Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Actually stockpiling causes inflation because it artificially concentrates purchases that would have been spread out over months. Thanks a lot grandma.
This is why inflation is a runaway train. People see a little bit of inflation and then they panic buy and cause an inflationary spriral.
Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before COVID we ate exclusively fresh food. I went to the store once or twice a week to buy what we needed. I never used something from a can -- gross, never. I never bought frozen food unless it was ice cream or tilapia. We just didn't eat or shop like that.
During COVID I had to spend a small fortune on Whole Foods and Instacart deliveries. I never knew WHEN I could schedule a delivery or what they would have in stock. Every delivery was missing multiple items. I didn't like it at all. I don't care if we never have food shortages that lead to rioting and shooting pet dogs, or totally empty shelves like they had in the former Soviet Union -- what I went through during COVID was stressful enough, thanks.
Now we have a good pantry of foods we like and can probably live off of for 3 months. I'm glad we have it. I will never go back to being unprepared.
So you were too lazy to go to the store for yourself and shop for your own family and had to deal with a few missing items that you expected someone else to pack and deliver to your front door? And that was stressful to you? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
Your comment adds nothing to the thread.
It adds what I was thinking, but too lazy to type.
So you read a thread and just think a comment but you're too lazy to actually type it, and you think that somehow adds to the thread? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
I thought the same as PP. I mean, really, you are prepping because you were missing a few items from a food delivery?
Anonymous wrote:Serious question... so what is the tipping point where you go from just being a family that is well prepared for a true emergency to one that will be considered/called crazy preppers? For example, we keep enough food, water and other emergency supplies on hand to allow our family of 4 to survive for a month without leaving the house. This doesn't seem crazy at all to us. Three years ago very few people would have believed that places would force citizens to stay in their homes for extended periods (like Shanghai). And the threat of a virus even more severe than the current variants of COVID no longer sounds unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before COVID we ate exclusively fresh food. I went to the store once or twice a week to buy what we needed. I never used something from a can -- gross, never. I never bought frozen food unless it was ice cream or tilapia. We just didn't eat or shop like that.
During COVID I had to spend a small fortune on Whole Foods and Instacart deliveries. I never knew WHEN I could schedule a delivery or what they would have in stock. Every delivery was missing multiple items. I didn't like it at all. I don't care if we never have food shortages that lead to rioting and shooting pet dogs, or totally empty shelves like they had in the former Soviet Union -- what I went through during COVID was stressful enough, thanks.
Now we have a good pantry of foods we like and can probably live off of for 3 months. I'm glad we have it. I will never go back to being unprepared.
So you were too lazy to go to the store for yourself and shop for your own family and had to deal with a few missing items that you expected someone else to pack and deliver to your front door? And that was stressful to you? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
Your comment adds nothing to the thread.
It adds what I was thinking, but too lazy to type.
So you read a thread and just think a comment but you're too lazy to actually type it, and you think that somehow adds to the thread? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before COVID we ate exclusively fresh food. I went to the store once or twice a week to buy what we needed. I never used something from a can -- gross, never. I never bought frozen food unless it was ice cream or tilapia. We just didn't eat or shop like that.
During COVID I had to spend a small fortune on Whole Foods and Instacart deliveries. I never knew WHEN I could schedule a delivery or what they would have in stock. Every delivery was missing multiple items. I didn't like it at all. I don't care if we never have food shortages that lead to rioting and shooting pet dogs, or totally empty shelves like they had in the former Soviet Union -- what I went through during COVID was stressful enough, thanks.
Now we have a good pantry of foods we like and can probably live off of for 3 months. I'm glad we have it. I will never go back to being unprepared.
So you were too lazy to go to the store for yourself and shop for your own family and had to deal with a few missing items that you expected someone else to pack and deliver to your front door? And that was stressful to you? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
Your comment adds nothing to the thread.
It adds what I was thinking, but too lazy to type.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before COVID we ate exclusively fresh food. I went to the store once or twice a week to buy what we needed. I never used something from a can -- gross, never. I never bought frozen food unless it was ice cream or tilapia. We just didn't eat or shop like that.
During COVID I had to spend a small fortune on Whole Foods and Instacart deliveries. I never knew WHEN I could schedule a delivery or what they would have in stock. Every delivery was missing multiple items. I didn't like it at all. I don't care if we never have food shortages that lead to rioting and shooting pet dogs, or totally empty shelves like they had in the former Soviet Union -- what I went through during COVID was stressful enough, thanks.
Now we have a good pantry of foods we like and can probably live off of for 3 months. I'm glad we have it. I will never go back to being unprepared.
So you were too lazy to go to the store for yourself and shop for your own family and had to deal with a few missing items that you expected someone else to pack and deliver to your front door? And that was stressful to you? You won't make it through a real food shortage.
Your comment adds nothing to the thread.