Remember August 29, 2005
Aug. 29th, 2007 04:49 amThis time two years ago, I was hunkered down in my home, with
marigoldg‘s mother and my two dogs for company. My husband was a few miles away at work, locked into a hospital one block from the beach. We were waiting for Katrina to come roaring ashore in all her fury.
I look back now in hindsight, and see how foolish I was to stay--though even now, I am not certain that I had any alternative.
For the next several hours, we huddled in the dark, listening to the wind howling like a pack of Wargs, as the rain poured down ceaselessly in horizontal waves. When we finally emerged, many hours later, it was into a world forever changed.
We were lucky. We survived the storm with a roof still over our heads; many others were not so lucky--my husband’s sister lost everything she possessed except for her cat and the clothes on her back. Others lost family members, or their own lives...
We spent the next year recovering, along with everyone else on the coast, from the devastation. But the fear of another hurricane, along with other problems, was one of the deciding factors when my husband was offered an opportunity to move us far from the coast.
I still miss my home of 30 years, but I could not ask him to spend another storm in peril of his life. And as long as the hospitals on the Coast refuse to evacuate, that’s what it would come to, because he’s too conscientious a nurse to abandon his patients.
There are those who are *still* trying to recover from Katrina. My sister-in-law was in her FEMA trailer for 18 months before she was able to find an apartment. But thousands of people still on the coast remain in those flimsy make-shift campers, for there just were not enough places to go around. The three coastal counties still are mostly cut off from one another, as the missing bridges are gradually being reconstructed. And the recovery effort has been hampered by insurance companies, who were from the first, reluctant to pay out what they owed, and who now have placed exorbitant premiums on insurance for any of those who are trying to rebuild their lives there on the Coast.
You will hear a lot today, all about New Orleans, and how dreadful it is there, and how little has been accomplished in rebuilding the city.
But spare some thought for the state that was actually *hit* by Hurricane Katrina: Mississippi. The people of Hancock, Harrison and Jackson Counties, and the area immediately north of that, received the full brunt of the storm.
As I did last year, here are some links:
This is the diary I kept, during the storm and its aftermath--
My Katrina Diary
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/77507.html#cutid1
And here is a link to some pictures I took after the storm--
Katrina Pictures
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/104916.html
And finally, a fic I wrote, as a thank-you to all the support and friendship I received from my flist.
Hobbit Aid
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/84361.html
Remember.
(My thanks to
danachan for the icon she made for me to commemorate the day.)
I look back now in hindsight, and see how foolish I was to stay--though even now, I am not certain that I had any alternative.
For the next several hours, we huddled in the dark, listening to the wind howling like a pack of Wargs, as the rain poured down ceaselessly in horizontal waves. When we finally emerged, many hours later, it was into a world forever changed.
We were lucky. We survived the storm with a roof still over our heads; many others were not so lucky--my husband’s sister lost everything she possessed except for her cat and the clothes on her back. Others lost family members, or their own lives...
We spent the next year recovering, along with everyone else on the coast, from the devastation. But the fear of another hurricane, along with other problems, was one of the deciding factors when my husband was offered an opportunity to move us far from the coast.
I still miss my home of 30 years, but I could not ask him to spend another storm in peril of his life. And as long as the hospitals on the Coast refuse to evacuate, that’s what it would come to, because he’s too conscientious a nurse to abandon his patients.
There are those who are *still* trying to recover from Katrina. My sister-in-law was in her FEMA trailer for 18 months before she was able to find an apartment. But thousands of people still on the coast remain in those flimsy make-shift campers, for there just were not enough places to go around. The three coastal counties still are mostly cut off from one another, as the missing bridges are gradually being reconstructed. And the recovery effort has been hampered by insurance companies, who were from the first, reluctant to pay out what they owed, and who now have placed exorbitant premiums on insurance for any of those who are trying to rebuild their lives there on the Coast.
You will hear a lot today, all about New Orleans, and how dreadful it is there, and how little has been accomplished in rebuilding the city.
But spare some thought for the state that was actually *hit* by Hurricane Katrina: Mississippi. The people of Hancock, Harrison and Jackson Counties, and the area immediately north of that, received the full brunt of the storm.
As I did last year, here are some links:
This is the diary I kept, during the storm and its aftermath--
My Katrina Diary
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/77507.html#cutid1
And here is a link to some pictures I took after the storm--
Katrina Pictures
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/104916.html
And finally, a fic I wrote, as a thank-you to all the support and friendship I received from my flist.
Hobbit Aid
http://dreamflower02.livejournal.com/84361.html
Remember.
