EDC – Priorities

EDC (Everyday Carry, that which is always at hand) can vary a bit depending on circumstances and carry options.

General categories:

  • Personal items
  • FAKs
  • Tools & equipment
  • Self-defense
  • Communication
  • Water/food

There are other elements, and some of the above elements may not be included in some EDC configurations. (For example: EDC included only in clothing worn is going to be more limited than an EDC bag/backpack.)

For this post, I want to deal briefly with one essential element: First Aid Kits.

There are three basic levels of EDC FAKs:

Bare “stop the bleed” kits focused on THE one most likely life-threatening need for first aid: bleeding. Tourniquet, gauze impregnated with blood clotting agent, bandages, etc. VERY small pack. Specialized, so it’s limited, by design. In a pocket in worn clothing, so ALWAYS available.

General, basic FAK with anti-biotic cream, pain relievers, “Israeli Bandage and more tourniquets, etc. – just more general first aid materials and equipment (scissors a good add, for example). This, much larger kit clipped to (or Molle—attached to) a medium-sized backpack with full EDC loadout. I usually keep one in each of our vehicles along with a separate roadside emergency kit.

Mini trauma kit: Expanded FAK including splints for skeletal injuries, sprains, etc., more med supplies (mainly for pain), pre-made (temporary!)sutures of various kinds for open wounds, and much more. Not a full EMT loadout, but not all that far off. One in each vehicle.

Key: what can I get to most quickly and easily in an unexpected situation. If a gunshot or stab wound is involved, I’d want one of the car kits immediately. If just a quickly dealt with arterial wound on an extremity, what’s in my pocket with almost certainly stop the bleeding quickly in most cases.

Other injuries? Need the full FAK or mini trauma kit.

Now, suppose you injure yourself while alone. Have you practiced bleed stop (or other proceduresone-handed? With your non-dominant hand? You MUST practice! And practice at though you are on your own and injured.

Note: what you carry in your FAKs should be influenced by your circumstances. Do you have meds you might need in an emergency? Pack those (and replace them pretty regularly). What kinds of environments will you be in and how do environmental factors affect what you should carry (applies to all EDC contents). What are your daily expected activities? What are some abnormal circumstances you can reasonably imagine?

Think about what you might need, the space you expect to use, and there sources you can afford. Max those as much as you can.

And practice, practice, practice.

 

Ambivalence

Sitting here and contemplating the pros and cons of digging in and doing the work that MAY fix a bunch of keyboard errors on a laptop or just parting the thing out to upgrade a new one with a few improvements*. . . On the one hand, replacing the keyboard MAY work (and be a less expensive option, discounting my work), but. . . involves—on this compy—almost complete disassembly (including mobo removal, which is a royal PITA.

So, $$ vs time and irritation. . . and no assurance of effecting a fix. Meanwhile, when kybd errors irritate me enough, external BT kybd to the rescue.


*Would need new one to use compatible RAM and have open slots; be able to accept an extra storage drive, for starters.

Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum

9mm NATO is definitely not the most potent self-defense round, but, in contemporary loads, most would deem it a more than adequate SD round. Its chief benefit, IMO, lies elsewhere, though. Until NATO adopted its standardized version, it was known only, AFAIK, as the 9mm Parabellum, invoking the wise attitude, “Si vis pacem para bellum.” Hence, I will always and ever think of the round as the 9mm Parabellum, a round made for the ethos that says, “Enforce peace,” because, in this world, one cannot rely on civil government to (even attempt to) perform its primary function of sowing fear in the hearts of evildoers.