Hello brothers and sisters. I have come here to transmit instructions that have been given to me and in obedience to our father I will transmit them exactly as they have been shown to me without inventing adding or changing anything.
In recent months and especially in recent days we’ve seen a lot of things on the internet.
Tons of videos tons of people talking about dreams, visions, warnings about difficult times ahead.
And me as a believer, I don’t believe it’s a coincidence. I saw all of this and I prayed.
I asked our father to guide me concretely to give me practical instructions, advice for when that day comes.
And he gave it to me. Yes. Jesus Christ, our Lord, gave me these instructions this morning after days of searching and prayer.
I woke up at 3:00 a.m. My heart pounding and with unprecedented clarity of mind.
It was as if each word was being written in my mind. And let me tell you something important.
He didn’t give me just one thing. He didn’t give me five. He gave me 11.
11 things to do when the time came. I’m not here to scare you. I’m here to warn you and to prepare you.
So listen carefully because when the time comes, those who are prepared will be able to protect themselves and their families.

Jesus showed me that on the day everything happens, many will panic without even understanding what is happening.
He told me, “My son, before you run, observe. Before you shout, discern.” And these words have remained engraved in my heart as my first teaching.
In the event of a power outage, don’t automatically assume it’s the end. Power cuts are frequent.
They could be a simple fault, a problem on the grid, or a storm. But there’s a difference between a typical power outage and a much more serious problem.
And you need to be able to tell the difference in the first few minutes because your reaction will determine what happens next.
Go outside and look around. Are your neighbors also in the dark? Are the street lights out?
Try starting your car. If it doesn’t start, ask your neighbor to try theirs. If no cars start, if cell phones are completely out of service, not just without a signal, but totally inoperative, then you’re facing a different problem.
A problem that has affected the entire region simultaneously. The Lord has shown me that the calm of the first 60 seconds allows us to distinguish the wise from the foolish.
While some will shout and run aimlessly, those who have heard this word will take a deep breath, assess the situation, and act with determination.
This is not the time for despair, but the time for discernment. In 2017, my neighborhood was without power for 4 days after a violent storm.
Half the residents reacted as if they were camping out. The other half were already panicking by the second day and fighting in supermarket lines.
The difference, those who understood the situation from the start organized themselves. Those who didn’t suffered needlessly.
So my brother, here is the first piece of advice Jesus put in my heart.
Don’t panic. Act. Observe for 60 seconds. Check what happens. And then commit to following the plan.
Because from now on, every minute counts. That morning, Jesus woke me up and the second thing he showed me was water.
He said, “My child, when the system stops, the water stops, too. And whoever doesn’t act quickly will be thirsty.”
These words resonated with urgency and gravity. I understood that it wasn’t a suggestion, but a command.
Let me explain something that few people know. The water that flows from your tap depends on electric pumps.
The city’s water supply system runs on electricity. In the event of a power outage, these pumps stop.
What continues to flow from the tap for a few minutes is simply the residual pressure in the pipes.
After that, nothing and the water doesn’t come back on anytime soon. You have 30 minutes to a maximum of 1 hour.
During this time, fill everything you can. Buckets, pots, bottles, jugs, bathtub. A full bathtub can hold nearly 200 L of water.
This is a precious resource in a crisis. Don’t waste this minute. The Lord also showed me the water heater, that boiler whose existence many people forget.
It holds between 100 and 200 L of drinking water. But you must shut off the water supply valve before the system pressure drops.
Otherwise, the water will disappear. Do it within the first few minutes. A family of four needs at least 4 L of drinking water per day.
If you manage to collect 200 L in the first hour, you’ll have enough to last almost 2 weeks.
Meanwhile, others will be fighting over bottles of water in a closed supermarket because the automatic doors are out of order and the checkouts aren’t working.
I remember the Texas water crisis in 2021 when the system became overwhelmed. People only had minutes to act.
Those who filled their tanks got through it without major problems. Those who waited didn’t get any water.
Jesus showed me this clearly. Water first always. Because you can purify dirty water later, but you can’t create water out of thin air.
