or seizures may occur, and vision is altered.
- Loss of more than 15% of body water is frequently fatal
* – A mini-mental status check can be performed by assessing the subject’s cognition and awareness of his/her surroundings. “Alert and oriented x 3” indicates that the patient is alert and aware of person, place and time (who they are, where they are, and what day/time it is).
Fluid Replacement
Fluid replacement is the treatment for dehydration. If oral rehydration is inadequate, intravenous (IV) fluid replacement may be indicated; IV fluid resuscitation should be performed only by a qualified medical professional. Oral hydration therapy can be administered by frequent small amounts of clear fluid should be used. Clear fluids include water, clear broths, popsicles, Jell-O, and electrolyte-containing fluids such as sports drinks (Gatorade, Powerade, etc.) and specialized fluids such as Pedialyte. Avoid fluid replacement with diuretics – especially alcohol – which complicates both diagnosis and treatment. Do not use sea/salt water as a substitute for fresh water – even if it is the only water available; it can be fatal. Concentrated in solutes, sea water actually draws water from the body, dehydrating it further and worsening electrolyte imbalances.
If brackish or contaminated fresh water is all that is available, a cost-benefit judgment will have be made concerning its use (more on this problem in future articles).
If the patient is unable to keep down small slips of replacement fluid, and regurgitates them via vomiting or experiences diarrhea as a result, immediately call 911. Do not attempt to force-feed oral hydration to an unconscious person, or anyone whose airway may be compromised. Medical attention should also be sought immediately if oral rehydration fails to relieve signs and symptoms of acute dehydration. Intravenous fluid resuscitation therapy is advanced life support, and should be carried out only by trained personnel, except in the most-dire circumstances where qualified medical help is unavailable. This is especially true of electrolyte imbalances, whose diagnosis and treatment are often subtle and complex. In these cases, emphasis should be on getting the affected person to a fully-equipped medical facility as soon as possible.
Conclusion
In upcoming installments, we will continue to explore water and medical survival, including methods of water treatment, improvised collection of water in extreme environments, water-borne illnesses and how to avoid them, and much more.
Copyright © 2011 Peter Farmer
Related articles
- Osmolality – blood – All Information (umm.edu)
- Diabetes insipidus – All Information (umm.edu)
- Diabetes insipidus – nephrogenic – All Information (umm.edu)
Posted in Contributors, Dehydration, Dry skin, Fatigue, Frequent urination, Medical archives, Medical testing, Pete Farmer, Public health, Water, Weight loss
Tagged Chloride, Electrolyte, Fluid balance, Health, Kidney, Vasopressin, Water
1 Comment
The Challenges of Medical Preparedness in a High-Tech Age
The following post is contributed by Pete Farmer, who holds advanced degrees in research biology and history, and is also an RN and EMT.
In the first of a series, he raises a number of issues that other readers may be interesting in addressing as well. If you are knowledgable in a certain field and would like to contribute, please leave a comment in the box below.
Special thanks to Pete for his thoughtful article.
The Challenges of Medical Preparedness in a High-Tech Age
by Pete Farmer
The preparedness movement – “prepping” for short – has gone mainstream. What was formerly a movement at the margins of society has penetrated into popular culture such that Amazon.com and Costco sell preparedness supplies, and one can get a hand-cranked survival radio at Eddie Bauer. Post-apocalyptic movies and books are entertainment staples.
Anyone even remotely interested in prepping can probably identify a tipping point, such as Hurricane Katrina, which caused them to begin taking the idea seriously. Others point to the unfolding solvency crisis of the western world, or perhaps to the 9-11 attacks. Still others fear an influenza or similar pandemic. Finally, there are those people who do not fear a specific calamity or “black swan;” but simply believe in contingency planning and thereby getting a good night’s sleep. History teaches us that plans rarely survive contact with reality – but also that having plans and preparations is vastly preferable to having none. “Chance,” the old aphorism notes, “favors the prepared mind.”
Once one has made the decision to think proactively and begin prepping, the questions multiply rapidly. Authorities such as James Rawles have devoted a great deal of time and effort to developing templates and action plans, to assist would-be preppers in getting themselves and their loved ones squared away and ready to face a crisis, whatever it may be. Rawles and other authors have also explored the subject fictionally, in great detail. These are great services, ones for which we should be thankful. However, as Rawles himself notes, he is not a medical professional – hence the need for blogs like “Armageddon Medicine,” and services like Medical Corps, which offer disaster-preparedness medical training from physicians, EMTs and former medics/corpsmen.
Medical preppers face a number of obstacles found nowhere else in the movement. Subsequent articles in the series will explore some of them, as well as topics of general interest to medical preppers. Cynthia Koelker, M.D. has kindly asked me to write as a guest columnist, exploring some of the relevant issues. In doing so, I will draw upon my training and experience as a historian, a scientist, and healthcare professional (EMT & RN). In subsequent features, we will consider such subjects as the following…
1. What can history teach us about disaster preparedness? What do public health and epidemiological crises of the past teach us about prepping in the present? We will examine such past crises as the influenza pandemic of 1918, to help answer this question.
2. For which scenarios should we prepare? Which are best left to professional clinicians such as physicians, med techs or pharmacists? Which preps can be done by the lay person, and which cannot? How should we encourage our federal and state disaster management agencies to prepare?
3. Legal/regulatory barriers to medical prepping. Do we protect our turf, or protect our patients?
4. The knowledge gap: the specialized expertise of scientist-clinicians; high-tech infrastructure of medical research and implications for preppers.
5. The military medical model and its applicability to the future of preparedness. What can preppers learn from medics, corpsmen, nurses, and Doctors without Borders?
6. Know your limits. Why apocalypse and post-apocalypse medical care will make this time-tested advice more important than ever.
