pearlieq
<font color=green>They can sit & spin<br><font col
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2004
- Messages
- 8,734
New things we learned from Irma:
--Plan for boredom. Gather up games and cards, get some good books from the library/download to your kindle/reading app, get stuff together for craft projects. The days before/after can be loooooong to fill.
--Right after food/water/shelter, a phone with data was the most helpful thing I had. Consider switching to unlimited and make sure you've got lots of charging options.
--Get food you like and vary it as much as possible. Fun snacks might be the best thing about your day when you've been cooped up with no AC forever. Make sure you've got a balance so you're not eating endless sweet stuff or salty stuff.
--Reach out to your neighbors. Go knock on the doors around you and talk about your general plans to stay/go. Think about who around you might be vulnerable and make sure they're OK. Making friends may score you an invite to crash at the nice cool house with the generator and you may find you have a ton of fun at the impromptu clean-out-your freezer cookout.
--TURN OFF THE WEATHER CHANNEL! Watching them babble about the storm for 72 hours straight will drive you mental and make you worry. Sign up for emergency alerts and set a limit on when you'll check in with the TV broadcasts--we found 5-10 minutes every half hour was plenty to stay informed.
--Plan for boredom. Gather up games and cards, get some good books from the library/download to your kindle/reading app, get stuff together for craft projects. The days before/after can be loooooong to fill.
--Right after food/water/shelter, a phone with data was the most helpful thing I had. Consider switching to unlimited and make sure you've got lots of charging options.
--Get food you like and vary it as much as possible. Fun snacks might be the best thing about your day when you've been cooped up with no AC forever. Make sure you've got a balance so you're not eating endless sweet stuff or salty stuff.
--Reach out to your neighbors. Go knock on the doors around you and talk about your general plans to stay/go. Think about who around you might be vulnerable and make sure they're OK. Making friends may score you an invite to crash at the nice cool house with the generator and you may find you have a ton of fun at the impromptu clean-out-your freezer cookout.
--TURN OFF THE WEATHER CHANNEL! Watching them babble about the storm for 72 hours straight will drive you mental and make you worry. Sign up for emergency alerts and set a limit on when you'll check in with the TV broadcasts--we found 5-10 minutes every half hour was plenty to stay informed.