(My thanks to
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 10:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:37 am (UTC)*tight, tight hugs*
*much lovings and rememberings*
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 12:05 pm (UTC)It was a horrible, horrible time -- not least because of the sensationalist national media's simplistic over-emphasis on that Other City, while ignoring y'all who were truly hardest hit. What little respect I'd had for them was effectively destroyed in their coverage, and their lack of coverage, and especially in their creation of crises that didn't even exist. What vultures. Stuck on stupid, as Gen. Honore accurately stated.
/end media-rant
I admire y'all's courage in recovering from the devastation -- and your wisdom in moving inland, as hard as that's been.
I'll re-read those links as soon as I can, dear friend. I'll tell you, regarding "Hobbit Aid": I was telling Milady about the hatchets-in-the-attics on Monday this week! And she mentioned how smart it would be for everyone in the area to buy a hatchet and place it in the attic just in case it's ever needed.
How is Marigold's mum? Anna, is that right? She moved inland too, didn't she?
*more big hugs*
*comfort brownies*
*many, many blessings*
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:42 pm (UTC)And I heard today that the mayor of New Orleans is complaining because "Mississippi got more money!" I *know* how badly NO was damaged--but that doesn't make Mississippi's need any less. And the truth is, Mississippi's made better use of the money it DID get!
Anna moved to Jackson, to a new retirement apartment building run by the same ones who ran the one in Biloxi that was destroyed in the storm. She is not quite as happy there, I think, but she's undeniably safer.
(((hugs back; scarfs brownies))))
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 12:18 pm (UTC)*hugs* I can only imagine, having lived through and cleaned up after a couple of major hurricanes, how truly awful it must have been.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:45 pm (UTC)It was (and for those still there, is,) truly awful.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 12:32 pm (UTC)I saw something, yesterday I think, about Bay St. Louis and how far inland the debris field was pushed. They were saying that rebuilding their is every bit as slow as in New Orleans and how the whole Gulf Coast is still suffering.
I still shudder when I think about some of the posts you made the day before the storm hit. I think that knowing you were there made it real to me, if that makes sense.
I'm glad you moved inland, too. I still think about you in severe weather, but I understand the type of storms you get now. I still can't deal with hurricanes.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 01:12 pm (UTC)An emotional anniversary.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 01:53 pm (UTC)*hugs you, hard*
You survived. Not just bodily -- you're still a beautiful person and are writing, your spirit seems still in tact. Congratulations. That's no small feat.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:50 pm (UTC)*blushes* Well, thank you! But I'm most certainly not alone--there are a lot of people down there *still* overcoming and surviving!
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 05:34 pm (UTC)I remember your post from that period very well.
((((hugs you))))
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:51 pm (UTC)And I remember your card, and the chocolate--it really brightened up my day!
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 06:05 pm (UTC)Here in my little corner of the world the focus on the news wasn't only on New Orleans, but also on the area where you lived. The devastation I saw on the news and in the newspaper was immense and I can't even begin to understand how difficult it must have been, and still is, for the people living through it.
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:52 pm (UTC)Well, I am glad to know that! It's good to realize that other countries are maybe more aware than our own, of what really happened!
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 07:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 08:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:57 pm (UTC)((((((hugs back)))))))
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 10:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:58 pm (UTC)&heart;
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:16 pm (UTC)God Bless you and your husband.
hugs,
Pipkin Sweetgrass
no subject
Date: 2007-08-29 11:59 pm (UTC)And I think it an extremely worthwhile project!
no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 01:07 am (UTC)I am incredibly grateful that people like you and your husband made it through in one piece, my dear...
no subject
Date: 2007-09-02 01:30 pm (UTC)(((hugs)))
no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 05:13 am (UTC)*hugs you*
no subject
Date: 2007-09-02 01:31 pm (UTC)((hugs back))
no subject
Date: 2007-08-30 05:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-02 01:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-02 06:07 am (UTC)It makes me incredibly sad that the U.S. government has really let all those affected by Katrina down so. I never imagined that two years later, Mississippi and Louisiana would still be so devastated---and so many people still homeless.
no subject
Date: 2007-09-02 01:35 pm (UTC)What is scary is that FEMA *still* has not seemed to learn their lesson--and that there are still 17,000 "temporary" trailers down there...
no subject
Date: 2007-09-03 03:02 am (UTC)What boggles the mind is that the Corps of Engineers is rebuilding the levees (sp?) at New Orleans---but they've said that due to cost, they won't withstand another hurricane. Like-what? If you're going to build 'em, build 'em right.
It makes me all nervous to realize that Hurricane Felix is out there right now.