“It’s all gone.” That’s what the lady on the news said.
She was an older woman, being interviewed by a reporter. Giant news camera shoved in her face.
The lady sounded like she was in a uniquely frantic state, poised somewhere between panic and absolute exhaustion. It is a frame of mind where you experience millions of emotions at once, and yet feel none of them.
I know this because that’s how she described it.
“It’s all gone. All of it.”
This was followed by images on my screen that were apocalyptic. One of America’s most historical storms. Hurricane Helene. Destruction from Florida to Virginia.
And here I am, sitting in my comfortable living room, watching the tube, thinking about how scary all this is.
These people’s lives are ruined. These people have nothing left. These are Americans. These are my brothers and sisters.
Whole towns are gone. Highways have been upended. Floodwaters rage. Mudslides. Missing persons. Missing pets. People going hungry. People trapped. People injured.
All I can
think about are the emails and texts going back and forth between those who experienced the nightmare.
“We still haven’t heard from my mom…”
“My son hasn’t called yet…”
“It’s been days and I don’t know where my husband is…”
As I write this, the death toll tops 120. And I just read somewhere that 600 are still missing. And that’s just the ones we know about.
And as I’m watching this unfold on the television, I’m about to cry. I’m about to give up, deep inside. For there is little hope left in this world, I’m thinking.
But then I see something.
On the television, I see a kid picking up debris. He’s slight and small, maybe 6 years old. Blond hair. And he’s out there helping. Busting his tail.
I see food trucks galore,…