GridDownComms.com |
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Disaster Environment |
What it is like to experience a disaster. |
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To
understand disaster communications, you need to have some
understanding of a disaster. Most of my Red Cross experience (but not
all) was in relatively "nice" areas. Not expensive homes and such, but
good neighborhoods. Places where people knew their neighbors and
respected each other. In good times they would be very nice places to
live. Things change after a major disaster. Some things get better,
some get worse. Lets put you there, in that neighborhood. What would
you experience? How would you feel?
You will be tired. Very very tired. This lead to
irritability, errors in judgment, lowered resistance to disease and
accidents. And it is not just you that will be tired, but everybody
will be tired. Bone dead tired. Imagine being in a town where everyone
is stressed. Small incidents bloom into confrontations. People make
stupid mistakes which irritate others. Everyone becomes edgy.
Confusion will be extreme. It will be almost impossible to
find out what is really happening. Rumors will circulate so many times
you will begin to believe the most ridiculous stories. You will spend
energy going someplace to get something that is not available. Not
once or twice but many times.