It was a big storm. The television showed weather updates. The radar looked like red-and-yellow vomit.
“Find shelter!” the weather guy kept saying. “There’s a tornado on the ground in Calera!”
I texted my friend in Calera.
“You okay?” I texted.
“We’re good. But you should hear it outside. Pray.”
Pray, he said.
As I write this, 34 are dead across Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, and Mississippi. Maybe more by the time you read my words.
Who knows how many are injured. Who knows how many are missing. Who knows how many are waiting to be found. Who knows how many hundreds of thousands are without power.
Pray.
Well, I have been praying. And I really mean that. As in: I have physically folded my hands, closed my eyes, said amen, and everything.
This might not sound like a big deal, saying a simple prayer. But for me, it is a big deal. Namely, because when I was younger I used to
tell people I’d pray for them and never actually do it.
“I’ll pray for you” was just something my people said.
It’s not that I didn’t feel compassion for others, I did. But this phrase was purely verbal reflex. The words popped out before you could call them back. You were just required to say them.
If you DIDN’T tell someone you were praying for them, you were a big fat jerk who was probably a communist and added sugar to your deviled eggs.
I can’t tell you how many people throughout my life I said I’d pray for, and yet I never even uttered a word on their behalf. Heaven only knows why I didn’t.
What was I so busy doing? It takes, what, a minute or two to say a sincere prayer? I’ve spent more time picking belly button lint.…