Wednesday, November 14, 2012

In Which We Not-So-Brave A Storm



Hurricane Sandy. My family’s experience was inconsequential compared to those who lost homes or family members. Yet Husband and I are only half-joking when we talk about PSSD: Post Sandy Stress Disorder. It wasn't the storm itself but the nine days afterward without power in cold weather that was a demoralizing experience.  Here’s the play-by-play of our day-to-day:

Days leading up to hurricane: Husband and I are in Dread Mode. One year ago, we were traumatized by losing power for four (FOUR!) days after Hurricane Irene. We don’t normally watch TV but now find ourselves glued to The Weather Channel. (“Next up:  Xtreme Apocalyptic Storms Trackers!!”) 

The forecast doesn’t look good, even if you factor in the way this region freaks over a 1-3 inch snow forecast. (Groceries stores sell out of eggs, milk, and bread. Seriously. As friend Gerianne says, “What do they plan to do, make French toast?”) I am consumed with restless, possibly useless, storm preparations.

Husband sets up the generator, bought after Hurricane Irene, and we buy two extra tanks of propane. I even pack a suitcase of essentials in case we need to leave home. It feels like overkill. We are shame-faced Xtreme Doomsday Preppers. 

The day before the storm, I experience a Mommy Guilt Moment when Huckle sighs, “I used to like it when the power went out. Now I’m worried.” 

 “Don’t worry,” I tell him. “Dad and I are just getting us ready. Why don’t you find some candles?” Like all ten-year-old boys, Huckle is a pyromaniac. As a hobby, he collects oil lamps and opportunities to use them. Huckle finds every candle we own and arranges them on the dining room table and focuses his energy on begging to light them. Now. I congratulate myself on distracting him. We even have a Teachable Moment about taking our concerns to God -- though I'm convicted of doing too little of this and too much useless flurrying and worrying.

The night before the storm, Husband and I can’t sleep. The clock in the bathroom ticks “dread, dread, dread.” Husband agrees to have everyone sleep in the downstairs study the next night, the night of the Super-storm. It’s a relief to me that I’ll have everyone in one place. And yet, Husband taking this so seriously raises my level of concern. He’s not a panicky kind of guy.

Days 0-1: Husband cranks up the thermostat as the storm worsens. “We might as well start the power outage with a warm house,” he says. When the power goes out, we’re prepared. We’re warm, we’ve had a good meal, and each of us has a flashlight. Huckle proudly lights his oil lamp collection. We nestle together like baby mice amid piles of sleeping bags and pillows in my study. Huckle and Sally think it’s great fun, like camping. Husband and I don’t think it’s great fun. We are listening to the wind beat the rain sideways against the house and watching the trees bend like circus contortionists. But we all sleep soundly, which is a wonderful answer to prayer.

Days 2-3: The storm ends faster than expected -- another praise. We can’t get much news, because even the cell phone towers are impacted. But the worst is definitely over, as are many trees and telephone poles. 

The house grows cold and colder. The kids bicker constantly -- probably helps them stay warm. Husband goes on long walks looking for cell phone reception because his clients in other parts of the country are still hard at work and so he must be too. Our nights have cozy “Little House of the Prairie” moments during which we snuggle in blankets around our tiny (= inadequate) electric space heater and read by candles and lamps, all the while waiting for the power to come back on. Huckle is feeling very self-satisfied. He studies by the light of his oil lamp “just like Abraham Lincoln” and keeps making comments like, “Aren’t you glad I collect lamps? Remember how you didn’t want me to buy this many oil lamps?” I let him light another lamp. 

The house feels especially cold and dark in the morning. Husband, an early riser, goes downstairs and starts the generator. We use it for a few hours twice a day: morning and evening. It keeps our water heater hot and our refrigerator cold. But every day it gets harder to get out of bed and face the cold. I think about Almanzo’s mother in the Little House book called Farmer Boy. I used to pity her, getting up before sunrise and spending all day in the kitchen preparing huge meals for her field-working men. Now I see the pleasantness of her situation: she hangs out with a warm fireplace and good baking smells all day long. My kitchen doesn’t have a fireplace, but it does have warm dishwater. I find myself doing lots of dishes to keep my hands warm. (“Hey, anyone have another mug to wash? Take your time…”) 

Days 4-5: Cell phone service is back, so we are again connected with the outside world. We learn that almost everyone else in our area has power back by now, including most of the streets around us. It’s a little maddening and a lot hope-inspiring – it might only be a matter of hours before we get ours. I call the power company repeatedly in case they’ve forgotten our street, as they did after Hurricane Irene.

Husband’s workplace gets power, so he is able to work from his office, which is a relief after all his challenges of keeping the high-tech world moving from our low-tech living conditions.  But I’m home in a dark, cold house with two squirrelly kids who don’t have homework (the opiate of the little people) because the school doesn't have power. I try to stay active but feel my brain shutting down. I wander around the house numbly putting stuff back in the basement and attic, breaking up arguments, doing more dishes. On Day 5 we venture far from home in search of propane. The stress of potentially not finding more wears me out. By the end of a day, I’m cold and tired and bitter and complaining -- NOT a Teachable Moment.

