I’m going to provide you with the direct information first.
If you want to read all the other things I wrote, and are in a safe place to do so, by all means, go ahead, it’ll be at the bottom. But for the people in Gulf Coast, Central, and East coast Florida, for the love of God, at least watch the videos provided.
I’d so much rather come off as a nutjob and be completely WRONG, than be right and NOT put this out there.
Bullet points are below. Videos are here.
Our water levels are already beyond excessive from TS Debbie in August, it won’t take more than two inches of rain to flood the roads. The heavy rainfall begins today, the new TS coming in before the hurricane on Tuesday, give or take a day on either side.
If you choose to evacuate and wait until you’re officially told to, you won’t be able to if the roads are flooded.
These are high population areas - again, just like what we’re told about Asheville and surrounding areas in NC, a “once in a 100 year flooding event” - we are now being told this is a “once in a 100 year storm” - sound familiar?
If you do not choose to evacuate, prepare NOW, do not wait until the day before it makes landfall. I hope you choose to evacuate if you are here.
This is another video that my friend in west NC sent me. He’s watched this man for a while and said he’s always been on point.
Bullet points that I want to make as a plead to just take this shit seriously -
When driving donations the other day, it rained for about thirty minutes. All the roads flooded immediately. That is how high our water levels are. We cannot take more water.
The water starts SUNDAY, meaning when you read this. The hurricane itself comes Tuesday or Wednesday, but your problem is going to start BEFORE that. As soon as the roads flood, you cannot get out!!! So why would you wait until the hurricane is closer? Go while you actually can!
Don’t wait until the “officials” tell you to - they have to wait until the VERY last minute before issuing evacuations, likely for liability purposes.
By itself yall native Floridians might not think its a big deal — but nothing we’re seeing weather wise now is NORMAL, and you know why that is. If you were waiting for an “October Surprise” - i doubt this was on anyones bingo card, but perhaps this is it.
These are high population areas. Even if yall can weather the storm - what do you think is going to happen in the aftermath where tons of people - ones who already have either lost everything, or who have been working to give / assist those who have lost everything, are gonna do when they’re in a situation with no power, no water, no resources for a long time? It’s not pretty.
We’re already short on supplies in this areas from Helene and from a brief port strike.
For those aware of geoengineering and how a lot of spraying happens right before these events (we’d notice that all the time in tenneseee, they’d be spraying like crazy and we’d know a tornado was coming. sure enough, it would) what did the sky look like to you today? My area was grey sky so I couldn’t tell, but I also slept until 4 PM because I didn’t go to bed until 6 AM. People as far south as Cape Coral were seeing the spraying, and this hurricane is projected to affect as far south as cape coral on the gulf side.
Whether you evac or not - make sure the following is taken care of now:
CASH - if you’re in the state of Florida and shit like this is happening, you need cash, your debit card and the ATMs will not work when the power is out. You do not KNOW how long the power will be out.
GAS - if you have a car, you need to make sure your shit is on FULL. You don’t know when you’ll have access to gasoline again. Gas pumps don’t work when the power is out.
MORE GAS if you have a generator. Get more than you think you’ll need.
WATER - your body cannot survive more than 72 hours best case scenario without it. Get more than you think you’ll need, UNLESS you are evacuating, then get as much as you will need till you get to the place that you’re going that is NOT within range of this shit.
MEDICAL - make sure you have what you need if you have any prescriptions, if you have an IFAK make sure you have that within reach esp if you’re evacuating
FOOD - you’ll need more than you think, non perishables. Try to avoid shit that requires water to cook with, or requires you to cook.
DEFENSE - you need to have your guns and ammo. Not for the storm. Understand when people are desperate and scared they can do shit like take your life if they think you have something they need. The best defense is to NOT be where the problem is, but sometimes that is unavoidable.
If you don’t have the above mentioned, keep your head on a swivel and just have your situational awareness be at maximum, don’t learn this lesson the hard way, be vigilant, don’t be walking around with your face in your phone.
Godspeed.
If you’re gonna evacuate, go do that now. I’d suggest getting out of the state of Florida entirely for this one, but at least get as far north as Jacksonville.
For those not in the area, if you want to read the rest of the shit I wrote, you can do so below.
I will be on the road while you are reading this, so if you have questions or something, I will not see them or be able to answer them timely. If you know me personally and need to reach me, do so by phone please.
I love you all and Godspeed.