The third instruction the Lord placed in my heart concerned food. He showed me a refrigerator, and I clearly saw that it had turned into a clock.
With each passing minute, the food inside spoiled. And he said to me, “My son, teach my people not to waste what they have.
In the event of a power outage, your refrigerator will keep food cold for about 4 hours, provided you don’t open it.
Your freezer, on the other hand, will keep food cold for a little longer, between 24 and 48 hours, depending on how full it is.
However, each time you open the door, you lose about 10 minutes of cold air.
So the first rule is to avoid opening them. Think of your refrigerator and freezer as airtight safes.
The second thing to do is sort quickly. What spoils first? Ground beef, chicken, fish, deli meats, dairy products, eggs.
All of this needs to be eaten or cooked within the next few hours. There’s no point in storing these foods while waiting for the power to come back on.
If the power isn’t restored within 4 hours, everything will be lost. So cook now, eat now, share with your family.
Jesus showed me a trick used by the ancients. If meat thaws and you have no way to cook it, cover it completely with salt.
Coarse salt, lots of salt. It’s not perfect, but it preserves it for days instead of just a few hours.
Your great grandparents did this before the invention of the refrigerator. It’s an almost forgotten skill, but it can save your food in winter.
If the outside temperature is below freezing, take food out of the freezer. In January 2019, during a 3-day power outage, that’s exactly what I did.
I put the meat in a box outside near the window. It kept longer that way than in the freezer, even with the power off.
Nature acted as a refrigerator. Brother, the Lord has shown me that wastefulness in times of crisis is a sin.
He provides for our needs, but he expects us to manage them wisely. Time began to run out as soon as the lights went out.
Respect this time. Act quickly and don’t waste what God has already placed in your home.
The fourth instruction was accompanied by a very clear image. Jesus showed me people queuing, holding invalid cards, staring at blank screens, unable to buy a liter of water.
And he said to me, “The money they believed in never really existed. It was just a number on a machine.
Imagine this. If there’s a power outage, what happens to your digital money? Pick stops working.
Bank cards become unusable. ATMs are out of service. Banking apps become inaccessible. Your entire balance displayed on the screen simply vanishes.
Not because it’s disappeared, but because you can no longer access it. And if you can’t access it, it’s as if it never existed.
In the first days or weeks of a crisis like this, the only currency that will work is cash.
Paper money. Money you can hold in your hand and give to someone without needing the internet, electricity, or any other system.
It’s real money. The Lord advised me to always keep a little money at home.
It doesn’t have to be a large sum, but save what you can. That forgotten bill in your bedside table drawer, the change you keep in the car, the envelope you keep for emergencies, all of it is now worth its weight in gold.
And favor smaller denominations, 2 5 10 20 rayes. No one will have change for a 100 rii note and many will even refuse it because they won’t be able to verify its authenticity.
I saw what happened in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. The digital financial system took months to recover.
Those with cash could still make purchases. Those who relied solely on credit cards struggled even with positive bank balances.
Jesus showed me that this lesson must be learned beforehand, not afterward. And one last important thing, don’t flaunt your money.
Keep it safe. Hide it. Use it wisely and discreetly. For a while, your money will be worth more than many things until everyone realizes it.
Anticipate, be prepared, and thank God for every bill you manage to save. Jesus showed me streets filled with parked cars.
New beautiful modern cars all stopped. And in the middle of them, an old van, one of those from the 70s, drove by peacefully.
And the Lord said to me, “Not everything that seems old is necessarily useless, and not everything that seems new will necessarily be useful to you.”
Let me explain what’s happening. Modern cars are essentially computers on wheels. They’re equipped with sensors, chips, and electronic modules that control everything.
Ignition, fuel, brakes, steering. An electromagnetic pulse destroys these components. Studies conducted by the US Department of Transportation have shown that more than 90% of modern vehicles would suffer critical failure in the event of such an incident.
If your car was running when the incident occurred, it’s likely out of commission. If it was off, some systems may have survived, but before attempting to start it, disconnect the battery.
