KatrinaRuns
Member
- Messages
- 10
- Location
- Tuscaloosa
After lurking all week, I might as well jump in and ask. Tuscaloosa is under the bulls-eye, correct?
I've been a member here since long before 4/27/11. I just went back to the archived thread to see my posts from that day. My last one was about an hour before it passed within a mile of my house in Tuscaloosa. Someone mentioned recently about PTSD. For me, it's not the actual tornado that brought on years of awful memories. It was the days after. My house survived. Our church did not, but a team from Texas had a food truck and disaster assistance supplies ready to go early the 28th on the "slab" of our blown-away building. When the first truck and trailer needed able bodies to go into Alberta area, I jumped on. The days of assisting from trailers were humbling and horrifying. I'll never forget the spray-painted X's on houses, imploded houses with basements, center bathrooms left standing, "loot and I'll shoot" signs, radio voices that became lifelines, crying at the number of American Flags that sprouted over the rubble, curfews, and the level of desperation people suddenly experienced. Yet, across the bridge in Northport, it was business-as-usual. Very surreal.
I'm not ready for that again. But I'm sticking here for the duration. I don't understand a lot of the scientific stuff and I REALLY appreciate those who put things in laymen's terms. I can read a color map and see that my area of West AL is not looking good. So thank you all for your patience with the new people and the long-ago members like me who are back for more. Especially those who are not from AL but are sharing info for us in AL. It's a very welcome change from where I hang out for winter weather.
I've been a member here since long before 4/27/11. I just went back to the archived thread to see my posts from that day. My last one was about an hour before it passed within a mile of my house in Tuscaloosa. Someone mentioned recently about PTSD. For me, it's not the actual tornado that brought on years of awful memories. It was the days after. My house survived. Our church did not, but a team from Texas had a food truck and disaster assistance supplies ready to go early the 28th on the "slab" of our blown-away building. When the first truck and trailer needed able bodies to go into Alberta area, I jumped on. The days of assisting from trailers were humbling and horrifying. I'll never forget the spray-painted X's on houses, imploded houses with basements, center bathrooms left standing, "loot and I'll shoot" signs, radio voices that became lifelines, crying at the number of American Flags that sprouted over the rubble, curfews, and the level of desperation people suddenly experienced. Yet, across the bridge in Northport, it was business-as-usual. Very surreal.
I'm not ready for that again. But I'm sticking here for the duration. I don't understand a lot of the scientific stuff and I REALLY appreciate those who put things in laymen's terms. I can read a color map and see that my area of West AL is not looking good. So thank you all for your patience with the new people and the long-ago members like me who are back for more. Especially those who are not from AL but are sharing info for us in AL. It's a very welcome change from where I hang out for winter weather.