MAY
02
What Boy Scouts (Sorry Ladies) is to Preparedness.
By:

When I was vis­it­ing fam­i­ly two week­ends ago, I was sit­ting at the kitchen table chat­ting with my moth­er. I hap­pened to lok down at the table and a brochure caught my eye. This brochure was for my old Boy Scout troop. It was their 100th anniver­sary of exis­tance, and they were being hon­ored local­ly by the over­see­ing body for Boyscout troops in that area. It got me think­ing… What are the Boy Scouts to pre­pared­ness ??? Before I go all in with my thoughts here, and in full dis­clo­sure, this is also on the tails of anoth­er post that I read a cou­ple weeks ago on anoth­er blog. I can­not remem­ber who’s blog I was on, but remem­ber skim­ming the post and did­n’t real­ly give it as much thought, until I saw that brochure sit­ting on the kitchen table, wait­ing for me to pick it up.

So let’s out­line a few things first. What is the Boy Scout Mot­to? I am assum­ing many already know this… Maybe I am wrong, but it is Be Pre­pared.Let’s exam­ine this for a moment. Prep­ping is the con­cept of ready­ing your­self and your fam­i­ly for an unfore­seen event that could cause you and/or your fam­i­ly to be in as sit­u­a­tion where you may oth­er­wise not be ready to han­dle a sit­u­a­tion that would cause harm and stress to those around you. Of course, this is my def­i­n­i­tion, how­ev­er, let’s exam­ine the con­cept of “Be Pre­pared.” Be pre­pared for what? It is a pret­ty broad sweep­ing state­ment. The answer; Be pre­pared for any­thing. Peri­od. I know what you are think­ing. How am I going to be pre­pared for any­thing? Well, (and I am not knock­ing any­one here), should a young many make it to Eagle Scout, like my good friend Kevin did 25 years ago (I did not, but more on that lat­er), one would have earned many Mer­it Badges for skills they would have learned and would have had to exe­cute suc­cess­ful­ly as well as be test­ed on. There are more than 100 Mer­it Badges for skills in exis­tence that can be earned by a scout today.

How about the Boy Scout Oath? What is it, and where and how does that fit into prep­ping? Well, here is the oath and my thoughts on this sub­ject:

On my hon­or, I will do my best
To do my duty to God and my coun­try and to obey the Scout Law;
To help oth­er peo­ple at all times;
To keep myself phys­i­cal­ly strong, men­tal­ly awake and moral­ly straight

So again, what does this all mean… It sounds good but let”s diu­sect it a bit and break it down…

Duty to God and Coun­try: My fam­i­ly was a mixed reli­gious house­hold, by no means does this have to apply to you, it is just a lit­tle his­to­ry for me and how it applies to me, I think, and maybe oth­ers as well… In my mixed reli­gious house­hold, one thing was con­stant, both reli­gions believed in the same God. So for all intents and pur­pos­es my fam­i­ly taught me to know and serve God. No I may not have always been on the straight and nar­row as a kid, buyt my point here is that the fam­i­ly val­ues reli­gion taught were part of what was sup­posed to trans­late to Scout­ing and the scout­ing lifestyle. Notice I called it a lifestyle. This lifestyle is sup­posed to trans­late into a core val­ue sys­tem for you to live by.

The sec­ond peice of the above, duty to your coun­try, trans­lates to this: Hun­dreds of thou­sands of Amer­i­cans and non-Amer­i­cans have served this coun­try in the mil­i­tary, pol­i­tics, as voulen­teers, and more to make this one of the great­est coun­tries in the world. Many have died or have almost died to give you and I what we believe in, and con­tin­ue to do so even today. By rec­og­niz­ing this and under­stand­ing your val­ue sys­tem, by being good to your fam­i­ly and being a good fam­i­ly mem­ber, by work­ing towards the greater good, being aware of what is hap­pen­ing in your coun­try, by doing your civic duty of vot­ing, and so much more, you do your duty to your coun­try.

Duty to oth­ers: Peole need help not only when the econ­o­my is poor, not only when things are bad, but many peo­ple need help dai­ly just to make it through the day. That does­n’t mean you need to stop and help every­one you see dur­ing the day. Maybe some­one is hav­ing a bad day and a smile or a kind word can help them to make it through… Maybe just by open­ing the door for some­one that has their hands full helps them out and they rec­og­nize it… You help to make their world bet­ter for the moment… You don’t have to be a Boy Scout to “Do a Good Turn Dai­ly.”