This will prevent any residual voltage surges from further damaging the remaining components and will protect what can still be salvaged.
The Lord made me realize the importance of knowing about classic cars. Vehicles manufactured before the 1980s, especially those with a mechanical focus, have a much better chance of surviving.
Old diesel pickups, cars with points ignition, old farm tractors. These are simple machines made of metal and mechanics without any digital technology that could get clogged up.
I know someone who owns a 1978 Ford F1000. In the neighborhood, everyone made fun of his old car, calling it junk.
Until the day a major power outage hit the area, and his car was the only one that worked.
For 3 days, he delivered water and supplies to three different neighborhoods. What seemed like a weakness turned into a strength.
So, my brother, assess your situation. If you depend entirely on a modern car, know that you might end up walking.
And if you end up walking, your options change completely. You’ll have to think locally.
You’ll have to reorganize. Jesus showed me that transportation isn’t guaranteed. And those who understand this early on suffer less later.
The sixth instruction was given to me in an interesting way. Jesus showed me an old metal box, like a paint can or a trash can, and said, “This would protect what matters.”
I didn’t understand at the time, but later he explained to me what a Faraday cage was.
Not everything was destroyed. Some devices switched off, unplugged, or stored in strategic locations managed to survive.
A battery powered radio, a flashlight, an old cell phone, spare batteries. These items can make all the difference between being informed and completely unaware of what’s happening in the world.
A Faraday cage is simply a metal container that blocks electromagnetic waves. You don’t need a laboratory to make one.
Take a metal box with a lid, a trash can, a paint can, a large cookie tin.
Line the inside with cardboard or fabric as devices should not be in direct contact with the metal.
Place your important items inside and seal it tightly. The Lord showed me another even simpler method.
Simply take the device, wrap it in cloth or plastic, and then cover it with three tightly sealed layers of aluminum foil.
Tests conducted by amateur radio operators in 2024 demonstrated that this homemade method blocks over 95% of electromagnetic frequencies.
It’s simple, inexpensive, and effective. Imagine the importance of a working radio when no one else has any information.
You’ll be able to hear emergency alerts, situation reports, and instructions from the authorities. While everyone else is in the dark, unaware of what’s happening, you’ll have a window to the outside world.
Jesus showed me that in times of crisis, information is worth more than food. I keep a handc cranked radio in a metal box in the cellar.
It cost me 150 real. If I ever need it, this radio will be my link to the outside world.
The Lord has taught me to protect the tools that develop my abilities, my conscience, and my security.
Do the same, my brother. This is one of the teachings that touched me most deeply.
Jesus showed me families separated, parents without news of their children, wives without news of their husbands, and he told me, “My child, communication will be broken, but those who anticipated this will remain united.
Your mobile phone is out of service. WhatsApp is gone. You can’t send texts, make calls, or locate anyone.
All the technology that connected you to your loved ones has simply vanished. Now what?
How do you find your family? That’s why it’s essential to have a plan even before you need one.
A pre-arranged meeting point. A specific place where everyone knows where to go if communication breaks down.
In my family, the agreement is simple. If a serious problem arises and no one can communicate, everyone goes home.
No beating around the bush, no hesitation, no waiting. We’ll meet here. The Lord also showed me the importance of a plan B.
What if the house is inaccessible? What if there’s danger nearby? Plan a second meeting point agreed upon in advance.
It could be a relative’s house, a church, a specific place that everyone knows, a place that’s easy to find without needing technology.
Another thing Jesus inspired in me, having a contact outside my city during regional disasters, long-distance calls can sometimes connect people to the network when local lines are overloaded or out of service.
This external contact then becomes the nerve center of information. Everyone tries to reach them and they relay messages.
It’s a true human safety net. Integrate this today at dinner, during prayer, before going to bed.
Make sure your family memorizes this plan. Ask your children if something happens and we can’t communicate.
What do you do? Practice regularly. When the network goes down, my brother, the one who planned for the disconnection, is the one who stays connected.
Jesus showed me this clearly, and now I’m passing it on to you. Jesus showed me a pantry and next to it a notebook.
