Thank You

teacher

Earning My Ears
Joined
Mar 9, 2005
Messages
9
My family and I live in South MS, about one and a half hours from the Gulf Coast. We live on a dead end county road with about 14 houses. All of our houses were surrounded by beautiful pine and oak trees. On Aug. 29, 2005, our landscape changed. Standing at our French doors watching all the trees fall to the ground is an experience that I will never forget. When the winds died down, we and our neighbors began to gather in front yards and walk up and down the road (there was no way a car could get out of our driveways). As horrible as it was, we were safe. A few of the homes had trees on the roofs and storage buildings and barns were a thing of the past. Shortly after, the men began work on clearing a pass down the road. By the next morning we could get out of our little neighborhood. We decided to try to get to my dad's. As we traveled the 10 miles to my father's home, we found that neighbors were helping neighbors and strangers were helping strangers. We found my father safe and his house OK. He would not leave his house. By Tuesday night, we were lucky to have a generator. One of our good friends is the head of one of the local chicken companys and people that work for his company in Ala. were able to get three generators to Laurel. That is the best $1000 WE had ever spent. Life slowly moved on. By Wed. my husband who works in the engineering department of a local company that builds transformers was working long hours. After three weeks, we returned to school ( I teach at a local high school). Blue roofs are now the norm around here, FEMA is considered a dirty word, everyone waits to hear from their insurance adjuster, but we have survived.

What did Katrina teach me? Katrina taught me many things but most of all that people care! Everyone I know shared what they had with others. We helped each other. On Thursday of that week, my husband and I left Laurel to go to Meridian to get cash for ourselves and several of our friends. (I will have several hundred dollars in cash if we are ever hit by another hurricane.) On the way there we passed a line of power trucks heading south. It was the only time I cried. I knew then that we were not alone. The rest of the country did care and they would help. And help you have!! Churches and other organizations from many states have come to our small town to help in any way they could. People have given their time and money to help this part of the country. Your prays have lifted us up and given us strength-during and after the storm. So thank you for what you and this great country has done to help us overcome Katrina. It will be years before thing are as they once were. I will miss my trees, but new ones will grow, and as they grow I will remember all the kindness and goodness that has been shown to us during this time.

Thank you,
Martha
 
So nicely and warmly said, Martha. And good to hear things are moving on some, making progress. You all remain in good wishes and continued prayers. :hug:
 
Thank you for posting your experiences!!! It is a wonderful feeling when people help people, even complete strangers. Good luck with the clean up. I know it will take a long time. We still have blue roofs from Ivan and that storm wasn't as bad as Katrina.
 
We lost so much here. I live in Waggaman. On the westbank of New Orleans in Jefferson Parish. I am happy to be alive. Just a quick hang in there. We will rebuild.
 

Oh, I could totally relate to crying at the sight of the power trucks. We have seen trucks from literally all over the country. We are just off I-55 and see alot of traffic coming into the state. I always smile and wave at these workers. They have given up alot to come down here and help.

They used the parish agriculture arena here for a "staging area". These men were actually sleeping on metal bleachers (when they had a few hours to rest). I felt so bad for them. Between the mosquitos, heat, and a hard bench, I doubt they ever rested very well.

I thank everyone who sent a penny, a canned good, a bottle of water, or came down here to help. Not just Americans. There was a report on the news tonight about an 18 wheeler from Canada that pulled into Baton Rouge today. These people actually sent things like TVs for people who had lost everything. Just when I think I've seen the best of people....something else tops it. :cheer2:

Lots of :love1: to everyone!
 
The Province of Ontario has agreed to pay wages and flights for Provincial Employees to go to Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas to assist in the relief effort. 4 of my co-workers are enroute to Mississippi as I write this, and another is bound for New Orleans. They are a few of 100 from the Public Service group, that are coming in the first wave. In a month, they will be replaced by 150, and hopefully each month, as required, 150 will fly down to help.
Hopefully a positive can come from this tragedy. :grouphug:
 
Thank You Digskat and everyone else who has helped in any way. We would not be as far along in the cleanup if not for the help from others near and far!
 
Another thank you to everyone across the nation who helped our area in any way. We are slowly but surely coming back, and could not have done it without the outpouring of help.

I don't know if this made the national media or not, but early on after the storm, an out of town power company worker was electrocuted when restoring power in the area. This broke my heart, to think some young man left his family to come down here to help and was lost...my prayers are with his family.
 

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