Huckle shines. He is a little Man of the House. I need to print a document but nearly give up in despair when I realize I’ll need a three-prong extension cord. ALL these cords running through our house and NONE are three-pronged?? My dear Huckle scrounges through a huge box in a dark corner of the basement. He finds and patiently untangles the sole three-pronged cord and connects my printer for me. Then he repeatedly shakes the near-empty propane tank to keep the generator running until my printer is done. It’s a beautiful role reversal moment, humbling and encouraging. I catch of glimpse of the wonderful man my son will become. He’ll probably visit me at the nursing home on Saturdays and push my wheelchair to the park. I think I’ll give him extra dessert tonight.

Day 6: Sunday is an especially good day. Resourceful Husband figures out how to hook up the generator to the furnace in our family room addition. It’s the warmest and most hopeful we’ve felt in days. Life seems normal-ish and we feel optimistic-ish. We even plug in a real lamp instead of finding our way in the flickering beams of flashlights and Huckle’s oil lamps. And we can be less stingy with generator time, because Home Depot has plenty of propane and our power could come on at any minute. We run the generator most of Sunday, feeling like hedonists. We have a lovely meal in the warm, welcoming home of dear friends Chris and Danielle.

Day 7: I realize that we have developed some strange new routines.
  • On weekday afternoons, as it gets colder and darker, the kids and I hang out at the public library. I charge my cell phone and computer and call the power company, while Huckle and Sally do homework and check out every Hardy Boys book in the county that they haven’t already read.
  • Every night before dark, I collect all our flashlights and kick stacks of Hardy Boys books out of the walkways so nobody trips.
  • Once it’s dark, we all must be constantly on guard against the many, many extension cords that Husband has snaking through our whole house: up the stairs to Sally’s aquarium to try to save her tropical fish, down to the basement to power the chest freezer, through the back door to the study at the front of the house. Our house is one big fire hazard, and Husband is the Duke of Hazards. But that’s okay – we’re just making do a few more hours, because the power should come back at any moment. I call the power company, just in case.

Day 8: When we wake up, the furnace has broken. Apparently, connecting the generator has damaged the furnace. I can’t do this anymore. I give up. While the kids are in school and Husband is at his office, I pack our belongings and move our family in with the family of my kind and generous friend Carolyn. Sally is thrilled – we just moved in with her best friend! It’s like the ultimate multi-day sleepover! Husband and I are grateful to our dear friends but really, really just want normal back. We feel demoralized, defeated. We feel like refugees.

Day 9: As I’m taking another load of laundry over the Carolyn’s house, the power comes back on. It’s beautiful. Do you really appreciate how miraculous electricity is?? I press a button and the garage door opens! I flip a switch and the kitchen floods with light! I’m giddy with delight and thankfulness. The big furnace works for hours to raise the temperature from 42 degrees to 62. And 62 feels steamily, dreamily hot like a day in the tropics. 

One week later:
We’re okay now. We’re slowly winding up the extension cords and getting our lives back in order (and looking into whole-house generators). But Husband and I still feel the effects of Sandy, the PSSD. We still feel a little unsettled in our home and in our minds. I find it hard to concentrate and have to fight the urge to be a closet fatalist, expecting disaster to strike at any moment. I have irrational fears, like tortilla shortages. I can't look out the window without wondering which trees are so weakened that they'll fall on the house at the slightest breeze. I obsess over weather forecasts. But I know this will pass. 

The lesson I hope won’t pass is this: I see now how hard it is to provide thoughtful guidance to your children when you are in survival mode, when meeting the daily needs of your family for adequate shelter and food are all-consuming tasks. Our experience was only a superficial, first-world version of subsistence living – when the going got tough, we went out for Chinese. But now I think about parents who are truly “just making it” -- single parents struggling to make ends meet, families coping with severe physical or mental disabilities or emotional hardships, fragile communities caught in war or natural disaster. I have a new respect for anyone parenting under duress, since I nearly folded after nine days. It’s a lesson in being generous not only with what I have but with how I view others. "God bless us, everyone!"

2 comments:

  1. Love you! You get hit so hard every time there's a storm, I can understand where it would become a drain. I'm glad things are getting back to normal again.

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  2. Wow, thanks for sharing this! I think that day 5's role reversal is absolutely beautiful...he's such a neat kid!! I believe we'll all be feeling the PSSD for awhile...it's difficult feeling that vulnerable, not to mention we completely lost 2 weeks of our life (Thanksgiving is NEXT week? Seriously??), and apparently there was a Presidential election thrown in there somewhere. Never really bought into doomsday prep before, either, but have to say that I will be thinking much differently next time a storm comes along.

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