He told me, “My child, he who does not know what he possesses does not know how long he can last.”
This teaching teaches us the mathematics of survival. It is about knowing precisely what we can rely on.
You’ve already filled up your water tank. You’ve already put the food in the refrigerator.
Now, you need to take a complete inventory of everything you have at home. Check every cupboard, every shelf, every drawer.
Write everything down. Every can of beans, every bag of rice, every packet of pasta, every bottle of oil, every packet of salt.
Indicate the quantity and if possible, the calories. The an adult needs about 2,000 calories a day to maintain energy and mental alertness.
It’s possible to survive on less, but the body weakens, the mind slows, and decisions become less sound.
So, do the math. If you have enough food for 30,000 calories and there are four of you at home, how long will that last?
The Lord showed me that rationing isn’t synonymous with famine, but with wise management. If we eat normally, consuming 2,000 calories per person, our supplies run out more quickly.
But by reducing this intake to 1,500 calories per day, we prolong the life of our reserves.
This gives us extra days, days that can make all the difference between receiving aid and finding ourselves without resources.
Think of food as fuel, not pleasure. Rice and beans, pasta with canned sauce, oatmeal with peanut butter.
It’s not gourmet cuisine, but it’s essential for survival and wellbeing. Also, think about difficult decisions.
If your neighbor knocks on your door asking for food, what do you do? If a hungry child looks you in the eye, where do you draw the line?
Decide now before your emotions take over. In 2014, I spent nearly a week without electricity due to a winter storm.
My wife and I took inventory of our belongings the first day, but it was rushed and sloppy.
After 4 days, we didn’t even know what we had left. It was unnecessary stress.
Since then, Jesus has taught me the importance of an immediate, detailed, and written inventory.
Do the same, my brother. Knowing what you have is the first step to knowing how long you can last.
The Lord showed me something that served as a warning. He showed me good people, ordinary people doing things they would never normally do.
And he said, “My son, when the system collapses, despair changes human behavior. Protect your home.
Protect your family.” I’m not saying everyone will become a criminal. Most people are good and will try to help.
But despair has strange effects on the human mind. When you haven’t eaten for 3 days, when children are crying from thirst, when fear overwhelms you, you do things you never thought possible.
You have to be prepared for that. Your home is your fortress. Treat it like one.
Lock all doors, windows, the garage, and all access points to the basement and laundry room.
If you have the materials, boards, plywood, nails, consider reinforcing the main floor windows. This isn’t about building a bunker, but about taking advantage of opportunities as they arise.
Jesus showed me the importance of vigilance. In your family, organize yourselves by taking turns.
One person stays awake while the others sleep, 4 hours awake, 4 hours resting. Fatigue impairs judgment, and poor judgment in times of crisis can have disastrous consequences.
Remain vigilant and make sure you take turns staying awake and be discreet. If you have a generator, don’t light up the whole house as if it were a party.
If you have food while others don’t, don’t let the cooking smell spread. Appear as destitute as those around you, not out of deceit, but to protect yourself.
The Lord taught me this as the principle of the discrete man. Don’t draw attention to yourself.
Don’t draw attention to yourself. Go unnoticed. But Jesus also showed me that total isolation is dangerous.
We need allies, trusted neighbors, brothers and sisters in the church, people whose character we know.
3 weeks after a crisis, those with community support eat better, sleep more peacefully, and maintain their equilibrium.
Those who tried to do everything alone are exhausted, vulnerable, and on the verge of collapse.
Surround yourself with people. Choose wisely, but build it. You can’t do it alone, my brother.
This was one of the most profound teachings Jesus gave me. He showed me people who had food, water, and shelter, but who were broken inside.
And he told me, “My child, the body can survive for weeks. The spirit however can break in a few days.
Take care of your inner being as much as your outer being. Most people manage to hold on the first day, maybe the first week, but then they start to fall apart.
Why? Because they haven’t changed their mindset. They’ve kept waiting for things to go back to normal.
And when they haven’t, despair has overwhelmed them. It’s crucial not to fall into that trap.
