India is an extremely sensitive zone, ecologically
speaking. Every year we witness some sort of natural calamity, either in the
form of floods or earthquakes or cloudbursts or drought or some other natural
disaster. And with global warming making itself felt across the world, the
quantity of rain is concentrating more and more in shorter spans of time. What
would earlier fall in a few weeks, now pours in a few days or hours. And the
fragile geography, the young Himalayas and the rampant concrete jungles that
are coming up, without any heed to safety, is aggravating the problem even
more. Fingers get pointed after every calamity, political points are scored,
demands for resignation are made, tribunals and committees are formed, promises
are doled out like there is no tomorrow .... yet the more the things change,
the more they remain the same. There is talk of the nexus between corrupt of
every hue to whom is laid the blame for these calamities. Meanwhile people keep
losing their own lives, the lives of their family members, they lose their
homes and means of livelihood. Compensations are announced and life goes on as
usual ... till the next disaster strikes.
There is a need to look at the reasons behind these disasters
and the reaction to them. There is a need to speed up prediction and our
responses to prediction. Relief and rescue needs to be looked at very seriously
so that unnecessary time is not lost ... and thereby more lives are not lost
due to avoidable delays.
But there is another aspect that needs to be looked into
very seriously, which no one seems to be doing. It has never been seriously addressed
and indeed, is not considered a priority. It is the training and preparedness
of the people who are caught in disasters and calamities. Whether it be the
earthquakes in Bhuj or Latur, the floods in Kosi, or the cloudbursts in Leh and
Uttarakhand, it WILL take time for authorities to respond. With roads being
washed away, it will be difficult for rescue vehicles to reach. First we have
to identify the region and then gather the resources and then send them to the
required places. This takes time. We might want to speed things up as much as
possible, but there will be a time delay, however unfortunate. It is for times
like these that the people who are caught in the calamity have to fend for
themselves instead of waiting for relief and rescue.
Each of the people have to learn the art of survival. Not
only solitary individuals stuck in the middle of nowhere and the only way out
being self rescue, but even those gathered in groups. It takes just one panic
stricken person to turn the whole dynamics on its head. And soon you have a
bigger problem in addition to the original one. Situations like these need a
cool head, basic leadership qualities and the knowledge about how best to make
use of the resources found in the devastation all around. At the same time,
keeping the people together, keeping their hopes up that rescue and safety is
just around the corner.
In every survival situation the basics are the same.
Whether it be in the flattened town of Kedarnath or a group of trekkers
stranded in the middle of nowhere. There are essentially SEVEN things that need
to be addressed.
The first and most important is a positive mental
attitude. If the mind is not in the right place, everything else becomes
difficult. Worry or panic is not going to solve anything; only a calm and
composed mind will. The rule I follow is acronymed STOP – Stop, Think, Observe,
Plan. In times of calamity, where home and hearth is lost, there is injury or
maybe even death, it is difficult to keep calm. This is where group dynamics
comes into play. There needs to be people who are aware of the situation and
make all efforts to keep people around them calm and composed.
If rescue and safety is not imminent, shelter is the next
most important essential. In cold weather, if wet, if windy, hypothermia can
set in very very quickly resulting in death. The first line of defense against
the elements is the clothes on your back. If the clothes are wet, get them dry.
If it is windy, find shade against the wind. If it is cold, find warmth. In a
calamity such as in Kedarnath, there will be a lot of debris strewn all around.
Construct a shelter to guard against the wind and the rain and the cold. Use
body heat to warm each other. There are innumerable ways in which a shelter can
be constructed ... if only you know what to look for and what to do with what
you find.
People often complain about food. I was watching the
television coverage of the Uttarakhand tragedy and saw one lady complaining
that there was only rice and dal to eat. Lucky her, she at least had that. But
the human body is an incredibly versatile piece of machinery and you can
survive without food for maybe three or four weeks. In fact it is better to
stay off food unless there is adequate supply of drinking water since food
requires water to digest. I suspect good clean drinking water was at a premium
in Uttarakhand, and hence people would do well to conserve their energy as much
as possible and eat as less as possible. However, even amidst such devastation
there is food to be found in the trees, in grass, in animal protein ... if only
we know where to look and know what to eat.
Water is essential. Dehydration can set in extremely
quickly and people can die in a very short time without water. Chances are that
in Uttarakhand water was plenty. After it was a flood that caused all the
destruction. But the water would have been contaminated. Debris, soil, and dead
bodies of humans and animals would be in the water contaminating it. And drinking
contaminated water is a surefire way of getting very sick. Not a good idea in a
survival situation. Water HAS to be purified for drinking. And surest form of
purification is by boiling it. Which brings us to fire. But even if there is no
fire, there are many different ways that water can be made potable. If only
people knew how.
Fire in my mind is a survivor’s best friend. It keeps you
warm, it dries your clothes, it boils your water, it cooks your food. Fire is
also a great companion in the middle of the night, when you are enveloped in
darkness, with its crackling flames. It is almost a living thing that you can
talk to. It warms the cockles of your heart. But how do you light a fire in the
middle of all that devastation. Chances are you are not even carrying a
matchbox or a lighter. There are lots of ways to light a fire in the
wilderness, some easy, some more time consuming and energy sapping. But there
are ways to light a fire. Learn how.
So with a right mental attitude, shelter, water, fire and
food you have taken care of yourself. You are calm, have found shelter from the
elements, have a fire to keep you warm and boil your water and if you have
found food, you are not hungry anymore. Next is to find your way out of the
problem you find yourself in. People may be out looking for you, or you may
have to relocate yourself, either for others to find you or to effect self
rescue.
You need to know the art of signalling so that people far
away can identify that you are in distress. Without any signal no one knows
where you are and whether you require help or not. I talked about solitary shepherds
or farmers who might still be stranded in the folds of the mountains of
Uttarakhand. If they could signal their presence, they could possibly be
rescued. Without signalling you are pretty much on your own. And there are a
lot of ways you can signal for help, some that can be visible for miles.
In most cases it is best to remain where you are. If you
move and rescuers find your camp and you are not there, time taken is so much
more. The search continues. But in case it looks like that rescue is unlikely and
you have to self rescue, you have to know where to go, which direction to head.
And that is where you need to learn the art of navigation.
These are some of the essentials that are required for
everyone. Not for everyday life maybe, but certainly for disaster situations
and survival situations. Life will be calmer, it will be healthier and more
hygienic. Once rescue is effected and you are back in safety, the tears can
roll and the frustrations can come out in the open. But the need of the hour is
to find yourself and your group to safety.
Last but not the least is first aid. Even a small medical
problem like a blister or a cut of a sprain can aggravate to something major.
Just plain walking might become difficult or infection could set in very
quickly. The techniques of administering basic first is an invaluable knowledge
that you can have when stuck in an unfortunate situation.
To get back to where we started from, if more and more
people, particularly the youth, were trained in these eight basic survival
essentials, life in cases of such disasters could become more bearable. Why
should we always depend on the administration or the police or the armed forces
to come and help us? Why can’t we help them to help us by making sure that we
have not made a bad situation worse by disregarding basic principles of
survival.
If only more people are trained. If only more people are
willing to be trained. After all, as many of us like to believe, “It can’t
happen to me.”
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