Not about the Boy Scouts. One doesn’t want to get caught unprepared for a weather change. When I was a child we checked for dark clouds toward Baton Rouge with the wind picking up or listened to Nash Roberts on the 6:00 news for what was happening south of the lake. In 79 AD, the inhabitants of Pompeii saw flashes of fire, heard rumbles, and felt tremors under their feet until Vesuvius blew and changed lives and a place forever with only Pliny who watched from a boat in the harbor to give a written report.
Sometimes knowing in advance doesn’t solve all the possibilities of problems. Houston has had more rain than usual in the last two weeks. One storm was unique, a repeat from 1997 being the last of its specific type. The word went out for several days under Extreme Weather Warnings. As the evening of arrival approached, I put loose pots in the garage and unplugged the computer, and read while daylight lasted. Then rain lashed, wind blew, and the power failed and stayed off for 18 hours for me. However, this storm had a name. A derecho, which is a thunderstorm that lasts over several hours and extends a forward hop, skip, and jump motion for as much as 400 miles, and sustains winds up to 100 mph. From Austin to Florida, some areas had trees down, roofs removed, and windows broken.
An approaching event isn’t very dramatic if one is not on hand to offer the worrying that waiting requires. I was having a joyful carefree trip in New York satisfied I had prepared for eventualities by again unplugging my computer when I got a 10:30 p.m. text from a neighbor. A short rain storm blew though. Yet the wind blew down a tree which leveled a fence and jiggled loose the pole that allowed electricity to travel to 96 families. Across the street had no problems. I was without power for 44 hours.
To wrap this up, the paper keeps saying that this will be the story of our Texas summer. My preparation will continue to be to unplug the computer. After dumping contents of the freezer twice, only keeping two days ahead of food supples sounds like a good idea. Some of you who read may still be trying to repair from the first storm and working on the anxiety that arises with the possibility of a repeat performance. As life has been and will continue to be, storms will come. My middle two paragraphs are my most recent stories. For each of us every storm is our story of preparation, enduring, survival, gratitude in small places, and finding a new start over waiting for us.
God is our refuge and strength, an ever present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the sea, though its waters roar and foam, and the mountains quake with their surging.
Psalm 46: 1 – 3