What are people to do?

Over the past three weeks, I’ve had numerous discussions with people regarding the world today. These include people of varying economic classes, races, education levels – and political perspectives. None would be considered serious preppers. Concerns over inflation, food shortages, inflated stock markets, increasing cost of housing, and a ridiculous national debt were involved in these discussions. Something else that came up was an inability – or at least a suspicion – that most ANYTHING heard on the national news could not be believed.

Of course, within the group of people I am referring there were varying degrees of opinion, but, the sentiment remained the same: people are troubled and truly look at the future with a giant question mark.

In most cases, my discussion never entered the realm of preparedness. The discussions stayed more mainstream.

Inflation and fuel prices were major concerns. What was absent was blame. Most just focus on the results rather than the equation. I guess for the most part the reason doesn’t matter as we have to deal with it and have little control over the causes.

One individual was very frustrated with the cost of housing. She mentioned that rent for apartments had risen over the past year and combined with everything else made life extremely difficult.

Buying extra food and “stocking up” were mentioned by most. Putting together a food storage program was outside the realm of most people’s thinking. A few extra cans of soup, an extra bag of flour – and some additional meat in the freezer seemed to make sense for most.

Those who I suspected of being towards the bottom of the income scale mentioned fuel prices most. While food was certainly a concern and complained about – less expensive meals can be planned but gas has to be put in tanks to get back and forth to work. Several complained that although they have seen their wages increase over the past year those increases were nowhere near enough.

One person, in particular, recognized the serious economic times were are in. He was well versed in the annual Federal deficit and astronomical National Debt. He also mentioned the massive printing of money that has occurred in just the past two years. He was the only person that actually suggested that there may be no end to this trend and saw bad things happening in the future.

Interestingly – no one mentioned the Russia-Ukraine issue.

So – what does all this mean and what are people to do?

My 2 cents say that over the coming months as things do in fact get worse protests leading to riots will happen. Unless the government quells the masses with stipends, some form of guaranteed income, or “stimulus checks” – many of those same people who rioted over social justice issues will take to the streets over economic injustices. A number of those who find themselves struggling to make ends meet, put a roof over their head, and fuel their car to get to a job that hasn’t kept up with inflation will join them.

The question once again: What do people do?

The simple answer is people need to put themselves in a position where they are insulated from the effects of inflation, supply chain issues, and food shortages. Well, insulated as much as possible.

In today’s world, this is not easy. People are responding to the changes going on by adapting in a variety of ways. Some are decreasing their housing costs by renting out rooms in their home. Some are using alternative housing such as buying a camper, living in a van or converted cargo trailer – and even in tents. People are eliminating debts and reducing monthly expenses to free up income to go towards necessities. Others are taking on additional jobs and starting their own side businesses to increase income.

Thoughts? What are you doing to combat inflation and deal with these issues? Do you have advice you would provide to others?

Take care all –

Rourke

Pantry Food Storage Inventory & Checklist | Emergency Planner | Prepper Pantry Guide | Food Storage Binder | Preparedness Guide Printable

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Pantry Food Storage Inventory & Checklist | Emergency Planner | Prepper Pantry Guide | Food Storage Binder | Preparedness Guide Printable
Product Details

Build a Pantry You Can Rely On — Without the Overwhelm

If you’ve been meaning to get your food storage organized… but didn’t know where to start — this guide was made for you.
The Pantry Food Storage Inventory & Checklist Guide is a practical, no-nonsense system designed to help you:
✔ Know exactly what food you have
✔ Identify gaps in your pantry
✔ Build a long-term food supply on a budget
✔ Stay organized with printable checklists
✔ Reduce stress during uncertain times

This isn’t theory.
It’s a real-world system you can start using today.

📘 What You’ll Get
This is a printable PDF guide packed with useful, easy-to-follow content:
  • Pantry Inventory Sheets (printable)
  • Pantry Gap Checklist (what most people forget)
  • Pantry Shelf Life Reference Chart
  • Bucket Food Storage Guide (Mylar + oxygen absorbers)
  • Step-by-step Mylar packing instructions
  • $5 / $10 budget food storage plan
  • Pantry organization tips
  • Food rotation basics
  • Practical preparedness advice

Each section can be used on its own — or combined into a complete pantry system.

🧾 Designed to Be Used — Not Just Read
Fully printable
Use in a binder or on a clipboard
Print extra pages as needed
Simple, clean layout
Beginner-friendly

This is something you’ll actually use in your home, not just download and forget.

💡 Who This Is For
This guide is perfect if you:
  • Want to build a pantry but don’t know where to start
  • Are trying to prepare on a budget
  • Want to keep your food storage organized
  • Live in an area with storms, outages, or uncertainty
  • Want to take better care of your household

⚠️ Why This Matters
Food prices are rising.
Supply chains are unpredictable.
Life can change quickly.

A well-stocked pantry gives you:
  • Peace of mind
  • Flexibility during hard times
  • One less thing to worry about

📥 Instant Download
Digital PDF (no physical item will be shipped)
Download immediately after purchase
Print at home or at a print shop

🔒 Please Note
For personal use only
No refunds on digital downloads
Colors may vary slightly when printed

🤝 Final Thought
You don’t need to do everything at once.
Start small. Stay consistent.
Build something you can rely on.

 

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