The Night I Realized My Prepping Saved My Life

The Night I Realized My Prepping Saved My Life

0 Posted By Kaptain Kush

Two weeks ago, I thought all this prepping and outdoor survival training was just me being “extra.”

My friends joked about me stockpiling water filters, fire starters, and solar chargers. Even my mom once asked, “Are you planning for a zombie apocalypse?”

I used to laugh it off. Until that night.

It started like a normal weekend. I decided to test myself by going camping alone in a small forest area just outside Ibadan.

The plan was simple: no tent, no phone service, just my bug-out bag, a tarp, and a knife. I wanted to see if I could actually survive three nights outdoors with minimal gear.

The first day went smoothly. I set up camp near a stream, boiled water with my little metal pot, and roasted some plantains I carried in. I even carved a walking stick and felt like one of those bushcraft YouTubers.

Night came, and the forest turned into another world. Every sound was louder, every rustle felt like a threat. Still, I managed to build a small fire. I sat there, warming my hands, whispering to myself, “This is why you prep.”

But around midnight, things changed.

I heard footsteps. Not animals—these were heavy, deliberate, human footsteps.

I froze.

Then a voice whispered from the trees:

“Guy, you dey alone here?”

My heart nearly stopped. I couldn’t see him, just the flicker of firelight bouncing off the trees. My mind raced. Was it a hunter? A lost traveler? Or worse—bandits?

I kept quiet, clutching my stick like a spear.

The voice came again, closer this time:

“No fear. I just wan warm body small.”

I wanted to believe him, but every survival instinct screamed otherwise. My prepping brain went into autopilot. I quietly slid my knife from its sheath and positioned myself behind the fire, so the smoke would blur me from his view.

Then I saw him. A man in torn jeans, no shoes, face dirty like he’d been wandering for days. His eyes darted wildly, and his hands shook. Something felt off.

“Who are you?” I asked, trying to keep my voice steady.

He smiled, but it wasn’t a friendly smile.

“Na just night wey bad for me. You go share food?”

I glanced at my pack. That bag had everything—water filter, snacks, even my emergency radio. If he took it, I was done for.

So I lied. “I don’t have food. Just water.”

He stepped closer. Too close. His shadow stretched across my fire.

That’s when I made my move. I grabbed the embers with my stick and flung them in his direction. Sparks flew, and he shouted, stumbling back. In that split second, I snatched my bag, kicked dirt on the fire, and bolted into the trees.

Running through the forest at night is like sprinting through a nightmare. Branches slapped my face, roots tried to trip me, and the dark swallowed me whole. My chest burned, but adrenaline pushed me forward.

Finally, I reached the stream. My lungs screamed for air. I crouched low, splashing my face with cold water, trying not to sob out loud.

That’s when I heard it—

footsteps again.

Only this time, they weren’t behind me. They were circling.

I gripped my knife tighter, whispering, “Not today. I trained for this.”

Then, out of nowhere, a flashlight beam cut through the darkness.

“Hello? Who’s there?”

It was a forest ranger patrol.

Turns out, the guy who approached me wasn’t a random hiker. He was a fugitive who had escaped from a nearby correctional farm. The rangers had been tracking him for hours. If I hadn’t prepped—if I hadn’t had my knife, my fire, my instincts—I might not be here typing this right now.

Now, anytime someone jokes about my survival prepping, I just smile and say,

“Better to have it and not need it, than need it and not have it.”

Because that night, prepping wasn’t just a hobby.

It saved my life.