By systematically varying conditions in simulated emergencies, AI surfaces the gaps in your plan that emerge under different combinations of stress—missing backup contacts when primary ones fail, unrealistic timing assumptions, overlooked dependencies. These gaps become visible without needing to live through the actual emergency.
When you think about preparing for emergencies, you probably focus on what you're ready for. But the real safety wins come from understanding what you're not ready for. That's where AI scenario analysis comes in.
Think of scenario analysis like a stress-test for your emergency plan. Just as engineers run thousands of simulated crashes before a car hits the road, AI can run through hundreds of emergency scenarios to spot the cracks in your preparation. It's not predicting the future—it's exploring the possibilities you might have missed when thinking through your plan alone.
Your brain is great at remembering things and following checklists, but it's not optimized for finding blind spots. When you imagine an emergency, you typically think about obvious obstacles: "What if the power goes out?" But you might miss second-order problems: "If the power goes out, can I still charge my phone to contact my family?" or "Will my emergency cash be accessible if the ATM doesn't work?"
AI excels at this because it can hold multiple scenarios in mind simultaneously and cross-reference them against your specific situation. Feed an AI tool your family structure, location, health conditions, and existing plans, and it can generate scenarios like: power outage + winter weather + elderly parent with mobility issues. Now you're preparing for something realistic instead of generic.
The practical outcome is a prioritized list of gaps—ranked by likelihood and impact. Instead of feeling overwhelmed by infinite "what-ifs," you get a roadmap. Maybe the analysis reveals that your family's communication plan assumes cell networks work, but your area has frequent outages. That becomes a priority to address. Or it might show that your emergency cash location is inaccessible if a family member is injured. Now you know to adjust.
This is different from just reading a generic emergency checklist. The AI is analyzing your specific situation: your neighborhood, your family composition, your resources. A checklist tells you to have a meeting point; scenario analysis might reveal that your proposed meeting point isn't reachable by someone with your health profile.
AI scenario analysis isn't about prediction or certainty. It's about expanding the number of reasonable scenarios you consider before disaster forces you to improvise. The more thoughtfully you've imagined possible futures, the more instinctively you can respond when reality happens.
Try this: Pick your most likely emergency (weather event, power outage, or evacuation in your area). Use Claude or ChatGPT and ask: "I live in [location], my family includes [composition], and we have [existing plans]. What gaps might we face in a [specific emergency] scenario?" You'll usually get 5-10 realistic problems you hadn't considered.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.