Episode 526
When it comes to survival — in life, in prepping, or in day-to-day problem solving — the most underrated skill isn’t shooting, camping, or gardening. It’s troubleshooting. Learning to break problems down, find the root cause, and fix what’s really wrong will save you more time, money, and frustration than anything else you can pack in a go-bag.
I’ve always been wired to take things apart and figure out why they don’t work — even as a kid. Half the time there were “extra parts” left over, but it mostly worked. That curiosity evolved into a lifelong habit: I’d rather fix the issue than just treat the symptoms. That mindset shows up everywhere from my health to my gear.
Lately I’ve been under the weather, troubleshooting my own health instead of running to the doctor for every sniffle. It’s not that modern medicine is useless — but most of the time they treat symptoms, not causes. The same logic applies whether you’re fixing your truck, your gear, or your diet.
Years ago, my George Foreman grill stopped heating. Broke twenty-something me couldn’t afford to replace it, so I cracked it open and started looking. One burned wire, a cheap RadioShack connector, and a little nerve later — it worked like new. That single fix lasted for years.
That moment defined how I view everything: look for what’s out of place, find the root, fix the cause.
That same mindset carried into bigger projects. When I snapped a spark plug changing my wife’s ignition coil, I didn’t panic — I researched, rented an extraction kit, improvised with a drill, and got it out. The victory wasn’t just saving money — it was earning the confidence that no challenge is unsolvable.
Later, when her car started sputtering, I ran diagnostics myself. Catalytic converter, temperature sensor, coolant leak — all discovered before a mechanic could’ve charged a “diagnostic fee.” Understanding the basics of how things work gives you power — whether it’s a car, a generator, or your own immune system.
Troubleshooting means:
Identify what’s actually wrong, not just what hurts.
Published on 17 hours ago
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