Do you know yourself? It is a fair question. Survivalist and prepper, yes, but do you really know yourself? One of the problems that we face in life is that we find our identity, the “who we are” within our interests…of what we do. If a guy works with electrical outlets and wiring buildings, then he is an electrician and calls himself as such. Akin to the zombies in George Romero’s movie, “Night of the Living Dead,” we plod through life and live and die within our professions, perhaps changing from one profession to another, but always self-identifying with what we do: a utilitarian identity.
But who are we? Do we know ourselves?
Perhaps this is confusing; however, rather than leave you with the question to sort out, let’s place some feedback and framework into it. Let’s answer a question by asking ourselves more questions. YOU SHOULD WRITE THESE DOWN ON PAPER, to review. Let’s do it!
- How do you see yourself outright, in what roles in their totality? A husband and father who is a college graduate and works as a master mechanic. That is an example of a potential “first impression” of yourself.
- Now…how have you challenged yourself, physically, in your life? Were you an athlete? Are you still? What did you accomplish with sports? What were your awards? What was your greatest athletic accomplishment, the one you were the proudest of…and why were you proud of it?
- Who are your friends? [An old saying: Show me who your friends are, and I’ll show you who you are]. Are you tightly-knit, akin to a family? Are they “winners” in life, meaning successful at taking care of themselves and their families? Or are they huddled around a 55-gallon drum with a fire in it, passing around the Popov?
- How have you challenged yourself academically and mentally? What are your greatest accomplishments from a scholastic (and perhaps competitive) perspective? Were you a chess champion? An “Avalon Hill” game tournament winner? An excellent speech and debate practitioner? Do you write?
- Service: How have you served something greater than yourself? The Red Cross? Your church? In the military, or the Peace Corps? What were your greatest accomplishments there? Have you ever saved someone’s life…in peacetime, or in war? Have you ever been recognized by your peers for your accomplishments?
- What are your greatest strengths?
- What are your weaknesses, physical, mental, and emotional? Are you prone to a violent temper? Are you docile to the point of being afraid of confrontation, either verbal or physical?
- What skills do you possess? List them all…yes, all of them. What do you know how to do? What have you done? There is a difference between those two parts. Knowing how to do it is being “technically proficient.” Actually being able to get it done is being “tactically proficient.”
- What are your three greatest skills and strengths?
- What is your number one strength…the one that you could match up with anyone in the world that you know of? What is that area where you are a master technician and tactician, performing it so well that you move in the fluid manner of an artist…that when you perform what you do best, it is more akin to an art form?
These are your starting points. A good self-assessment. If you are honest with yourself, you will really have some great material to look back on and to use as a tool to find out your goals and how you’re going to achieve them.
Then, #11. For number 11? Take one person whom you trust and know will be honest with you…and have them read all of it. Then ask for their opinion of all of it…especially asking them to be honest with their assessment of your strengths and weaknesses.
How is that for a challenge? Not only do you have to be honest with yourself, but you should trust someone who you believe in…and face honesty from them. In this manner, you will be able to form a truly beneficial assessment, and put together two of the component parts:
- Who we see ourselves as being, and
- Who others see us as being.
When are these determined? We can then better answer number 3. Do you know this one? It returns to the first question I asked you, and the hardest thing to learn:
- Who we are.
What a challenge: to find out who you are…take criticism (self and others) to heart, to improve yourself. You’ll need the courage to do it. In the end, we can defeat many battles in the fight to prepare and survive.
But the greatest battle you’ll ever face and the toughest opponent will be yourself. Stay in that good fight, assess yourself, know yourself, and seek self-improvement. Part 2 we will detail how to know your enemy. Good luck and God bless! JJ out!
Incredibly insightful. Extremely hard to do the first time. Even painful if you are living in self delusion. The person who can accomplish what youve outlined is not only able to suceed in tbeir own life, they probably will be of service to others as well. Awesome article, and the very foundation of what we try to accomplisb as preppers.