bottled drinking water
water filters with tanks like zero water
flash lights, fresh batteries
propane tank and camp stove
mylar blankets
fire wood
matches, lighters, fire starters
medicines you need daily and general antiseptic cleaners, bandages, first aid items
keep your car's gas tank full. If possible safely store a 5 gal. jerry can with gas.
canned goods including soups, spam, pasta, vegetables, fruits, things that keep without refrigeration
yes, toilet paper
soap, bodywash.
water for flushing toilets, washing, cooking Don't forget your hot water tank as a source.
solar powered battery charger for cell phones.
guns and ammo for defense, hunting
photograph all important papers and documents in case you can't grab them to take with you and backup if possible.
backup your computers to small portable drives.
fiat money might be worthless in a crisis. Always have some higher karat gold that can be accessed quickly if you need to move. Small gold coins, 18k or link chain that could be broken down into smaller links for trading. Stash in small coin in each shoe under the cushion.
A plan that you discuss with family and friends containing ways to contact each other if power and cell towers are out, rendezvous places should you need to move or bug out.
Dried pinto beans.
Cheap. Great protein replacement. Good for minimum 2-3 years, 25-30 years if stored properly. Staple of the American frontier where food was often scarce.
Butterbeans, black eye peas, crowder peas, navy beans, and more. Pinto beans are my least favorite.
One secret tip here: If you want old beans to cook soft, don't salt them at the start of cooking. Wait until they get soft.