Very good point. I am OCD when comes to checking net worth, and budgetting. I prep 3 budgets annually. Normal, Austere, and Emergency. It's not a point of only of how much you make, but how much you spend.
Excellent. You teaching preppers courses?
Nah, I am barely a prepper... The only claim to that I have is a pile of Mountain House for ultra long term food - But that ain't really fair either... Mountain House is a staple thing for out in the sticks... My go-bag has three days of MH in it at all times, and my truck has a bucketful, always - so it is something I go through some anyway... Which is why I stocked up... not because I figured to need it 25 years from now. I buy it by the bucket, and I wait for good deals - And then I buy a lot. So yeah, I could probably survive on MH alone for about a year after the canning shelves are dry.

Mostly just country. Redneck 101, man. Grow your own, put it up yourself, and you will have a plenty that just don't quit. As a matter of course you'll get three years in the pantry... Same with keeping fuel around - That is because of the farm, not because I am a prepper... Same with tools and being able to fix for yourself... Buy it broke and fix it... That's how I get nice things.
That's why the money ain't all that - I went that way... six figures that way... And seen it all go up in smoke in three months. What I do now, hearkening back to my roots, is far more durable.
As far as money does go, I have found it far more useful to keep it rolling over on the local street than anything else. So long as I can keep flipping things, I am making more, with less investment that I ever did with 10 employees... In real, unencumbered cash.