For those that aren’t evacuating/in this area, this was the rest of the article:
Weeks ago when I had a consultation with Astrologer Trifon Nikolov, he said a few things about this present time that made no sense - one being that things were suggestive of me facing a lot of moral conflicts or contradictions.
There’s another hurricane coming, but this time it’s headed to make landfall exactly where I live. It aint just passing close by like Helene did.
I decided to evacuate. And I feel guilty.
I have been in a multitude of SHTF scenarios. I’ll simply reflect on ones that involve either “natural” disasters or widespread violence and chaos that came out of nowhere on a large level.
Civil Unrest
The first one was in 2020. I lived in a certain area that had constant chaos and violence to the point where the national guard was deployed and we were put on a curfew, but that did not stop much.
Flash bangs, riots, fires and having to sneak around like a roach in the daylight just to safely acquire a few groceries for the next few days before the next batch of riots erupted (or worse) was something you got used to.
Coming home to the apartment complex and seeing large amounts of blood on the ground and going, “oh shit, better follow the trail to find out where the body is / if they’re still alive” didn’t raise the heart rate. You can become desensitized to anything.
For clarification, the man was someone I knew who lived there, and he barely survived, but he did survive.
I had a friend from home call me when this whole thing cracked off. He begged me to come back home, more like commanded me to, and told me all the things that were about to happen in my area.
I didn’t care and/or didn’t believe him, or rather, I suppose in my stubbornness in not wanting to leave my new home (LA), not wanting to go back to my old home (Oregon), and potential arrogance with the attitude of “I can handle whatever it is” - I refused.
I stayed in complete chaos for the next 8 months, and I won’t talk about what happened, but I wound up being faced with the following options after a situation critical: Get out right now, die, kill someone else, or go to prison for life.
Those were my options. I chose the first one and hit the road.
I was not happy about it at all. It was devastating to have my home and the life I had there ripped away overnight, and it was hard to come to terms with the fact that it was never coming back.
Lessons in adaptability, and that experience would greatly shift the directions I’d take later on, so I can’t say I regret it. I don’t, but I’d never EVER put myself in that situation again.
You move differently after you see people do things you’d never think they were capable of. You move differently when after being around that for so long you recognize the same rage and violent inclinations also exist within yourself.
Tornados
Ah yes, Tennessee tornados.
I’d never been around a tornado. On the west coast, we’ve got earthquakes and fires. I didn’t even know there were tornados in Tennessee, but my first night in Nashville (after having packed everything I owned into my Honda and moving there) we were on a tornado warning. I was like oh shit, we got tornados here? HAHA yeah, a lot of them.
I was prepared for “civil unrest”, no food on shelves, bugging out and grid down scenarios, ready to bounce at the slightest hint of another lockdown 2.0, as people lose their ever loving minds in those sardine cans. But I didn’t make any kind of preparedness plan for how to handle tornados.
Then the sky turned green. I was at my apartment where I lived alone, and these were old apartments, few units out moreso in the outskirts, I did not live in Nashville proper. Didn’t want to, too population dense, and I wanted to be closer to the farmers, as that’s who I got my food from. Learned not to rely on grocery stores years earlier.
I had some friends out there, but they all lived at least an hour’s drive away. I could have lived further out in the country with them and even had two invites to do so, but my work was in the city, so I had to live within reasonable driving distance from Nashville, and they were too far out.
What’s funny is after I left Nashville (for reasons not related to tornados) I wound up getting another job where I’m basically completely remote. You learn what you learn when you learn it I suppose.
So the sky turned green, and there were no tornado shelters. You could ask the neighbors what to do, but they’d just say there was nothing you could do except get in the bathtub and pray it didn’t land on top of you.
Alright.
It was then that it hit me.
I neglected the most important part of life for a long time, and surely the most important part of preparedness. Community building and having a realistic plan for when SHTF with said individuals, BEFORE SHTF. You can’t make a plan during SHTF, it’s too late.
Something dark hit me as I watched that hulk green sky, and felt / saw the tornado approaching. I actually thought I was going to die that night.
I realized, wow, if I die here, it’ll probably take my family a long time to even notice I’m missing, let alone dead. I wonder if they’ll even find my body. Will they ever?
If you’ve ever had to ask yourself that question and your answer was, yeah, they probably won’t even notice somethings up for at least a month, and by then you’ll have long since been a Jane Doe - that’s a feeling the english language doesn’t have words for.
So, after feeling like I’d swallowed whole the legion of doom, I said fuck it, watched the storm approached and figured I’d meditate until it took me out.
