Don't let bad advice leave you unprepared.
The Dangerous Comfort of Myths
Here's something you won't hear from most prepping websites:
Most people aren't unprepared because they're lazy. They're unprepared because they believe things that aren't true.
Myths feel like knowledge. But fake knowledge is worse than ignorance. Ignorance can be fixed with one fact. Myths require digging out the roots.
I've talked to hundreds of people about life without oil. Again and again, I hear the same three myths. They sound reasonable. They feel comforting. And they are absolutely wrong.
Let me show you why—so you can stop waiting and start preparing.
Myth #1: "When things get bad, I'll just move to the countryside"
Why people believe it:
The image is seductive. A cabin in the woods. A garden out back. No neighbors for miles. Total self‑sufficiency. Hollywood and survivalist forums have sold this dream for decades.
Why it's wrong:
Let me ask you three honest questions.
Question 1: Do you currently own rural land with a water source, shelter, and tools?
If the answer is no—when exactly do you plan to buy it? Before the crisis? During? After prices spike?
Question 2: Do you have the skills to start a farm from scratch?
Growing food is hard work even with tractors, fertilizer, and decades of experience. Doing it with hand tools and no experience is nearly impossible.
Question 3: What happens to the millions of other people who have the exact same plan?
You won't be the only one heading for the hills. Every major road will be a parking lot. Every rural property with a "for sale" sign will be claimed within hours.
The reality:
The countryside already has people living there. They have their own families. They have limited resources. And they will not welcome a flood of unprepared urban refugees.
A 2020 study of pandemic migration patterns showed that rural communities pushed back hard against newcomers—and that was during a relatively mild disruption. In a real oil crisis? The welcome mat disappears.
What actually works:
Prepare exactly where you are. Make your current home more resilient. Build relationships with your current neighbors. The rural fantasy keeps people from doing the real work right in front of them.
Myth #2: "I need to stockpile years of food before I can feel safe"
Why people believe it:
The prepping industry runs on this myth. Ads show basements lined floor‑to‑ceiling with buckets of freeze‑dried meals. The message is clear: More food = more safety.
Why it's wrong:
Three problems with the "year of food" approach.
Problem 1: Most people can't afford it.
A year's supply of freeze‑dried food for one person costs $3,000‑$5,000. For a family of four? $12,000‑$20,000. Most households don't have that kind of disposable income. So they do nothing at all.
Problem 2: Food storage requires space, rotation, and knowledge.
That bucket of rice? It can go rancid. Get weevils. Absorb moisture. Lose nutrients. A stockpile you don't actively manage is just future garbage.
Problem 3: A year of food doesn't solve the real problems.
What happens after year one? You need long‑term solutions—gardening, foraging, trading, community food systems. A stockpile postpones the hard work. It doesn't replace it.
What actually works:
Start with two weeks. Then one month. Then three months.
A 90‑day supply of normal pantry food—canned goods, rice, beans, oil, salt, sugar—costs a fraction of the "prepper bucket" approach and uses things you already eat.
More importantly, spend your energy on systems, not just storage:
A small container garden (even on a balcony)
A relationship with a local farmer
Knowledge of wild edible plants in your area
Skills for preserving food (canning, drying, fermenting)
Food security isn't a number. It's a web of sources, skills, and relationships.
Myth #3: "I'll just learn things when I need them"
Why people believe it:
We live in an age of YouTube tutorials. Need to fix a toilet? There's a video. Need to start a fire? Ten thousand videos. The assumption is that information is always available.
Why it's wrong:
This myth confuses access to information with actual skill.
The internet will not be there.
In a prolonged oil crisis, the internet doesn't work. No WiFi. No cell towers. No data. That YouTube tutorial you're counting on? Unreachable.
Skills require practice.
Watching a video on fire‑starting is not the same as starting a fire in the rain with cold hands and fading light. The first time you try a skill should not be the time you need it to work.
Stress degrades performance.
Under real pressure, your cognitive ability drops by 30‑50%. Tasks that are easy in your living room become nearly impossible when your family is hungry and you're exhausted. Skills need to be automatic, not intellectual.
What actually works:
Learn one new practical skill every two weeks.
Not "watch a video." Actually do it. Multiple times. Under slightly harder conditions each time.
A six‑month schedule could look like this:
| Week | Skill |
|---|---|
| 1‑2 | Boil water without electricity (camp stove, alcohol burner, solar) |
| 3‑4 | Sew a button and patch a tear |
| 5‑6 | Identify three edible weeds in your neighborhood |
| 7‑8 | Start a fire with two different methods |
| 9‑10 | Change a tire (even if you don't own a car—help someone who does) |
| 11‑12 | Cook three complete meals from shelf‑stable ingredients only |
After six months, you have six real, tested skills. After a year, twelve.
That's worth more than any stockpile.
The Cost of Believing Myths
These myths aren't harmless. They have a real cost.
Myth #1 keeps you passive. You're waiting for a move you'll never make, instead of improving where you are.
Myth #2 keeps you overwhelmed. You're looking at a $5,000 goal you can't reach, instead of taking $20 steps that actually build security.
Myth #3 keeps you fragile. You're counting on resources that will vanish exactly when you need them most.
The people who survive won't be the ones who believed the most comfortable stories.
They'll be the ones who saw clearly, started small, and kept going.
What the Book Gives You Instead of Myths
How to Survive in the World Without Oil was written to be the antidote to these myths.
Instead of "move to the countryside," you get urban and suburban resilience plans that work where you already live.
Instead of "stockpile years of food," you get a realistic, affordable food security ladder—starting with what's in your kitchen right now.
Instead of "learn when you need it," you get a practical skills curriculum you can start today, with no special equipment or prior knowledge.
No myths. No fear‑mongering. No unrealistic scenarios.
Just honest, actionable survival for ordinary people.
[Get the Ebook on Etsy – Instant Download →]
A Challenge for This Week
Pick one myth you've secretly believed. Just one.
Then take one small action that directly contradicts it.
If you've been waiting to move to the countryside: improve one thing in your current home.
If you've been overwhelmed by the "year of food" goal: buy one extra can of beans and one bag of rice.
If you've been telling yourself you'll learn later: practice one skill for 15 minutes today.
Don't try to fix everything. Just break the myth's hold over you. One small crack is enough to let reality in.
Next on the Blog:
The 10 Items You Actually Need (And the 20 You Don't)
Until then—stop believing. Start doing.
— Peter Ng
Post‑Oil Survival Guide
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