Martha Stewart Will Definitely Survive the Zombie Apocalypse

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By the author of Be Ready for Anything and the online course Bloom Where You’re Planted

I have always been a big fan of Martha Stewart.  I know, sometimes she does stuff like gluing moss on lampshades which causes you to wonder if she ever uses that lamp and why it doesn’t catch fire, and rolling grapes in goose liver pate sounds like it won’t be on my bucket list, but let’s put those things aside for a moment and talk about how Martha is better prepared than just about anyone to survive the Zombie Apocalypse. And it’s not just because she’s rich.

Please note that, as always, I use the Zombie Apocalypse as a metaphor for any type of civil unrest, long-term disaster in which the unprepared are going to want what you’ve carefully stored, and events during which people eagerly await the government’s handouts to rescue them from their Darwinian fates.

But, let’s talk about Martha. I’ve always seen her as a mentor, even though I’ve never had the privilege of meeting her.

She understands the value of a home-cooked meal with every detail from scratch. She grows her own veggies and herbs, maintains orchards, and raises chickens. She can sew, bake, garden, and run a multi-billion dollar business. She’s survived some things that would have driven a lesser woman to her knees. Remember how a few weeks back when I talked about prepper friends, I said that some of them weren’t exactly preppers but would be fantastic neighbors and allies? One word for you: MARTHA.

Here are just a few of the reasons why I’m quite certain that Martha Stewart will survive anything the Zombie Apocalypse could throw at her.

She can cook anything, anywhere.


First of all, let me state that Martha Stewart taught me to cook. When I was a new bride, I seriously couldn’t cook at all except for homemade tomato soup and homemade marinara sauce. Anything beyond that was beyond my ability because I’d spent my single young adulthood traveling around, staying in extra rooms, and renting hotels by the week while I explored America and Canada.

One of my wedding gifts was a subscription to Martha Stewart Living magazine, and at the time, she had this recurring segment called Cooking 101. (By the way, you can get a year’s subscription to that magazine for only $5 – and it’s still AWESOME.)

Every month, I grimly set out to tackle the 101. I learned to make a perfect lemon roasted chicken, mouthwatering potato salad, pot roast with vegetables, Caesar salad, and the be all and end all of mashed potatoes. I learned how to easily peel a winter squash, make a perfect boiled egg, how to cook pasta al dente, how to care for and use my prized cast iron skillet, and how to make a crisp, fresh vegetable platter. All these things sound really easy, but if you don’t know how to do them, trust me, a step-by-step is required.

Of course, back in those flat-broke days of my early marriage, I wasn’t getting saffron strands to season my rice or capers and morels for a tasty spring meal, but I learned the basics and produced many perfect, simple meals with Martha’s help.

But it isn’t just in the kitchen where Martha is adept. She can host an outdoor crab dinner, make skillet bread, and cook over an open fire. Even Martha’s camping hot dogs are better than those of mere mortals. (Her website has a host of recipes to be made in your prized cast iron skillet over a campfire.) And if Martha’s stuck out in the woods without gourmet ingredients, don’t worry, she knows how to forage. Heck, even when she was in prison, she foraged greens outside to make her stay more pleasantly nourished.

She’s a top-notch homesteader.


Martha has many homes, but her favorite seems to be her farm in Bedford, New York. Okay, most of us would call it an estate, but to-may-to, to-mah-to.

On that farm, she raises an abundance of her own food. From a berry orchard and apple orchard to a vegetable garden and herb garden to an area that houses more than 200 chickens, Martha raises enough food to be very self-sufficient.

She stays pretty busy with her business enterprises and most of the day-to-day chores are done by people she has hired, but everything is completed to her exacting standards and she possesses the skills and knowledge to do it all.

However, when she wrote her best-selling book, Martha Stewart Gardening, back in the early 1990s, rumor has it she spent 12 hours a day outside researching and gardening hands-on so she could provide the best possible information.

Martha built an empire knowing a lot of stuff about a lot of topics.


Martha Stewart has written dozens of books, and they’re not all everyone’s cup of tea, but many of them are actually useful for the prepper or homesteader. Besides the aforementioned gardening book, she also has books she personally researched on sewing, homekeeping, baking, making handmade gifts and crafts, starting seedscelebrating holidaysliving a healthy life, organizing your home, hitting up yard sales, and a cooking school one that I could have really used back in my 20s. Heck, she’s even a sorceress who can actually fold fitted sheets and make them look as tidy as flat sheets do, instead of just stuffing them into a pillowcase like I do.

