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a doomsday prepper in black gas mask and green protective raincoat outdoors in spring
(Photo: Svetlana Repnitskaya/Getty Images)

Help! My Boyfriend Is a Doomsday Prepper.

In our chaotic world, maybe preparing for the worst isn鈥檛 such a bad idea. But when does it go too far?

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(Photo: Svetlana Repnitskaya/Getty Images)

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When I first started dating my boyfriend, he mentioned that he had a group of friends who went 鈥渃amping鈥 every month to practice skills for the future. I asked for more details and he said that they practice orienteering, tracking, and survival skills like that. He鈥檚 a really sweet, caring guy and nothing seemed like a red flag. Actually, my ex was less social and very clingy, so I remember thinking it was a green flag that he spent time with friends.听

We鈥檝e been together for a year now. In that time, this group has become a bigger part of his life. They meet up almost every week. They also started meeting at a gun club. When I asked why, he talked about social unrest and wanting to make sure that he can protect us. He鈥檚 also been obsessively watching the news about in New Jersey.听

I was looking for something in the basement last week and came across a duffel bag filled with packaged food and ammo boxes. It was upsetting because I鈥檝e asked him before if he鈥檚 a prepper. He told me he isn鈥檛, but that he doesn鈥檛 want to be a frog in boiling water who doesn鈥檛 notice when things start to heat up. But I don鈥檛 want to be a frog in boiling water either. I really love him, but I鈥檓 starting to think there might be more under the surface that he鈥檚 hiding from me. How do I know when it鈥檚 getting to be too much?

Question: Does your boyfriend seem to enjoy all this? Is it fun for him? If so, then I want to hold space for the best possibility here, which is that prepping (and yes, this is prepping, regardless of whether he admits it) is his hobby.

Consider historical reenactment: a broad interest that gathers a lot of different skills and pastimes under one roof. Reenactors don鈥檛 just dress up like people in their chosen era; they also learn crafts, cooking, languages, and so on. Hobby preppers do the same, but in reverse. Instead of focusing on the past, they imagine a future when their skills in self-reliance might be put to good use.

That future probably won鈥檛 come to pass, but there are plenty of realistic scenarios where their skills could come in handy. It鈥檚 not that everyone who buys a zombie apocalypse bug-out kit is actually scared of zombies. It鈥檚 just that prepping for a zombie apocalypse is more fun than packing the exact same supplies so they鈥檙e ready in case of an unusually long power outage.听

Some people follow end-of-the-world scenarios like other people follow sports. Sometimes a bag of food and bullets is just, uh, a bag of food and bullets.

If that鈥檚 your boyfriend鈥檚 situation鈥攊f he enjoys thinking about possibilities, and trying new things, and he has a good friend group to try them with鈥攖hen there鈥檚 no need to worry. That said, you mentioned a few things that do concern me, and I鈥檇 recommend getting to the bottom of them.

First, your boyfriend said he鈥檚 going to the gun club because he wants to be able to protect your household against social unrest.

To me, that says he鈥檚 imagining a near future in which he might have to shoot people, or at the very least, scare them away with guns. Not zombies; people. He鈥檚 couching the violence of that image under a fantasy of protection, but the point remains the same.

Does that mean that everyone who learns to shoot for self-defense is fantasizing about shooting people? Of course not. And presumably, he鈥檚 practicing at a range that emphasizes gun safety and responsibility.听 But given the anticipatory subtext of prepping in general, and the other details you shared鈥攊ncluding his use of the phrase 鈥渉eat up鈥濃擨 think this development is concerning.

Secondly, and most important, you鈥檙e worried that there鈥檚 more under the surface.

You know your boyfriend well. You鈥檝e watched his interests change and grow, and you鈥檝e seen how he鈥檚 responding to the news. You saw the look on his face when you found his bag of food and bullets. You don鈥檛 seem like a paranoid or sensational person. If the hairs on the back of your neck are going up, that鈥檚 the most important clue that something is wrong.

aIn fact, even if everything else seemed perfect, that would still tell me that something鈥檚 wrong.

I鈥檓 wondering why your boyfriend denied that he was a prepper, when the term isn鈥檛 derogatory, and it seems so clearly accurate from the outside. Is there another term he uses for his activities, or his identity? If he鈥檚 willing to tell you, it might help clarify his agenda, his priorities, and where his head is at. If he won鈥檛 tell you鈥搃f he鈥檚 convinced that his activities are so practical and universal that they have no name鈥搕hen that鈥檚 illuminating, too.

You haven鈥檛 been together very long, in the grand scheme of things. Do you really want to move into the future with someone whose vision of that future is fundamentally different from yours? If this isn鈥檛 the relationship you want, you don鈥檛 need a specific conflict or fight or reason to break up. Your feelings鈥揳nd your discomfort鈥揳re more than enough.

If you stay together, keep your eyes open. Notice what鈥檚 going on. Remember that you鈥檝e had concerns before, so if something else raises an alarm, it鈥檚 part of a pattern. If you live together, try to have a plan, and some money saved up, in case you decide to leave. After all, it never hurts to be prepared.

Blair Braverman writes our听Tough Love column. Previously, she has given advice on dating a sore loser.

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