Training an AI system on your family's health conditions, dependencies, resources, and decision preferences so it understands your constraints, not generic ones. The system becomes useful when it knows you're allergic to penicillin and your mother lives upstairs.
Think of training AI your crisis playbook like giving a coach a detailed game strategy. A good coach doesn't just know the goal—they know every formation, every backup plan, and what to do if the star player gets injured. The better the playbook, the faster the coach executes.
Your family's crisis playbook is everything: where to meet if you evacuate, who calls whom, what to grab in 60 seconds, where important documents are, what neighbors can help, what your teenager is responsible for. Most families have bits of this scattered in their heads. AI can organize it and help you use it during actual crisis.
You're not teaching AI to learn forever like you teach a child. You're uploading your emergency information into an AI tool and formatting it clearly so the AI can instantly reference it when you ask. It's like putting your playbook into a binder and handing it to someone who reads very, very fast.
Your playbook includes: evacuation routes, emergency contact sequences, medical information, pet care plans, financial account locations, insurance details, and roles everyone plays. Some of this is sensitive—addresses, phone numbers, medication names. That's why you need to choose secure AI tools and never upload more than necessary.
Say a wildfire warning comes through at 2 AM. You're half-asleep. Instead of trying to remember where you keep the go-bags or what route you planned, you open your AI tool and ask: "Start evacuation sequence now." The AI pulls from your playbook and tells you exactly: which family member calls grandma, which neighbor takes the dog, what route to use, what to grab first. It's like having a crisis coordinator in your pocket.
The AI won't make decisions—you do. But it removes the cognitive load of remembering everything while you're stressed and tired.
Don't include passwords, complete Social Security numbers, or full account details. Include enough for identification (last four digits, account holder name) but not enough for someone to take action if they saw it.
Try this: Write your family's current crisis playbook on paper without AI. Just list: "If we evacuate for wildfire, we meet at [location]. Mom calls Dad. Dad calls Grandma." Etc. Once you see what you actually have, ask ChatGPT or Claude: "Here's our current plan [paste it]. What gaps do you notice?"
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