Pre-planning and preparing for the unexpected is very important.
“She’ll be right.” Is that your attitude?
“‘She’ll be right,’ won’t really cut it,” I am reading in an insurance brochure.
“They have an attitude of ‘she’ll be right’ when often that is not the case at all,” says Maritime New Zealand deputy director about people who ignore water safety rules like wearing a life jacket, letting people know where you are going, when you will be back and taking a communication device with you.
In Australia and New Zealand we say “she’ll be right,” the rest of the world says “that’s all right” or “not to worry.”
If pre-planning and preparing is very important for the unexpected, how much more important is it to be prepared for the expected.
(All of us are going to die, whether we expect it or not.)
“‘Therefore this is what I will do to you, Israel, and because I will do this to you, prepare to meet your God, O Israel,'” the Bible says in Amos 4:12