The California wildfires are, luckily for us here in sub-zero (at the moment) Minnesota, far away and unlikely in our near future. However, there are always circumstance which could make having to leave home in a huge emergency our only option for survival. I'm sure you all can think of something that would drive you out of your own home to save your lives.
As Steve and I watched the coverage, we spent some time thinking about what needed to go with us. What's irreplaceable? What's possible, given age and health?
A presupposition to having any choice at all is that we'd be awake and dressed for whatever weather is outside. If that weren't so, there's very little point in making further plans. Imagine waking up to a house fire when one needs 5 minutes to dress, find shoes, and maybe locate the car keys... this time. Oh, and where's the wallet or purse which carries your credit cards and IDs? After arriving in MN during our move last year with most of our important documents packed with the rest of our possessions and sitting 1800 miles away, the importance of having certain ones of those at hand was driven home. You need the car, the car needs gas, gas needs money in some form. For a bed to sleep in, you either need somebody who'll take you in, or again, money, as well as ID if a motel is your answer.
Since we're not in a location that suggests disasters can happen at any moment, a go-bag isn't sitting by the door waiting to be used. Were wildfires close, that would change and the must-have list would change. If we had floods forecast, or earthquakes likely, or major rioting happening, they'd be packed and ready... enough. Some would already be in the car.
But assume the very unexpected nightmare was imminent. Minutes only were allowed. What has to be taken with you?
We came up with two things for each of us. First, our laptops. Charging cables would be optional, as they're replaceable. But our lives are on those laptops, from family photos to information on contacting other people to medical info to financial info. For some of us, cell phones would be just as important, but those are usually in the same places and fit in a pocket or purse on our pass through.
The second thing, for us with our health histories and the variety of medications that keep our quality of life as good as possible at our ages, would be grabbing all those meds to take as well. While our pharmacies do keep records of what we need and when, that doesn't mean one can wait perhaps 5 days to find one far enough from whatever made us flee, yet also be quickly accessible as well as in a network to track our history and have a supply on hand that insurance can cover on an emergency basis. Steve would have to grab a large bag of his bottles, not too far from where his laptop sits. I'd have to raid my organized stockpile in the bathroom (which I'd be sure to have used by then) and dump them in a bag to bring along. There are always extra bags nearby, so not a big deal. I could even dump out the wastebasket liner and fill it with meds as a last resort. Who cares at that point if litter is left behind? Somebody's going to come in behind me and tsk tsk how dirty my dirt is?
This scenario is one time I think we're lucky that my allergies took over, forcing us not to keep pets that would need to be rounded up and removed, with all the chaos they'd likely be going through at the same time. That's a likely recipe for tragedy, either theirs as they hid, or ours as we stayed too long and searched.
With more warning, more time, more things could be salvaged. But those are just things. The loss would hurt. But we would recover. I already have secondary lists for "in case". But we know now what is most important, after each other. We have a plan.
Do you?