She even has a book on the rules of business, which leads me to believe she’d be one heck of a barterer in a post-collapse economy. My goal in life is to have a complete Martha library because I’m pretty sure I could do anything once I have it.

Before Martha built an empire being herself, she worked as a model, a stockbroker, a caterer with a million-dollar company, and was the food and entertainment editor for the New York Times. She’s a renaissance woman in every sense of the phrase. Seriously, you want Martha on your Zombie Apocalypse Survival Team.

Her business empire is worth several hundred million dollars now, but at its peak, the value exceeded 2 billion dollars. One thing is sure, Martha knows how to do business.

Martha’s a survivor.


She’s been through a lot. Some of it is typical stuff that happens to many of us, like her divorce in 1990. But she pulled up her socks and created an empire, publishing her beloved magazine, having a syndicated television show, creating a web presence, and developing a syndicated newspaper column.

In 2004, she hit some hard times that most of us will never experience. After a legal battle, she was sentenced to prison due to a stock trading scandal. She spent 5 months in federal prison, then 5 months monitored with an ankle bracelet, and 2 years under supervised release. During this time she estimates that she lost nearly one BILLION dollars. (See? Even rich people can have a financial disaster.)

It was hellish, and she doesn’t sugarcoat it, but she survived.

Stewart herself offered up details about her time in jail, candidly saying, “I did fall in one deep hole, for a period of about 10 months.”

Stewart, 73, had the audience laughing when she continued, “That deep hole was not a pleasant hole. And everybody tells you, ‘Oh, whatever happens to you, it will make you stronger, f*** them.”

“It’s so mean, that is the stupidest thing. It doesn’t make you better at all. It could ruin you,” she said of her stint a decade ago in West Virginia’s Alderson prison…

“Luckily, I have an extremely strong, healthy constitution, so my health never suffered,” she continued. “Health, optimism and that curiosity to see what shouldn’t happen, what you can overcome. So, I overcame a very difficult, nasty situation.”

…Stewart explained how she stayed optimistic during this time.

“Well, I wasn’t dying,” she added. “So, I couldn’t have fancy food for a while. That was fine. I was sent far away, but my friends came to visit me regularly and it was just a peculiar moment in time. It cannot define you. You cannot let something like that define a good person’s life. I am a good person and I am a creative person.” (source)

Lots of folks thought she went to “Camp Cupcake” and spent 6 months in secluded luxury under house arrest, but Martha has been very honest about how difficult it was. She told Katie Couric:

“It was horrifying and no one, no one, should have to go through that kind of indignity really except for murderers, and there are a few other categories, but no one should have to go through that. It’s a very, very awful thing…

…[Did I feel] that ‘you can make lemons out of lemonade’ and ‘what hurts you makes you stronger’? No. None of those adages fit at all. It’s a horrible experience, nothing is good about it, nothing…

…There are lots and lots of disturbing things that go on in an incarceration like that. In minimum security, you still couldn’t walk out the gate or cross the river. There’s still guards and it’s still nasty…

…It’s not a good experience and it doesn’t make you stronger. I was a strong person to start with and thank heavens I was and I can still hold my head up high and know that I’m fine.” (source)

You can check out the podcast here.

But when she was in prison, she made the best of things. It’s reported that she never complained about the labor she was forced to do.

“She hasn’t complained once about being in jail. The afternoon I was there, she was going to get a job cleaning the floor waxing machine. Imagine that job. But Martha didn’t complain. She said, `Gimme some paraffin, turpentine and a wire brush and I’ll get right to it.'” (source)

She spent her off time participating in a Christmas decorating contest, making a ceramic nativity scene, crocheting, walking the grounds, creating meals out of commissary and vending machine goods. She has spoken of the lessons she learned during this time:

While in prison, Martha says she learned she could live without any luxury whatsoever. “I think many of us have an inner strength that you do not know until you are tested,” she says. “This was a test. I kept my head up. I kept my friends intact, most of them. I kept my spirit high, and I moved on.” (source)

That particularly reminds me of some of the things Selco said when he talked about who survived and who died when the SHTF in Bosnia. Martha clearly has what it takes to be a survivor.

After she got out, she became a vocal spokesperson for prison reform.

The celebrity homemaker also showed a softer side, writing about the plight of some of the 1,100 other inmates. “Many of them have been here for years — devoid of care, devoid of love, devoid of family,” she said, urging people to press for reforms in the sentencing guidelines for nonviolent first-time offenders. (source)

Martha is clearly nothing if not adaptable, and every prepper knows that adaptability is the key to survival.

