This is in response to Sensational Haiku Wednesday.
Today's prompt is "Spooky."
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
SEPTEMBER 2004 - MY WORST MONTH EVER
Write a post inspired by the word: Flooded
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Hurricane Frances, Sept 2004 |
SEPTEMBER 2004
I was happy to have Labor Day (Sept 6th) plus 5 additional days off.
After 13 months of higher-than-normal rainfall resulting in an already-high water table, on Wed Sept 8th, the remnants of hurricane Frances broke the 1-day rainfall record in our area, filling our basement with 18 inches of water. It was a mess but not devastating. The washer, dryer and water heater still worked. We weren’t sure about our two furnaces as the gas company had turned off the gas. The last 3 days of my “vacation” were used for flood cleanup.
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Hurricane Ivan, Sept 2004 |
Meanwhile, our cat Patches was admitted to the animal hospital with kidney problems and was not expected to survive.
The next Friday (Sept 17th) I was on my way to deliver groceries to my 90-yr-old mother, but I couldn’t drive past flooded roads because hurricane Ivan had arrived, breaking the 1-day rainfall record of the previous week.
Before the day was over, we had 4 feet of water in the basement.
I was awarded an unpaid leave-of-absence for the clean up. My husband repaired the dryer. He replaced the motor in the washer and one heating element in the water heater. Luckily he has every tool known to mankind, so we pressure-washed everything in the basement and sucked up the muck with a wet-dry vac. (That makes it sound easy, but we had moved tons of things to the upper floors, and lots of things were soaked or ruined. It took days to clean up.)
The following Tuesday, I was able to deliver groceries to my mother who lived 45 min. away, but as soon as I entered the house, I smelled gas. The gas company found leaks in her gas lines, furnace, and stove. Our place was such a mess, we couldn’t invite her to stay with us. I bought her a new stove by phone. A relative who lived in her community, arranged for a plumber and furnace installer. Because my mother would be without a stove, furnace, and hot water for several days we ordered Meals on Wheels and borrowed a space heater for her. Luckily the weather stayed warm.
After a week at the vet’s (& a bill of $500) Patches came home. She was not well, but doing okay.
Two days later Calico, the oldest of our four cats, seemed listless on Friday evening (Sept 24). We planned to call the vet and take her there on Saturday, but she died later that night. She was a stray we had adopted five years earlier. She had been old, had no teeth, but seemed healthy up to that day, and went peacefully in her sleep. We were glad we had saved her from several years of cold winters and dumpster-diving.
I had felt rather nauseous that Fri night. On Sat Sept 25th, the final day of my leave-of-absence I threw up all morning. My doctor directed me to the emergency room.
For about 36 hours, I threw up fluid as fast as the hospital could pump it into me. I had a urinary-tract and an intestinal infection. I may have ingested microbes during the cleanup. The doctor mentioned that stress probably acerbated my symptoms. The hospital kept me for 2 days and directed me to stay home for another five. I lost my appetite for several weeks.
Between vacation time, leave-of-absence days, a week off for illness, I worked only a few days in Sept. I could have become accustomed to a schedule like that if it didn’t come with 2 floods, massive cleanups, gas leaks, sick and dying cats, loss of pay, and whatever miserable illness caught me.
My husband repaired the main furnace. The other furnace needed to be replaced. FEMA arrived and promptly sent a check that covered some, but not all, of our losses. Within a year, the washer, dryer, and water heater died and, sadly, so did Patches.
Yet, many people in my area lost everything, so I felt fortunate.
I tried to look at the positive. We got rid of useless stuff from our basement. I lost 15 pounds in 2 weeks and our cat-hair problem was reduced.
On the other hand, I don’t want to go through another month like that again. EVER!
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October 2012: This week there were dire predictions of torrential rains and high winds from hurricane Sandy in our area, but we dodged the bullet.
This page tells you how you can help victims of hurricane Sandy and provides links to 9 charities with top ratings (those that spend a large percent of their donations to help those in need, rather than on fundraising and salaries.)
Friday, October 5, 2012
GRATITUDE - short fiction

This story is in response to a writing prompt at Views from Raven's Nest. Each week Raven chooses words or phrases for anyone to use in a piece of writing. She creates a 10-word challenge and a 5-word challenge, or one can use both for the 15-word mega-challenge.
