Kiley woke me back up at about 9 that morning. And I instantly had an anxious feeling. The regular shows were still on tv but they would give a weather update probably every half hour telling how these storms were moving through Missippi on their way towards Alabama. I have never been one to really fear storms, but I had a bad feeling. I was home alone with Kiley and I am sure that might have been part of it. (My first storm home alone with my child). I called my mother at work and told her that I was feeling nervous and she said that was probably for a reason. So right then I decided that I was not going to ignore this storm. I called a friends family and asked if they wanted to come ride it out with me. They lived in an apartment so they needed a basement and I needed mental support! Fair trade huh?
They began the LIVE non-stop coverage of the weather at 2pm. A little while into it, they went to a live shot of Cullman, Alabama. (Probably about 30 miles north of my home). They had a live video of a tornado on the ground.
It was crazy to watch it actually moving through and not coming off the ground. After a few seconds, you began to see things flying around the bottom of the funnel cloud. (or a debris ball) That is when it hit you that as we were watching this, the tornado was destroying things in its path.
It was still not doing anything at our house yet. Weather was fine. About maybe an hour or so after the first storm is when the next one began to roll in. They went to a live video of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. About 50 miles southwest of my house. You would think we would have been prepared for what we were about to see since we had already seen one tornado in the day. We were wrong..
It was absolutely horrifying to see this. That is all an enormous funnel cloud. We immediately ran to the basement. And very shortly lost power. Kiley was panicky, but I couldn't blame her. I tried to calm her down but I'm sure she wasn't buying it. We waited and waited but nothing really every happened and after about 15 minutes in the basement, the sun came back out. It had passed. Relief. We had made it. As is always in the south, everybody began to walk out of their houses. There was all kinds of debris in the yard. I found a lid to a plastic storage bin and my neighbor found a cd still in the case. Everybody was glad it had passed. The neighborhood did however smell of natural gas. But everybody was fine! None of us had power anymore and because of that, we had no idea how bad it really was. At least not until the light of day..
Without power, my "smart phone" died fairly quickly. The next morning, still no power, I drove to a city that I knew had not been affected to buy a car charger for it. I bought it, plugged it in, and immediately began reciveing texts messages. One of my friends younger sister was in Tuscaloosa and rode the storm out in a cellar and her car was destroyed. And another from telling me that another friend of ours had lost his home completely. She invited me to go down and help and I agreed. I took Kiley to stay with my in-laws because they had power so she was taken care of.
He lives in Concord Alabama. I was glad to help but I was not ready for what I would be seeing. (All of the following photos were taken by me)
Concord, Alabama |
My friend's parents house. |
My friend's house. |
I wrote this blog as a total vent session! I have been cleaning and picking through rubble for anything that can be saved. Talking to people, hearing stories of miracles and stories of heartbreak. My body is sore but mostly my heart is heavy. As I tried to lay down to go to bed, the physical and mental exhaustion kicked in and the tears came. So if your reading this, stop and say a prayer or maybe even just a kind thought for the state of Alabama, it could use all the help it can get!
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