She learned that even people you consider your best friends might not be the best additions to your survival community.

During her trial, one of the most heartbreaking stories was the one about Martha’s former “best friend,” Mariana Pasternak. Pasternak testified against Martha during her trial, then wrote a poorly received book about their “friendship” that was meant to be unflattering to Martha, but really served to show Pasternak’s true colors.

She discussed betrayals that led to the dissolution of the 20-year friendship in an interview with Oprah Winfrey.

Oprah: What was that like?

Martha: Disheartening, to say in the mildest possible terms.

Oprah: Was she always a best friend? Because I always think a best friend couldn’t do that.

Martha: Well, I thought so. Best friends are sometimes not, and it’s too bad.

Oprah: And [she] wrote an unflattering book.

Martha: Yeah, it’s a sad thing. I did not read the book, and I have nothing to do with her and I’m sorry about that.

Oprah: You’re sorry about that.

Martha: Yeah, of course. You would be. You would be horrified. Well, you can’t let it be the end of your world, because people change. People are odd. People do strange things for different reasons. Sometimes you don’t know the reasons. You don’t know what kind of pressure they’re under. You know, all kinds of things go on in that kind of episode. (source)

Unfortunately, like many of us, she learned that when the chips are down, there are some people – even ones you love deeply – who will not have your back.

Martha bounced back, more relatable than ever.

This nearly collapsed her business empire but she came back, Martha-style.

While things were rough for a while, she rebuilt and did it in a big way. She has now published a prolific 71 books. Her line of products is more than 7000 items strong. And she has four – count ’em – FOUR – television shows.

Martha is BACK.

But out of all of her endeavors, my very favorite is The Martha Blog. It’s not fancy and glossy like the rest of her empire. It could be a blog that your next-door neighbor started to document her progress with gardening and raising a menagerie of animals on her plot of land, aside from the grand scale and the gardeners. But it’s a personal glimpse of the day-to-day goings-on at her farm. It’s the real deal that talks about the things she learns as she travels and runs her home and runs her business and plays with her grandchildren.

Martha’s practical advice and warm demeanor have taught me a lot over the years and so much of it has spilled over into my efforts to be more self-reliant, to provide delicious healthy meals for my family, to polish all sorts of skills, and to constantly be learning about a broad array of topics.

Some folks who could survive just about anything aren’t survivalists at all. They just have a survival mentality. In light of that, really, is there any better role model for an everyday, ordinary mom who wants to be prepared than Martha Stewart? She may not be a prepper in the classic sense, but she’s a very well-prepared and multi-talented woman.

Picture of Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther is a coffee-swigging, globe-trotting blogger. She is the founder and publisher of three websites.  1) The Organic Prepper, which is about current events, preparedness, self-reliance, and the pursuit of liberty on her website, 2)  The Frugalite, a website with thrifty tips and solutions to help people get a handle on their personal finances without feeling deprived, and 3) PreppersDailyNews.com, an aggregate site where you can find links to all the most important news for those who wish to be prepared. She is widely republished across alternative media and  Daisy is the best-selling author of 5 traditionally published books and runs a small digital publishing company with PDF guides, printables, and courses. You can find her on FacebookPinterest, Gab, MeWe, Parler, Instagram, and Twitter.

Leave a Reply

  • That old rich prison hag will be long gone by then if it does ever happen.wish people would stop glorifying criminals because of there wealth focus on there wrong doing that shows who they really are

    • I was never convinced that Martha should have been in prison in the first place. Had she murdered someone or abused a child, clearly, I would not be a fan.

      Thanks for your input, though, Mh. Have a nice day!

    • Donald Trump has committed far more, and far harsher crimes. Just because he bought his way out of prison each time doesn’t make him better than a “prison hag”, you hateful thing. Take your denigrating language over to some hate site please.

  • I absolutely agree! I am in awe of Martha and her many, many talents. As usual, an excellently written and thoughtful article, Daisy!

  • I am glad she supports prison reform. It’s good to hear about those kinds of things from someone who’s been there and I think it makes her a decent human, she could have just finished her sentence and forgot about it. And I agree with the bs words people say, when times are hard it seriously sucks and although I tend to get through it i never felt it made me stronger, I hated every minute but I also don’t see the point in complaining. However, long afterwards I am noticing that I understand people I never would have thought about or cared about had I not had those struggles and I’m willing to help where I can when no one else cares. My hubby learned a long time ago for things he didn’t really get he shouldn’t talk about it or give me platitudes and admit that the situation sucks, thats all.