7. The importance of public health, and why the plumber may just be the most unrecognized and appreciated “public health worker” in America today. Why you, the medical prepper, should make friends with skilled tradesmen.
8. The medical preparedness bookshelf. Take stock of your knowledge, and add to it whenever you can. How to prepare if you didn’t go to med school.
9. Tell your representative: About medical readiness, disaster preparedness, and ask what steps he/she has taken to protect citizens in the district? Let your elected representatives know preparedness is a priority.
10. Get trained as well as you can; the importance of experience and skills.
11. Medical shelf life and storage for preppers, pertaining to such issues as drug expiration/potency, required storage such as refrigeration, and related.
12. Rediscovering medicine of the past; the importance of preserving and using “out of date” techniques and procedures in a post high-tech world.
13. Microbiology in the post-apocalyptical world – for healthcare, food production and storage, and more. What every lay person should know about basic microbiology.
14. Improvising medical care in extreme circumstances. How to keep a casualty or patient alive until you can get professional help.
15. Get to know your local emergency management professionals – they can help.
16. Conclusion and looking ahead to the future.
- Image via Wikipedia
Related articles
Fish antibiotics – Updated 3-22-11
Fish antibiotics . . .
. . . are they safe?
. . . are they effective?
. . . are they the same ones used to treat humans?
3-22-11 UPDATE:
This question is harder to answer than you may think, though I keep working at it when I have a little free time. I have identified one source of fish antibiotics that I believe may be selling the same medications used in humans, but this will require further verification. Keep posted for further details.
* * *
Original article continues . . .
These questions have been submitted repeatedly by preppers and survivalists. In checking online pet-supply sites, it is true that fish antibiotics are available for aquarium use without a prescription. Some of these sites list off-label dosing recommendations for pets such as cats and dogs. They also state “Not for use in humans.” Continue reading
It’s 2012 already – Part 2
This post is second in a series by Edward W. Pritchard. To read more of his writings please visit:
* * *
It’s 2012 already – Part 2
If the social order is catastrophically interrupted in America in 2012, can civilization continue? If for reasons unknown, at this time, and if we were suddenly forced to leave our homes and our cities, could civilization survive?
Chaos and insecurity would accompany a catastrophic shock to the social order. Fear of the future would occur next as we retreated inward and switched from planning for the tomorrow’s aspirations to becoming enmeshed in the struggle for daily survival. Economic conditions can change overnight following a universal jolt to the social order. Could America lose the privilege of having a surplus of food and sustenance suddenly in 2012? Would competition for food cause us to turn violent if scarcity becomes a reality to us who are accustomed to plenty?
For thousands of years civilization has meant cities. Cities typically have disappeared suddenly from earthquake, volcano, tornado, large waves if by the sea, and war. Biological epidemic and sudden climate change are also potential destroyers of cities. Could civilization as we know it survive a climate change of twenty degrees on average? Can famine still destroy civilization?
Ancient Roman civilization followed the pattern of begin, flourish, and eventually disappear. The cities eventually came back, but not quite as Roman civilization. Following the destruction of Western Roman civilization circa 476 an attempt was made to revive the old Roman world by the Eastern Emperor Justinian. Despite his military and political efforts the attempt failed and in 541 a plague, probably bubonic, killed up to 100 million people. Much later in 1348 in Western Europe bubonic plague again destroyed tens of millions of people and destroyed the economic system of feudalism. Somehow civilization survived and eventually many of the same cities that had endured both plagues flourished.
It took British historian, Edward Gibbon, in the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire, six lengthy volumes to describe and analyze the reason for the decline and fall of Roman civilization. However among the traditional explanations are the ennui and disillusionment of the citizens of Rome. The exhaustion of the optimism of the citizens of Rome was a factor in the fall of Roman civilization.
American civilization has meant will and optimism about the future, a sense of destiny, and creative energy to meet all challenges. Since at least 1783 Americans have had a sense of permanency and a determined will to grow our cities and promote civilization and culture on the continent.
Despite any catastrophic changes brought about in 2012 by unknown disruptions to civilization, human intelligence would continue. But would we have the will to look forward if we all suddenly left our houses and cities with only what we could carry?
Gibbons, the historian, philosophizing on the fall of Rome, in volume 31, Rise and Fall … ” There exists in human nature a strong propensity to depreciate the advantages, and magnify the evils of the present times.” Sitting here in 2010, is catastrophe in 2012 a product of our ennui and our disillusionment?
Every year is a new adventure. Drink a little wine tomorrow, enjoy your favorite things and buy a present for your Granddaughter. Unknown potential causes lurk ahead. Whether driven by the divine hand, benign nature, or statistical probability, we have little ability to control our destiny. Every year is also more potential suffering for us humans.
Will you be able to pass civilization on to your children and grandchildren? If you were rushing from your home suddenly in 2012, carrying a few treasures of your existence, how would you view the future and how would you remember your past?
It’s 2012 already – Part I
- Image by Patrick Strandberg via Flickr
The following entry is submitted by Edward W. Pritchard. To enjoy more of his writings, please visit: http://eddwardwpritchard.blogspot.com/
* * *
its 2012 already-part 1
What would you carry out of your house if you could only carry one thing?
Your sick child? No, a warm coat, good pair of shoes, and gloves and a hat don’t count. That’s a given.
What about your prescription? Or, if you are so inclined your best bottle of Napoleon brandy. Some fishing hooks and line for survival? A flashlight? Gold and silver?
What would you carry out of your house if you had to leave suddenly and would not be returning. Sadly many of us would grab their gun for protection out there. It’s going to be scary. You will have to take care of yourself. Try to take care of those you love while you can.
How about your Bible or the Koran? It might come in handy in 2012.
fiction
edward w pritchard