I don’t know how to write about anything. I don’t even know who reads this shit. Who even blogs anymore? I don’t know how to put the last few months into words. They’ve been some of the hardest, and most powerful of my life. It’s not like it’s been smooth sailing this year, what with that whole pesky rising authoritarianism and all, but we were doing alright.
Then September hit. We lost a friend. Then the storm came.
10/6/24
I still don’t know how to process it. My home will never be the same again. Nothing will ever be the same again. Every time I look at my oldest pair of Docs, I will remember: pacing around my house all night the night of the storm, waiting. Waiting for the rumble of a mudslide, the crack and crash of a tree falling through the roof. Pulling them on to run out the door as a tense gray dawn broke over the valley through clouds still heavy with rain. Scrambling through ankle deep with neighbors who were once strangers, who I will now forever call friend, to check on our other neighbors. The smell of propane tanks ruptured by rushing floodwaters. Racing back up the hill in fear of an errant spark. The sound of my partner Bex’s panicked voice on the phone. A moment of confusion, trying to comprehend their words over the roar in my ears, wondering if I had raced into the storm too soon, before realizing it was the thunder rumble of adrenaline.
Adrenaline that kept me upright for two days. Trapped on the mountain with dwindling food and water. Filthy. Sweating in the cruel heat of a summer stretched by climate change. Pacing. Waiting for word from friends, from chosen family. Trying to remember if Bex had enough insulin or not. Clawing through the woods with my neighbor, trying to help them find a neighbor overdosing on fentanyl. Slicing my leg open on barbed wire. Trying to keep the cut clean by dousing it with rubbing alcohol in the dark. What it felt like to see Crain and Bex Sunday morning, after they braved 40 miles of ruined roads, swerving a borrowed car around downed power lines and sink holes. The news tricking in about the sheer scope of the devastation, that entire towns in Western North Carolina were gone.
All my nearest and dearest made it through the storm, but each of us knows someone who lost someone. The cold and indifferent hand of death might not have reached down for us, but it touched us all the same
You can smell it in the air down here by the river, the mold blooming in the dust, the acrid smell of industry in the air. Nothing will ever be the same. You can see it in the shell shocked eyes of strangers. You can feel it in the warmth of outstretched hands.
Nothing will ever be the same.