  • Really..oh daisy..I have disagreed with you on a few things but she is what is wrong with America another rich detached snob.. living behind a gate never getting her hands dirty..likes to hang with the leftist elite..

  • I’m glad you wrote this article. I never followed Martha’s doings and knew very little about her, but when she was sentenced to prison my gut feeling was that she’d mostly been railroaded and was used as a scapegoat for the far greater crimes of many others. The PTB latched onto her misdeeds, which seemed to be minor, and threw her to the wolves in order to pretend that they were truly concerned about financial misdoings, but they never managed to incarcerate others who had committed much more serious crimes. I’m happy that she bounced back so well.

  • I like to watch some of her shows, and her recipes. She provides a lot of information to people. As a human being, from what I have heard, I don’t care for the way she treats people. As a present day businesswoman, I think to get to where she is, that is what she has had to do. Hopefully, future evolved business structures will be different. But I will say, having been in the business world and tried to treat people well, that people cannot handle it. They instead tae advantage of you. I would not do so again. So, kudos to her for surviving in a male dominated business world and rebounding from her legal difficulties. Even though she did commit (a) crime(s), I have always believed she was unfairly targeted because she was so sucessful. All that being said, look past the messenger to see the message. She does have something to offer through her shows. I particularly liked this show where Amy Goldman shared her knowledge on seed startins, She has others on a few topics.
    https://www.marthastewart.com/916827/saving-heirloom-seeds-amy-goldman
    https://www.marthastewart.com/910407/amy-goldmans-heirloom-squash-curing-barn
    https://www.marthastewart.com/910406/how-grow-heirloom-pumpkins-and-squash

  • Some of you are missing the point.
    She over came being crapped on by Wall Street – had she been a man, she’d never been in prison. I’m no feminist but she got the shaft.
    She’s wealthy and successful because she’s worked for it. Hating on her makes you look jealous and petty.

    The point is, people will survive because they have the will, grit and where with all. And some of them won’t even be Preppers! Gasp!

  • One skill for preppers is being able to reevaluate based on new information.
    I always ignored Martha as too impractical but now I have new information. I always skipped over any of her books at the thrift store but will be checking them out now. I may or may not find them useful for me but will at least consider things Martha has to offer.
    thanks Daisy. It’s good to know I can still be flexible in thinking about things.

  • Well there is an interesting idea: Martha Stewart in a post-zombie apocalypse world.
    Who thunk it? Not I.
    But it does make a degree of sense.
    Now, before I go on, I have neither thought highly or lowly of Miss Stewart. I am perfectly indifferent to her, as I cannot say I have ever actually seen her on TV, and if I did it was only in passing. I have seen her magazine on the rack at the grocery store, never looked through it. Via the interwebs I have come to understand she is very creative, talented, and can be a stern, but you dont become a successful business person being warm and squishy let alone a business woman.
    She made a mistake, had to face the humility of it, and did her time. I am sure it was quite humbling.
    Having said that, based off Daisy’s account, I would be more inclined to have someone in my post-zombie apocalypse tribe who is resourceful, talented, understand economics and logistics, with good organizational skills than a number of preppers who first and foremost thought is all things tacti-cool.

    But, for all we know, she could be a post-apocalypse warlord, with a hidden stash of water, looking to expand, but needs a certain book, a weapon, with the words to control the people.
    Wink! Wink!

  • Awesome reading !! I’m even bigger fan of Ms. Martha’s now ! You also help us to see Martha Stewart as the neighbor next door you want to hang out and learn everything you can . I love your newsletter & website. Thanks for helping us see the whole picture of ” zombie apacolyspt ” ????

  • I loved this one. For years, my nickname in my small circle has been Martha. I accept it as a badge of honor. I’m right with you on building my Martha book collection. I’ve been working on it for years. I learned about a few new ones, thanks for the links!

  • Now that was a wonderful, uplifting and encouraging post! Thank you for pointing out the skills that Martha Stewart used to remain stable throughout her crisis. Valuable insights.

  • I loved this article Daisy! Martha is resilient and a person with many talents we can learn from. Hope you manage to attain her 71 book collection

  • Yes Martha has many multi skills and talents and most people growing up in our Era did and had to survive. Most people our age has done things most would never even think about doing, but we did what needed to be done at the time. It is a sad time for many of this generation that have no skills, talents or work experience.

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