Words for the 10-word challenge this week: gratitude, immediate, vivid, choice, fragments, carving, charity, solitude, lagging, where did I put my glasses
And for the mini: irresponsible, teddy bear, colorful, knife and fork, wheels
“Where did I put my glasses?” Carson asked.
“Gees, Car. They’re bifocals. Why don’t you just wear them all the time?” Georgia asked.
Except in the shower, her glasses were on her face every waking moment. She could see only blurs without them and, lately, colors weren’t as vivid as they once were.
Georgia wondered how she had managed to marry two irresponsible people where eye glasses were concerned. Her first husband would drop his, then step on them, resulting in the cost of new frames and lenses, plus fragments of glass hiding in the carpeting for months.
Carson misplaced his several times a day. When they were in a hurry, he was always lagging behind searching for them. She wondered if it was a choice he made to annoy her. Georgia didn’t like solitude, but at moments like this, she wished she had remained single after her divorce.
Georgia scurried toward the car carrying a large teddy bear wrapped in clear plastic under one arm while she juggled her purse and a huge colorful sack in the other. She paced by the car waiting for Carson.
Finally he emerged from the house, eyewear in place, carrying two grocery bags with celery leaves poking from the tops. As was his habit, he circled the car making sure the way was clear to back out of the driveway and checking the wheels to see that the tires were properly inflated. Georgia tapped her foot and sighed until he unlocked the trunk.
They rode silently to the high school. Georgia wondered how Carson could be so meticulous about everything to do with the car, but his glasses were always an afterthought.
Gerogia checked the dashboard clock. It was after 7:00 am. They were running late. Again.
While Carson parked, Georgia rushed into the back entrance of the building. She handed the teddy bear to one of the high school volunteers to place with other toys to be given to a charity that provided Christmas gifts to children in women’s shelters. Then she headed toward the cafeteria’s kitchen where a dozen volunteers were already preparing turkey dinners for that day’s Thanksgiving feast while high school students set up and prepared folding tables and chairs, adding the placemats and centerpieces they had made in art class.
Immediately, she opened her sack to pull out five huge plastic bags of bread cubes she had toasted in her oven for the stuffing. She placed Carson’s favorite carving knife and fork on the stainless steel table for later. When Carson arrived with his grocery bags, she chopped celery, onions and spices.
Along with the other volunteers, Carson and Georgia worked and sweated in the kitchen stuffing birds donated by local supermarkets, running a huge mashed potato mixer, cooking vegetables, tossing salad, stirring gravy, and slicing pies.
When the birds were roasted, Carson took pride in being the best carver in the lot.
Before the buffet was ready, those the recession had hit the hardest had arrived and waited at the tables.
As soon as the lunch crowd was fed, they began all over again for the dinner guests who would show up later.
After everyone had been fed and more high school students arrived to clean the kitchen, Carson took Georgia’s hand as she limped to the car.
“Your heel spur acting up?” he asked.
“Uh, huh.”
“It was a long day,” Carson said.
“Always,” Georgia agreed, turning to kiss her husband.
Georgia was filled with gratitude that she had married a man who ---now that they were both retired ---was willing to work with her at the soup kitchen once a week and here, at the high school for six additional holiday meals each year, and was enjoying it.
So what if he could never find his glasses, she thought.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
FLAMED

This post was inspired by Mama Kat's writing prompt: Tell a story (based on truth or fiction) where someone is playing with fire--literally or metaphorically--and probably shouldn't be. Below is my true story.
When I arrived at my Peace Corps site in a small town in northeastern Brazil in August of 1967 and discovered I would be living without electricity or running water, it seemed like my life there would be much like a two-year-long camping trip. I had been a Girl Scout. I thought I was prepared for anything.
It was fun for a while, using my scouting and camping skills and learning new ones to survive the harsh conditions there, but after a while, I missed many of the conveniences of home.
On one occasion, forgetting that things didn’t work in Glória the way they did at home, could have turned into a disaster.
In order to furnish her extra bedroom, Brunie (another Volunteer who had already been in Glória for a year) helped me purchase a hand-made wooden bed at a carpenter's shop, along with an extra chair, a wardrobe and a mattress which was a large cotton sack filled with straw. The mattress was comfortable enough, although I needed to add more straw from time to time since the original straw eventually broke into small pieces and settled on the bottom side of the sack.
I always slept under a mosquito net, as protection from mosquitos, scorpions and beetles that carried Chagas disease.
