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To: NautiNurse
Hi folks, I thought I'd say a little about my area, which isn't exactly a media hotspot. I live in Jones County, MS, nearly a hundred miles north of the Gulf. We were pounded all day Monday, with the most intense winds- up to a 110 miles an hour- between 12:00 and 3:00 or so. It was awful- I have never been through a genuine hurricane before, so I have nothing to gauge it against, but let me tell you it was no fun. There were trees splintering and crashing all around our house. There was of course no power or telephones; no cell phone service, and our battery powered radio was little good because no local station was on the air. We have been getting news in tiny snippets; word of mouth, the occasional radio bulletin that concerns our area. Not having even basic communication technology is maddening. Being stuck in a hot, humid house with four other people in the midst of a raging storm is no fun. Talk about stress... The next day we got up and saw the damage. Our yard was- is- like a war zone, tree trunks splintered ten feet up, the grass invisible beneath a carpet of pine limbs. Our power line is curled up in the ditch, snapped. The road in front of our house was clogged with tree after tree after tree. Our neighbor down the road had every last one of his ten or twenty fifty-plus year old pines leveled.

One of the nice things about Mississippi, however, is that there are lots of guys with pick-up trucks, ATV's, and chainsaws, so our roads were cleared by Tuesday evening. We drove into Ellisville, our little town, after driving under dangling power masts and lines, and around great old oak trees and pecans. It was awful. I nearly cried. Century-old trees toppled, houses with holes in them, roofs crumpled like tin foil. People just walking around or sitting on their porches looking out into space. It's hot. If you've never lived down here you don't know what it's like. You lose the AC and life quickly gets miserable. You think you're under stress; try it when it's a hundred degrees outside. Our house lacked water for part of Tuesday; some parts of the county still don't have water. But we're fortunate; at least seven people died in our county, where there were no evacuation orders or anything.

Tonight I'm at a relative's house in Winston County, MS, a hundred or so miles north of Jones County, where they now have power again. We're going to stay here for a few days, then go back and clean up and wait. I have no idea when I'll be able to go back to school; we have no idea when we might get electricity again. Meanwhile I'm still in a sort of state of shock. I feel like I have jet-lag or something, only more intense. I feel selfish- the coast and NO are far worse; I can't imagine now what it must have been like- still is like- for people in Southeast Asia. I was reading St. Bernard of Clairvaux before the hurricane hit, in which he talks about us only knowing what the sick or hungry feel when we have been there; only then can we truly love them and 'share in their sufferings'. I think I have a faint glimmer of what he was talking about. I would like to say I've had further epiphanies and bursts of compassion, but I haven't. I've felt miserable; angry, tired, so on. I'm tired of rammen noodles (I had spaghetti tonight at my grandmother's; it was great); my parents' and brotherd' nerves are as shot as mine, and it shows! But we'll survive; we're alive and our house is undamaged. We have a place to go back to. There are so many in my state that don't. There are people in my county who don't. South Mississippi is an open wound tonight.

950 posted on 08/31/2005 7:38:31 PM PDT by Cleburne
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To: Cleburne
Maybe you can help us....we have a Freeper in Saucier MS....and we haven't heard from him since the hurricane rolled thru.

Can you tell me about Saucier....did it survive ..?

962 posted on 08/31/2005 7:40:52 PM PDT by Dog
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To: Cleburne

Thanks for the report. It's amazing how much damage there was so far away from the gulf.
Good luck and God bless.


969 posted on 08/31/2005 7:42:33 PM PDT by DouglasKC
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To: Cleburne
Now you know that a chainsaw is music to the ears...

So very glad you checked in, and that you are safe. Losing the radio must have been horrific.

I feel selfish- the coast and NO are far worse; I can't imagine now what it must have been like

Unfortunately, your state of shock and guilt are very normal. Right now, you need to take care of you. Take your time, and get your strength back, then you will begin the clean up. Please keep us updated.

989 posted on 08/31/2005 7:46:24 PM PDT by NautiNurse ("I'd rather see someone go to work for a Republican campaign than sit on their butt."--Howard Dean)
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To: Cleburne

Thank you for checking in. Stay safe!


1,010 posted on 08/31/2005 7:50:07 PM PDT by Andy'smom
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To: Cleburne

Thank you for sharing your story. Glad you are okay! Keep us informed about how things are going for you and your family.


1,047 posted on 08/31/2005 7:56:37 PM PDT by Abigail Adams
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