The practical preparedness system for ordinary homes — water, food, power, first aid, and the first 72 hours of any emergency — on a normal budget, in a normal house. No bunkers required.

Preparedness isn't a lifestyle. It's a chore you do once — and then stop worrying.
I've watched the same movie my whole life. The forecast turns ugly, and by evening the store shelves are stripped, the generator aisle is empty, and grown adults are fighting over bottled water they'll store wrong anyway. Not because they're foolish — because nobody ever showed them the boring, cheap way to be ready before the sirens.
The Ready Household is that boring, cheap way, written down: water that actually keeps, food you'll actually eat, light and heat when the grid quits, the papers and cash that matter, and a 72-hour plan your whole family understands. Every item with real prices, every step in plain order.
This is not about fear. Fear is what the unprepared feel. This is about sleeping well when the wind picks up.
Two houses on the same street. The storm hits both.
| The night-before house | The ready household |
|---|---|
| Fighting for the last case of water at 9 PM | Water stored right, rotated once a year, done |
| Buys a generator at markup, in the rain, if there's one left | Chose their backup power on a quiet Saturday, at list price |
| A freezer full of spoiled food and no plan | Knows exactly what gets eaten first, second, third |
| Phone at 12% and no way to charge it | Lights, radio, and charged batteries where they always are |
| Doom-scrolling for answers at midnight | A one-page family plan on the fridge |
| Spends hundreds in panic, every single event | Spent a little once — and it's still there next time |
Same street. Same storm. The difference was one quiet weekend and a checklist.
"Ice storm took our power for four days in February. First time in my adult life I wasn't scared — we just ran the plan. My wife thinks the book is the best $27 I've ever spent."
"I'd watched prepper videos for years and owned a pile of gear I didn't understand. This put it in order. The 72-hour chapter alone is worth the price."
"No fear-mongering, no bunker nonsense. Just a bloke telling you what to sort out and in what order. Did the water chapter the same weekend."
I'm Hank Barrett. I've spent thirty years working with my hands — building, fixing, and riding out every kind of weather Maryland can throw at a house, which is most kinds. I've seen what storms, outages, and bad luck do to families who assumed the lights would always come on.
I'm not preparing for the end of the world. I'm preparing for Tuesday — the ice storm, the layoff, the water main break. On my channel I show the practical way to get ready without fear and without going broke. This manual is that whole system in one place.
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No. This is for power cuts, storms, water problems, and rough patches — the emergencies that actually happen. If a book tells you to fear the end of the world, it's selling you fear. This one sells you a checklist.
Yes. Water, food, power, first aid, papers, and the 72-hour plan all scale down to a one-bedroom flat. The manual gives the apartment version wherever space matters.
The opposite. Most of the manual is built on ordinary items at ordinary prices, bought a little at a time — and it will talk you out of more purchases than it talks you into.
The videos are topics. The manual is the system — everything in the right order, with the prices, the quantities, and the plan in one place you can work through. You can't run an emergency off a playlist.
A PDF for any phone, tablet, or computer, formatted to print — and the parts that belong on your fridge and in your binder are made to be printed.