Duty to self: I think this one can be mis­un­der­stood… This lit­tle piece of the Oath means to take care of your­self men­tal­ly and phys­i­cal­ly… It means you have a duty to your­self to know and under­stand what is going on around you at all times. To be aware of what is hap­pen­ing in front of you and around the world, and how it might affect you per­son­al­ly. It means to always be learn­ing. Ask ques­tions, be intel­lec­tu­al­ly curi­ous about what goes on around you. It means eat right and not to have to many McDon­alds or Burg­er King ham­burg­ers every day/week… It means to make sure you are phy­cal­ly fit as best you can be, and take care of your body. It means to live hon­est­ly and not to deceive, cheat, steal, or harm. To be trans­par­ent and clear in your actions and with what you say. To be some­one of strong Prin­ci­ple, Strength, and Integri­ty. Trans­la­tion, some­one of good Char­ac­ter.

So, with all of that, we have the “Scout Law.” To me the Scout Law is a set of basic val­ues to live by that will help you to make the right deci­sions when you are in any giv­en sit­u­a­tion ‘prepar­ing’ you to do the right thing. Here is the Scout Law:

A Scout is:

  • Trust­wor­thy,
  • Loy­al,
  • Help­ful,
  • Friend­ly,
  • Cour­te­ous,
  • Kind,
  • Obe­di­ent,
  • Cheer­ful,
  • Thrifty,
  • Brave,
  • Clean,
  • and Rev­er­ent.

I am not going to get into what I think each one means to pre­pared­ness… I think many of these are self explana­to­ry, such as Thrifty, Clean, Brave, Kind, etc… You can apply your own def­i­n­i­tions that make sense to you and your fam­i­ly… The applied def­i­n­i­tions will no doubt be sim­i­lar to oth­ers by oth­er read­ers. I have a per­son­al belief that if we are all on the same page as pep­pers some of our val­ues over­lap, and our def­i­n­i­tions will be sim­i­lar in nature…

What I find com­pelling about this, is that I did­n’t make the con­nec­tion with my own life and scout­ing when I was a young man.  I had my own set of val­ues, and moral stan­dards that prob­a­bly did­n’t meet the scout­ing stan­dard.  I was a kid, what can I say.

Today I look back and see con­nec­tions I nev­er thought I would see.  Today I con­nect with many of the cri­te­ria in the Scout Law, try­ing to active­ly “Do my good turn dai­ly,” even if it is some­thing as hold­ing the door open for some­one, or help­ing them under­stand why prep­ping is the smart thing to do.  Oth­er con­nec­tions have come in time as well.  While I love my par­ents, I also think they were pret­ty pas­sive about val­ues, and thought that they just come in time.  I think that had to do with the mul­ti reli­gious house­hold.  Mom, being Roman Catholic and a woman of reli­gion got a lot of her val­ue sys­tem from the Catholic Church.  Dad a Ger­man Jew, got a lot of his val­ues from his moth­er and Syn­a­gogue.   And me, I had a LOT of ques­tions, which I trans­lat­ed into my own val­ue sys­tem for a good por­tion of my ado­les­cence.

In hind­sight, I think I would have liked to make a con­nec­tion with the above list ear­li­er than I have, but as dis­cussed ear­li­er…  My ques­tions have lead me down a dif­fer­ent path.  Not a bad one, just dif­fer­ent.

In the end, how­ev­er, the val­ues that the Boy Scouts bring to prep­ping is one that should be a nat­ur­al pro­gres­sion.  One that helps cre­ate a man of integri­ty that wants to pre­serve his and his fam­i­ly’s way of life.

How has Boy Scout­ing made a dif­fer­ence in your life, and/or your prep­ping?

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5
COMMENTS
By: Mr-Jones
jul
28

I like the Man-scout reference. That’s how I see CERT and ARES today. I laughed at the field guide reference too, because I have one still knocking around in my camping duffles.

This program gave alot to me. Both as a scout and as a leader. I stayed with it to Eagle, and it’s still the first thing I list when people ask me about myself as a prepper. It’s not just because it’s chronologically my first prepper achievement either. It’s because it gives a boy a firm foundation for other skills. I learned to shoot growing hunting, but I shot competatively for the first time in the BSA and it’s been a lifelong passion. I can’t imagine where I’d be without the Scouting Program. I highly doubt that I’d see myself in the same way as an adult without it.

By: suburban
may
2

In reply to JV .

Thanks JV!

By: JV
By:
JV
may
2

Here is a link to the Boy Scouts of America online version of their Fieldguide. Great read for anyone who is into camping, and or outdoor survival even if you read it when you were young.

http://fieldbook.scouting.org/Fieldbook.aspx

By: Prepperjim
may
2

I was a cub scout as a kid, but gave up when Boy Scouts started because I was doing other stuff.

I think I commented before, but one narrative to use to talk to non-preppers is to think of yourself as a Man-Scout practicing a grown-up version of Boy Scouting, by always being prepared. Instead of getting merit badges, my goal is to get some skills directly related to being prepared and always be learning something! Once again, Man-Scout style!

By: Joe
By:
Joe
may
2

Very nice! And you’re right, at it’s core, prepping is nothing more than hoping for the best and preparing for the worse.

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