While one side of the house faced an open area, the opposite side was the wall shared with our landlord’s home. The opposite wall of his house was shared with another neighbor and so on down the street. There was a space between the horizontal top of each wall and the pointed roof, leaving a large triangular opening between homes. This made it easy to converse with the neighbors next door, but it also meant one could hear everything going on in the landlord's home. He and his wife were newlyweds, so you might imagine what "everything" means.
While one side of the house faced an open area, the opposite side was the wall shared with our landlord’s home. The opposite wall of his house was shared with another neighbor and so on down the street. There was a space between the horizontal top of each wall and the pointed roof, leaving a large triangular opening between homes. This made it easy to converse with the neighbors next door, but it also meant one could hear everything going on in the landlord's home. He and his wife were newlyweds, so you might imagine what "everything" means.
Our front door left an inch or two of open space between the bottom of it and the floor. This, plus the open area between houses, meant that unwanted varmints could enter the house, either from outside or from neighbors' homes. We had toads, mice, bats, roaches, tarantulas, and an occasional snake in the house.
I hadn’t taken much jewelry with me, only a few pair of earrings, several inexpensive rings and a watch which I kept in a box on the wicker table I used as a night stand. One morning, while making the bed, I knocked the box to the floor, scattering everything under the bed.
Because of the vermin that could be there, I was not about to reach into the shadows below the mattress without seeing what was lurking there. So, I did what I would do at home. I grabbed a lamp, and placed it under the bed. I started to pick up my jewelry before I realized that a kerosene lantern with an open flame under a mattress filled with straw was not the brightest idea I ever had.
Because of the vermin that could be there, I was not about to reach into the shadows below the mattress without seeing what was lurking there. So, I did what I would do at home. I grabbed a lamp, and placed it under the bed. I started to pick up my jewelry before I realized that a kerosene lantern with an open flame under a mattress filled with straw was not the brightest idea I ever had.
I yelled for Brunie who was, luckily, in the kitchen, to bring a pot of water from the huge ceramic storage container there. Meanwhile I beat the flames with a towel.
Within a few minutes, the fire was out. The sheets were burned in one large area as was part of my mattress. Considering it was filled with dry straw, I was surprised it wasn't engulfed in flames within seconds. The wooden frame of the bed was blackened on a small area on one side, more scorched than burned.
Fortunately the mosquito net had been flung aside before I started to make the bed. If it had caught fire, the flames might have leaped to the ceiling where the net was attached to a lattice of wood that supported the ceramic tile roof. Since the homes were attached, the fire might have spread from lattice to lattice, resulting in the collapse of every roof on that side of the street.
Glória had no fire department. Because there was no running water, residents would not have been able to use hoses to spray water on their ceilings. Any attempt to throw water that high from buckets would have been futile.
I am so glad I hadn't caused neighbors to lose their homes or belongings. Worse yet would have been if I had caused someone a serious injury.
I could imagine the headline: PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER'S STUPIDITY LEAVES DOZENS OF BRAZILIANS HOMELESS. But luckily that didn't happen.

After cleaning the charred, wet mess in my room, I carried my mattress to the carpenter's store to buy new sheets and have the mattress cover re-stuffed and patched. It retained a burnt odor for months.

After cleaning the charred, wet mess in my room, I carried my mattress to the carpenter's store to buy new sheets and have the mattress cover re-stuffed and patched. It retained a burnt odor for months.
Then I headed to a different shop to make another prudent purchase ---a flashlight.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
241 Front Street (Fiction)
This story is in response to a writing prompt at Views from Raven's Nest. Each week Raven chooses words or phrases for anyone to use in a piece of writing. She creates a 10-word challenge and a 5-word challenge, or one can use both for the 15-word mega-challenge.
This weeks words are: (I chose to use all 15)
vocalize, vandal, virtue, visitor, vim and vigor, vermillion, vague, vacuous, vines, validate, voodoo, vixen, veracity, valid, vital
241 Front Street
Vivian took one step up the outside wooden stairs to her second-floor apartment at 241 East Front Street, Sarah, her landlady, was trimming the dead vines from the trellis on the side of the porch.
“Hi, Viv," Sarah yelled over her shoulder. "Say, who was that hunky visitor with you last night?”
Vivian answered. “No one. I wasn’t even home.”