When it hit the ground, it missed my apartment complex. I lived to see another day, but I never forgot what that felt like to have to come to terms with “I’m probably gonna die right now, and I also don’t think anyone will even notice for a very long time, and I doubt they’ll ever find me.”
That’ll change you too, and it’ll lead you to making different life choices.
Hurricanes and Floods
I’d never dealt with those either until now. Hey. I live on the Gulf Coast of Florida now.
TS Debbie
I remember tropical storm Debbie. I fucking love downpours of rain. However I didn’t realize people died by driving through 6 inches of water for a multitude of reasons - I’m from Oregon where it always rains, but it doesn’t flood the way it does here or in TN, it absorbs into the soil. We don’t have landslides and we don’t have flooding, but the rain isn’t as heavy, it’s just constant. That area is designed to absorb it. Southern rains though, and tropical rains - those are different.
I love them but I learned to respect them after Debbie. I was blown away that a tropical storm did as much damage as it did, let us also acknowledge whatever dumb fucks that run the city allowed the dams to release insane amounts of water (and 50 gallons of raw sewage) into the city, effectively flooding areas that HAD NEVER FLOODED BEFORE.
Sound familiar?
Areas that had NEVER flooded before. Areas that were owned in many cases by families who owned the land and had farms (reference to the Parrish area here) and who also reported receiving cold calls from people asking to buy their land for the past three years. They said no, so, these areas that never flooded suddenly were… destroyed entirely and submerged in contaminated raw sewage flood water.
I live in a flood zone. I’m not on the keys, but I’m close. Yet my area didn’t flood. The inland areas did. The areas where people had no flood insurance, because it’s not a flood zone.
The keys didn’t flood either. That never made sense to me. Water doesn’t conveniently gather in areas where outside interests have been wanting to buy the land.
But I digress.
We still haven’t bounced back from TS Debbie and that was in August. Our water tables are high as shit and our water quality? Dude, the waters in the gulf look like pickle juice, I have ZERO idea why anyone swims there, that is literally all sewage from TS Debbie and the fact that the city dumped toxic waste into the waterways.
Hurricane Helene
Then we get Helene.
That didn’t affect inland really, at least not in the Gulf, but the keys? Holy shit.
Siesta key, LBK, Anna Maria Island, St Pete Beach? Underwater.
Regarding the hurricane relief I’ve assisted a local group by way of deliveries, our area is entirely focused on Siesta Key, Long Boat Key and Anna Maria Island. The people a little north of us are helping those in Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties, then further north we’ve got Pasco, and further south we’ve got Charlotte county.
Up until two days ago I was still doing deliveries and we still needed so much more, primarily baby formula and baby bottles, which although we have received so many donations - we never received any of that, and thats one of many reasons why the following is concerning -
Hurricane Milton (and preceding tropical storm)
Now, hurricane Milton (yes, they’ve already named it) is headed directly toward the Tampa Bay region (Tampa Bay, St Pete, Parrish, Bradenton, Sarasota, Venice, North Port, Port Charlotte are all forecasted to get hit the worst with direct landfall as it moves laterally across the state, crossing the east coast and then moving into the Atlantic).
The national hurricane center has never in its history “called” a hurricane before it had even formed into one.
Until Helene.
That was a huge red flag for me.
Days before Helene was even a tropical storm, it was declared by the NHC as a category 3 hurricane. First time in the NHC’s history of doing that. WEIRD.
Helene made landfall as Category 4 and was twice the size of Hurricane Katrina.
That was LAST WEEK.
A few days ago, before I”d heard shit about Milton, I knew there was another tropical storm headed this way. As recently as yesterday I saw the rainfall expectations for my region alone starting Sunday and going through the next week - up to two feet of rain.
Debbie brought one foot of rain and it fucked shit up. Now we’re talking two feet of rain with already elevated water tables, a significantly more vulnerable area due to a CAT4 hurricane one week ago, an exhausted population, some without homes or resources, and many who gave everything they could of their own resources to donate to those who were without from the last hurricane?
Not to mention a (short lived) but still distruptive Port Strike in four major ports in Florida and all along the Southeast, precisely where Helene hit?
Even though their strike was only two days, that is still wildly disruptive for a supply chain when its the whole southeast.
And the supplies have already been depleted because the demand is so far above average for those with means needing to buy not only their own, but resources for those who just lost everything, both locally and in the further north affected areas as well, from north florida all the way up to north carolina.
