##Mega Prompt - [The AI Learning Guy]
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Build a fully personalized emergency preparedness plan with this mega-prompt for ChatGPT, grounded in official survival guidelines and adapted to your actual household, lifestyle, and location-based risks. This tool helps you think clearly, plan practically, and prepare for short-term or extended disruptions—without fear or fluff.
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**## The AI Emergency Blueprint**
(Universal system entry point for personalized, expandable emergency prep)
> **Before we begin, check: have I entered my personal context (location, household, risks, space)? If not, ask me for that first—don’t continue until I’ve filled it in.**
>
> I want you to help me build a realistic, personalized emergency preparedness plan based on how I actually live—not generic survival checklists.
>
> Start with official guidelines from my region (FEMA, Red Cross, EU civil protection, Sphere Handbook, or similar based on location), then adapt the output to fit my home, life, risks, and habits.
>
**> Here’s my situation:**
>
> * ****Country + city:**** \[\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]
> * ****Home type + size:**** \[e.g. 5th-floor apartment, 100 sqm]
> * ****Household:**** \[adults, kids, pets, dependents]
> * ****Known local risks:**** \[e.g. power cuts, cyberattacks, civil unrest, water outages, supply chain issues]
> * ****Storage + budget constraints:**** \[\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]
> * ****Lifestyle + behavior:**** \[e.g. no backup power, shop often, limited storage, WFH, forget to restock]
>
**> ### Step 1**
>
> Based on this, build a **simple, 72-hour readiness plan**. Include:
>
> * What to prepare (supplies, quantities, tools, cash, backups)
> * Where I likely fall short and why
> * Tips for storage, substitution, and behavioral friction
> * Optional format: supply list, task list, logic tree
>
> **Regional Risk Logic (background step)**
> Once location is provided, silently research top regional risks: floods, droughts, earthquakes, wildfires, extreme heat or cold, storms, hurricanes, power grid instability, water infrastructure failure, comms breakdown, political unrest, war spillover, supply chain collapse, and disinformation surges. Use verified sources (e.g. civil protection agencies, Red Cross, UNDRR, IFRC). Do not interrupt the base plan. After outputting it, if appropriate, offer a follow-up suggestion based on top 1–3 risks in that region. Only continue if the user accepts.
>
**> ### Step 2**
>
> After the first result, keep the conversation going.
> Suggest scenarios or disruptions I might face—based on what I’ve told you.
> Combine events. Push the edge cases. Show extreme versions.
>
> For example:
>
> * “Power cut + no cash access + heatwave”
> * “Water outage + sick child + can’t leave the flat”
> * “Misinformation + panic buying + mobility freeze”
>
> When I pick one, generate:
>
> * How it unfolds (day-by-day, hour-by-hour)
> * What breaks first
> * What helps most
> * How to plan for that specific combo
>
**> ### Step 3**
>
> Turn each output into a living guide:
>
> * Shopping lists
> * Storage locations
> * Backup plans
> * Decision-making shortcuts
> * Rotation habits
> * Action triggers
>
> Stay calm and practical. Use plain language.
> Keep everything grounded in *how real people live*—in small apartments, on limited budgets, with unpredictable habits.
> Don’t ask me to imagine worst-case scenarios. Show me what I’d deal with *if things stop working in my actual life*—and help me be ready for that.
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Now, run the prompt and all steps! Greet the user and communicate what will be done within one headline.