“Don’t kid me, Viv. I heard the two of you up there. Sounded like you were having a very, well, um, lively encounter. I’ve always liked a man with vim and vigor," said Sarah with a come-hither stare that wouldn’t have turned on a sex addict.
“Really, Sarah, I wasn’t here. I stayed at my sister’s last night working to defeat that idiot who is running for City Council in the third district again.”
“Oh, him,” Sarah interrupted. “Now that is one fine looking man. Him with the $3,000 suits and a one-cent brain.”
“Yeah, and the vacuous look on his face. Even his wife couldn’t stand him. She left him last year.”
Sarah looked at Vivian’s vermillion bag. “What’ve you got there?”
“Campaign information.”
She hefted her large tote overflowing with papers to the third step as if to validate the veracity of her statement.
“Someone was in my apartment? How did he get in? What did he look like?”
“Well, I thought you let him in,” answered Sarah. She scrunched her forehead and added, “He was tall.”
Dissatisfied with Sarah’s vague description, Vivian demanded to know the color of his hair and eyes, what he was wearing, and what time he arrived and left.
“Well, it was late when he got here. I peaked out the window before I turned off the porch light. He headed up the stairs as if he belonged, so I just assumed, well, you know. But I didn’t see him leave. Maybe he’s still there.”
“And his appearance?”
“Well, I thought he wore sunglasses, but then I thought it must have been the way the light hit them. He had on a dark turtleneck pulled up on his chin, a ball cap. Oh, and dark pants and maybe gloves.”
“Did he have a car?”
“There was a silver car where you usually park, so I thought it was yours, that you had gone up ahead of him. And I think he carried something, maybe a knapsack.”
Vivian picked up her bag and started up the stairs.
“Hold on a minute.” Sarah entered the house, emerging a minute later with a hammer in each hand.
At the top of the stairs, the women found the door ajar with a broken lock. Inside, Vivian’s place had been ransacked. Everything she owned was strewn on the floor. Pillows had been cut open, clothes had been ripped, and food containers emptied. Her living room walls had been spray-painted with “You lying vixen!” and “You are without virtue, you slut” in fluorescent pink.
The women tiptoed through the mess in silence, until Sarah came upon a voodoo doll nailed to the dinette table with what looked like blood spattered over it. Then she started to vocalize, “No, no, no, no, no,” which eventually turned into a low-pitched moan. She slumped onto the couch releasing a puff of stuffing from a huge slit.
Vivian grabbed her cell phone to dial 911.
It took the police forty minutes to arrive. After Vivian and Sarah had given their vital statistics and made statements to Detectives Johnson and Ramsey, the men continued questioning Vivian. Was it her ex-husband or ex-boyfriend? Was she having problems with someone at work? Who hated her? Then they seemed to imply she had done the damage herself to generate sympathy from an estranged lover. Vivian had no idea who the vandal could be, but the police didn’t seem to think her statements were valid and continued asking the same questions over and over. What they didn’t do was take photos or fingerprints.
Vivian was not only angry at the person who had done this, she was furious at the police.
After they left, she used her cell phone to take photos of the mess. Then she picked through her belongings and packed a suitcase with a few intact items, grabbed her red tote, and closed her door as best she could before heading to her sister’s home.
The next week, Vivian sorted through her possessions, salvaging what she could, while Sarah and a handyman repaired the door, cleaned the mess, and repainted the walls.
Vivian moved to the far end of town, instructing Sarah to give her new address to no one.
Two weeks later, Detective Ramsey called her cell phone to tell her that a similar incident had happened two blocks from her old apartment.
“You’re lucky,” he said. “When the occupant arrived home, the intruder tried to stab her. But he stumbled over the mess he had made and missed. The woman had her keys in her hand and managed to poke him in the eye. He'll probably be wearing an eye patch for the rest of his life. That'll ruin his handsome good looks.
"It turns out he was the woman’s ex-husband."
When the police questioned the suspect in the hospital, he broke down and admitted that the vandalism of Vivian’s apartment had been a mistake. He had gone to 241 instead of 421 on Vivian’s street.
“You’ll be seeing a story on the evening news. The chief is holding a press conference right now. You know, the idiot didn’t even ask for a lawyer,” he added.
“Good looking and stupider than a turnip,” said Vivian. “He ought to become a politician.”
Detective Ramsey paused, then said, “Funny you should mention that.”
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