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How Volunteering Helps You Be A Better Prepper


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When we think of preparing for emergencies, conventional wisdom tells us to stockpile food and water, know how to shut off our home utilities, and have a family plan. I can watch videos on the Internet and read books to learn preparedness skills. I have a plan and supplies to take my pets with me if I have to evacuate. So is that it? Am I done?

I would argue that there is a way to take your preparedness to the next level by becoming a volunteer. You can learn prepper skills through volunteer work.

image: woman in white shirt with blue bandana around neck applying makeshift splint to foot

Advantages of Volunteering for an Emergency Agency

My advice on volunteering is mostly selfish as someone who has worked in the emergency response field for many years. I’m suggesting a fair exchange of your valuable personal time for knowledge, skills, and abilities that will increase your level of emergency preparedness and provide much-needed help for the multitude of emergency agencies that exist. You’ll be surprised how much you can learn, how many like-minded people you can meet, and how your confidence can swell with focused goal-oriented volunteer service.

In many ways, volunteers are in a better position to define their experience with their organization than if they were an employee. In many cases, the employer-employee relationship is coercive, with the money exchanged held over the employee’s head. The special status of the volunteer, sacrificing their time for no reimbursement, can open opportunities that are generally only available to paid staff.

Why learn prepper skills through volunteer work?

My first volunteer experience was in high school, through my school’s Key Club. I represented our school in a wheelchair-a-thon for a local charity; people pledged an amount for each lap I could complete around the ¼ mile school track. I surprised myself and others when I was able to push my wheelchair a full 5 miles that day…and I gained the perspective of the limitations of being confined to a wheelchair.

Over the years, other volunteer stints included:

  • Time as a police Explorer Scout, where I learned law enforcement culture, leading to a future job as a city cop
  • Volunteer firefighter, where I learned fire suppression and rescue skills, and gained lifelong friends
  • Disaster Medical Assistance Team member, leading to disaster deployments across the country and a chance to develop leadership skills
  • Currently a member of Team Rubicon where I just spent a weekend learning chainsaw skills and hanging out with patriots.

My investment in these opportunities was the effort spent looking for a good volunteer opportunity, my time, and my attention. In return, I learned I was capable of more than I originally imagined and a broadened perspective. Both invaluable.

Steps to Learning Prepper Skills through Volunteer Work

Step 1: Road map to success

If you’re going to learn prepper skills through volunteer work, you must first identify what you need to learn. Therefore, the first step is making an honest assessment of what you need to learn, as a prepper. Makes sense, right?

Let’s say your weakness is in communications. You never even had a CB radio. Most communities have an Amateur Radio group associated with a police or fire department to provide communications support in emergencies. These groups are known by different acronyms like RACES or ARES. All of them provide valuable opportunities to learn about radio communications and an inside view of their hosting agency, in exchange for a few hours of your time here and there. Here are some others:

  • Want to increase your cooking skills on a shoestring budget? Volunteer for a soup kitchen.
  • Don’t know the difference between a ball peen hammer and a cat’s paw? Habitat for Humanity will get you squared away. Building a house piece by piece will give you an extraordinary range of skills.
  • And no outfit will teach you flexibility and give you more front-line experience with victims better than the American Red Cross. Their Disaster Action Teams help people every day in communities across the country.
  • Want to teach others what you know? “Be Prepared” by becoming a Boy Scout/Trail Life or Girl Scout/American Heritage troop leader.
  • Desire to learn how to help your community after a disaster? CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) is where you want to be. It’s comprehensive and once initial training is completed, refresher trainings and community events are available to keep you sharp. The following video illustrates their role in communities.

In addition, most communities have a “Volunteer Center” that helps steer prospective volunteers to appropriate volunteer groups that need help.

Step 2: Focus and commit

You won’t achieve your goals and meet your needs if you approach volunteering in a half-assed manner. Volunteer-based groups go through hundreds of prospects before finding a person that can follow directions, take whatever entry-level training they require, and show up to meetings and events as expected. Believe me, once you are assessed to be a reliable volunteer that can follow rules and directions, opportunities will open up. Every group has an “old guard” that carries the institutional knowledge of the group. If approached respectfully they love to pass on their knowledge no matter what the subject.

It may be that the training or opportunity that is your primary interest may not be immediately available. While you wait, make it a point to show up for as many events or work details as you can. Remember that volunteer organizations know that 80% of the needed work is done by 20% of their people. If you are one of the 20%, they will invest in you.

Step 3: Assess your contribution vs. your gain

Volunteer as long as it meets your needs. There may come a time when you feel that it is no longer a good match for you…that’s OK! End your service to the group gracefully and move on. The need for good volunteers always exceeds the number available.

On the other hand, if you have organizational or leadership skills, work your way up within a group; your opportunities to learn skills and access training will naturally increase.

Step 4: Pass on your experience

This is both a suggestion and a challenge: as a volunteer, there are always new volunteers joining your group who need basic information and mentoring. If you are motivated to share information and skills with them, your skill level will increase as well.

On the other hand, if that’s not your cup of tea you still need to pass the knowledge you gain as a volunteer to family and friends, increasing their knowledge, skills, and abilities. You invested the time and effort; make sure you can take advantage of what you learned in return.

Benefits of Learning Prepper Skills Through Volunteering

Volunteering can be a valuable addition to your prepping plan. It helps you develop crucial skills, build a network of like-minded individuals, and improve your overall preparedness for emergencies. You’ll also learn how to work effectively under pressure, develop your problem-solving skills, and gain experience in a variety of situations that can prepare you for unexpected events.

Not to mention, by giving back to your community, you can strengthen the bond between you and your neighbors, create a sense of goodwill, and potentially establish valuable connections that can prove useful during times of crisis. So, whether you’re looking to enhance your prepping skills or simply want to contribute to your community, volunteering is an excellent way to achieve both.

What is your experience learning prepper skills through volunteer work?

Updated and revised by Team Survival Mom.

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Jim has spent time as a volunteer firefighter, Emergency Medical Technician, and wildland fire hand crew member. He is currently a Certified Emergency Manager. In 2011, Jim authored “I Can Overcome That: The Practical Guide to Surviving the Next Big California Earthquake.”



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