I live in Sarasota, but I’m writing this to you from a hotel room in Jacksonville, nearly 5 hours north. Here’s why:
When driving donations the other day, it rained for about thirty minutes. All the roads flooded immediately. That is how high our water levels are. We cannot take more water.
Beginning now, the rains come. This is the tropical storm system coming through that’s supposed to dump two feet of rain in the exact same area for the next few days. That itself is already a massive problem - from inaccessible roadways to flooding to power outages and accidents and all kinds of mayhem. By itself it aint that big of a deal, but on top of a tropical storm (debbie) we still haven’t bounced back from, and on top of a hurricane we just had last week - dude, from supplies to the resilience of the land to the resources / lack thereof of the people, that’s why it’s a problem.
Right after the tropical storm starts and creates flooding conditions, meaning you may or may not have access to roads, the category 3 (which it easily could be amped up to be higher) approaches and makes landfall in that exact same area.
What part about that sounds like “just another hurricane” or “just a tropical storm”?
The issue at hand isn’t the fucking weather, it’s the compounding of events in a very short period of time combined with SEVERAL abnormalities and systemic efforts in what honestly seems to me of intentionally making shit worse. But I digress.
I spoke to some people. I heard my own intuition. I remembered a lot of things. I’m not going to give detail on any of that.
I made the decision to leave the area.
At first I was going to stay.
I’m already out of my mind from my friend taking her life last week, I’m already out of my mind from the damage from hurricane helene, how its affected our community and my loved ones across the states, the shit I’ve seen from “my fellow americans” who showed a new level of sociopathy by cheering it on because their political opponents voters may or may not live in those states, dude, what the hell.
So what I’m saying is, I’m the person who runs into fires, not away.
And here I am at the midway point of my northbound journey to stay with loved ones in NC (no not in the DZ, further east in NC) because I have a really, really fucking bad feeling about this.
And do I have the necessary resilience to defend against what is coming?
With an appropriate community response/plan in place, I probably would have stayed.
But that is not the case.
And I am not putting myself in the position of being shot at like a fish in a barrel again like I did in 2020.
I am not putting myself in a position where I am going to meet some secrecy mystery demise like I did in 2022.
And I am not going to put myself in a position where I am navigating both the suicide of a friend, the resurgence of the grief of nearly 40 others, a hurricane and the tremendous fear and isolation and lack of support I felt around that like I did last week.
So, I left to stay with people who may not be family by blood, but they are absolutely family.
And I feel guilty, because I’m leaving, and there are still people I care about back there who are not leaving.
If you are in the Gulf Coast and you are wondering if you should leave, my answer is YES. The worst that can happen is you get out of town for a few days if you’re wrong. If everyone else is wrong.
If we’re right though, what the fuck? Do you want to die?
At first I felt I had to stay because how could I help people if I was gone.
Then someone told me, if you’re SOL and lose everything in that hurricane, how can you help people out there? You might as well leave now and then go back for the ones who didn’t leave so you actually can help.
Really though, I have no idea. I’m not saying I evacuated because i want to help people who did not evacuate, that had nothing to do with it.
I evacuated because I had a really fucking bad feeling, and since there is no established MAG there, I removed myself from the equation because I didn’t want to die the same way I thought I was gonna die that night in Tennessee.
I left because I don’t want to die like that.
And yet, for some reason, I still feel somewhat guilty, for not taking the hit in solidarity, even though I know damn well if I found myself in a life threatening situation, all those people I’d feel guilty about leaving wouldn’t be there to fix it or help it, how could they be? they’d be in their own house dealing with the same shit. So if no one is coming to save me, then I AM coming to save me. and thats the decision I made, and it’s fucking hard.
If you are in Floridas Gulf Coast, if you are in Central Florida, if you are in the Orlando area or the East Coast near Orlando - and give or take probably 40 miles on either side of that line since it’s projected to affect as far south as coral gables and ft myers, for the love of God. Get out.
If you don’t believe me, maybe you can watch these videos and reconsider.
Thank you 🙏🏼 I just sent this to my friend and my parents that are in the area. They live in mainland St Pete. I am worried about my parents.
Because of you and a few others, the direction of my platform has changed! I've tried to stay away from the political side due to the attacks I received on FB and X before my accounts were deleted and deemed a terrorist. I'm glad you are safe. We are still without power here in SC. Keep getting the word out and I will continue to repost your articles. We are presently on our way to the Hendersonville area to see how we can help. Peace, dear lady! 🙏