Post by Ex_Nuke_Troop on Apr 13, 2014 19:40:58 GMT
Fukushima Diary : [Column] The most important thing in the time of hazard
Posted by Mochizuki on April 13th, 2014
Since 311, I’ve been hearing a lot of people say ” you should put this and that to an emergency bag or everyday bag at least. ” etc..
Yes, passport, wallet, phone charger,, these would help you accordingly in emergency.
However from my personal experience, what you really need to protect is “your life”. That’s it. I think people think too complicated but not deep enough.
Since I was a child, I’ve been told that I need to hide under a table on earthquake, get out of the house as soon as possible etc..
However in reality, it was dangerous to low down during the quake. You would have your eyes stabbed by the bouncing pens, knives and scissors if you hide under the table. If you rush out of the house too soon, you would be run over by panicking cars because the traffic lights go dead.
In emergency, thinking about passport or wallet or battery charger may endanger your life. All we should (could) do is just to focus on your life.
Only if you stay alive, it’s not impossible to get a new passport reissued, contact your credit card company or borrow the phone charger. The only unreplacable one is your life.
I’m proving that by my own life path. I was with only a secondhand MacBook type AK-47 ($200) and $700 cash when I boarded Aeroflot Russia departing from Narita international airport to Moscow. But I’m still alive and deploying.
I’m spreading the “bad rumor” of Tepco to all over the world only with my AK-47. Several Japanese people are already contacting my Dutch lawyers for visa information and I’m helping a Japanese company establish a subsidiary in Europe (probably I’ll make a new company and sell it to the Japanese company but this is only a technical minor detail.). Feels like I became a st. Vampire to suck the blood of Japan.
The most important thing is, your fanatic passion for your life.
I learnt a lot from my father’s company. One of them was “change or die”. ( I think it’s very applicable to the world energy policy too. ) You must lose various things sometimes. The more you lose, the further you can go. However it’s only if you don’t lose your passion.
I’m a fanatic believer of the thing called life. I don’t want to lose it, I don’t want anyone to lose it, and I won’t forgive anyone who is threatening everyone’s life. This is the reason I’m moving on.
And you are reading this because we are alive today.
Iori Mochizuki
fukushima-diary.com/2014/04/column-the-most-important-thing-in-the-time-of-hazard/
Posted by Mochizuki on April 13th, 2014
Since 311, I’ve been hearing a lot of people say ” you should put this and that to an emergency bag or everyday bag at least. ” etc..
Yes, passport, wallet, phone charger,, these would help you accordingly in emergency.
However from my personal experience, what you really need to protect is “your life”. That’s it. I think people think too complicated but not deep enough.
Since I was a child, I’ve been told that I need to hide under a table on earthquake, get out of the house as soon as possible etc..
However in reality, it was dangerous to low down during the quake. You would have your eyes stabbed by the bouncing pens, knives and scissors if you hide under the table. If you rush out of the house too soon, you would be run over by panicking cars because the traffic lights go dead.
In emergency, thinking about passport or wallet or battery charger may endanger your life. All we should (could) do is just to focus on your life.
Only if you stay alive, it’s not impossible to get a new passport reissued, contact your credit card company or borrow the phone charger. The only unreplacable one is your life.
I’m proving that by my own life path. I was with only a secondhand MacBook type AK-47 ($200) and $700 cash when I boarded Aeroflot Russia departing from Narita international airport to Moscow. But I’m still alive and deploying.
I’m spreading the “bad rumor” of Tepco to all over the world only with my AK-47. Several Japanese people are already contacting my Dutch lawyers for visa information and I’m helping a Japanese company establish a subsidiary in Europe (probably I’ll make a new company and sell it to the Japanese company but this is only a technical minor detail.). Feels like I became a st. Vampire to suck the blood of Japan.
The most important thing is, your fanatic passion for your life.
I learnt a lot from my father’s company. One of them was “change or die”. ( I think it’s very applicable to the world energy policy too. ) You must lose various things sometimes. The more you lose, the further you can go. However it’s only if you don’t lose your passion.
I’m a fanatic believer of the thing called life. I don’t want to lose it, I don’t want anyone to lose it, and I won’t forgive anyone who is threatening everyone’s life. This is the reason I’m moving on.
And you are reading this because we are alive today.
Iori Mochizuki
fukushima-diary.com/2014/04/column-the-most-important-thing-in-the-time-of-hazard/