A crisis like this isn’t just a 3-day power outage. Experts estimate that a full recovery could take months, even years.
You’re not in temporary survival mode, but in sustainable living mode. And sustainable living requires structure, routine, and purpose.
The Lord commanded me to establish a schedule even in chaos. An hour to get up, an hour to eat, an hour to attend to essential tasks, an hour to rest.
Human beings need rhythm. Without rhythm, the mind loses its way. With rhythm, even in extreme situations, we regain a sense of control, of normaly, of hope.
Divide the tasks among the household members. Who takes care of the water? Who prepares the meals?
Who keeps watch? Who listens to the radio? Everyone has their share. In times of crisis, an inactive person becomes a problem both for themselves and for others.
Set small daily goals. Today, we’ll reinforce the back door. Tomorrow, we’ll put away the tools.
Next week, we’ll install a rainwater harvesting system. Every bit of progress, however small, is motivating.
Jesus also showed me that boredom and fear are enemies as dangerous as hunger. If you have books at home, read them.
Play board games with your family. Play a musical instrument. Tell each other stories. Preserve humanity.
I saw a documentary about the siege of Sievo in the 1990s. People lived under siege for more than 3 years.
The survivors weren’t just those who had supplies. They were those who maintained the culture, the music, the stories, the human connections.
Protect what’s essential certainly, but also protect your spirit, your relationships, your reason for being.
I saved this instruction for last because Jesus told me it was the most important of all.
He showed me two people going through the same crisis. One had supplies, a plan, everything was in order, but lacked faith.
The other had fewer resources, more difficulties, but God was in their heart. And the Lord asked me, “Which one in your opinion will completely overcome this trial?”
Brother, you may have water reserves, provisions, a secure home, a communication plan. Everything is in order.
But without faith, you won’t make it. For there will come a time, and I guarantee it, when the situation will seem hopeless.
When fear will overwhelm you, when you will look around and see no way out.
And at that moment, only faith will sustain you. The Lord taught me to pray every day without exception, even when tired, even when afraid, even when speechless.
Gather your family and pray together. Read the Bible even in the dark, even with a trembling voice.
God’s word is a lamp to our feet and a light for our path. And we will never need that light more than in the darkest moments.
Remember what is written. God has not given us a spirit of fear but a spirit of power, love, and selfdiscipline.
When all around you panics, your peace will be your greatest testimony. People will look at you and ask, “How can you be so calm?
How do you do it?” And you will be able to answer because I know whom I trust.
Jesus showed me that times of crisis are also times of harvest. Those who refuse to hear about God will be in a desperate search for hope.
And you prepared body and soul will be able to be an instrument in the Lord’s hands.
Not just to survive, but to serve. Not to resist, but to bear witness. So my brother, prepare your house.
Yes, stockpile water, store food, protect your family, but above all, prepare your heart for when the world grows dark, the light that shines within you will be the light of Christ.
And that light, no electromagnetic pulse, no crisis, no chaos can extinguish. Before I finish, I want to do what I promised at the beginning.
Leave your name in the comments and the names of your family members because now I’m going to pray for each of you.
Heavenly Father, I thank you for each person who reads these words. Lord, I ask you to open the spiritual eyes of each one.
Give them the wisdom to prepare. Give them the courage to act. Give them the peace to trust you in all circumstances.
Lord, protect our families. Protect our children, our parents, our brothers and sisters. Guide our steps through uncertainty.
And when trials come, for they will, may we remain steadfast, not by our own strength, but by yours.
Not by our own understanding, but by your word, Lord. May every family that leaves its name here be protected by the blood of Jesus.
May the angels of the Lord watch over their homes. May they never lack resources.
May they never know sickness. May they never be ill. And may their faith never fail them.
In the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior. Amen. Brother in faith, may God bless you and keep you.
May he make his face shine upon you and grant you peace. Share this message with a loved one.
For when the day comes, those who were prepared will be grateful, and those who prepared others will receive the reward of those who cared for their neighbor.
See you in eternity.