Photo credit: Wayne Gilmore

Facebook.com/sandimarlisa
My town is on fire.
When it was just underwater 3 years ago.
I stood at my kitchen sink washing dishes, looking out to my backyard. Succulents line my kitchen window. A half filled cup of water sits beside the sink.
Itโs dark. I imagine orange flames licking up the last of the trees the hurricane didnโt destroy.
I really only have one. My pecan tree.
Hurricane Michael in 2018 lifted up my childrenโs play house and hurled it over my roof into the neighborโs front yard.
Amongst other things.
My children were sad to lose their swings, slide and fort. So when we moved back in months later, I installed a tree swing and put it beneath the Pecan tree.
It wasnโt much, but it was something.
Iโve had my coffee on that swing many mornings. Iโve laid back and looked through the leaves framing the sun in green.
I imagined an ember catching the entire tree on fire, taking that away too.
โHey.โ
Eli, my boyfriend, came up to me and put his arms around my waist. We had a good day. It was our one year anniversary of our first date. He made me and the kids breakfast, then we went to the park and ate watermelon and played in the bay. Then we made lunch and went to see a movie afterwards.
I carefully monitored the fire the whole day. Itโs five miles from me.
โHey.โ I responded.
โWhat can I do?โ
I sighed, scrubbing a dish. โTell me why it feels like my town is cursed.โ
โDonโt say that.โ
โItโs hard not to think it.โ I slammed a dish into the dishwasher and grabbed another.
โMaybe go sit down.โ
โNo. Iโm rage cleaning.โ
โWhat do you need?โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โLike. Do you want an apple, a banana?โ He paused and gripped my hips. โA massage?โ He breathed in my ear.
I smiled a little then. โNo.โ
โHey Eli! You said youโd watch me play a game!โ
My son, Judah, sat in the living room ready to rage play video games. My daughter, Lorelai, was already asleep on the couch.
Judah heard us talk about the fire and his breathing immediately grew rapid. I had to take his face in my hands and tell him itโs not like the hurricane.
โHow do you know? How do you know it isnโt?โ
And I paused. Reminding myself of the promise I made to never shield them from reality, but help them deal with it.
โI canโt know for sure. But thereโs no need for that kind of panic yet. There are a few homes that have been destroyed, others damaged, and that is horrific. Absolutely horrific. Butโฆ with the hurricane. It was the entire town. Right now we are not in immediate danger.โ
โAre you sure?โ
And I offered him my weak, โYes.โ
โLet me talk to your mom for a minute and Iโll be there.โ Eli answered him.
โOkay!โ And Judah sat back on his perch on the ottoman in front of the TV.
Eli grabbed my half filled glass of water and moved to the fridge to refill it. I wondered if he was thirsty.
But no. He just sat the full glass back down beside me. Because I gave him no other way to help me.
My heart softened. He was always doing little things like that.
I stared at the glass before saying, โIf you have any weed. I could use that.โ
โSay no more.โ
We stepped outside for a moment and I blew smoke towards the stars. The night was clear. A beautiful day, but not good for raging fires. Rain wasnโt expected for three days.
โI donโt know if I can make it through another disaster.โ I said. โNot again. Not this soon. People are losing their homes for the second time in three years.โ
Eli said nothing. Just listened.
I walked back inside to finish scrubbing dishes. My chest felt lighter, my thoughts not so urgent.
A bubble from the soap floated through the air. Eli pointed it out and our eyes followed it until it popped near the fluorescent lighting in my kitchen.
Eli slowly turned his eyes to me in a challenge. โDo it again.โ
We then erupted in a soap bubble fight, using way too much Dawn dish soap, the sink running. Our hands became bubble wands and soon we were laughing hysterically.
โEliiiiiiii.โ Judah called from the living room.
So we moved to the couch and watched my anxious son play video games.
โMom. How will we know if we need to leave?โ
โThere will be knocks on the door.โ
I ran over in my mind the things I would grab.
Butโฆ there really wasnโt anything I could fit in the back of my truck.
My piano I learned on wasnโt exactly movable. Maybe Iโd grab my childrenโs paintings off the walls. My children could grab what they wished.
โWe can go to my condo on the beach if it comes to that.โ Eli said.
Suddenly, we heard knocking sounds.
โJudah. Turn the volume off.โ
Eli jumped up to check the door. โI donโt know what that was but no one is here.โ
What little reprieve the weed had given me was gone.
I snuggled Judah on the couch until his eyes closed. I tried to ease his racing thoughts.
That child has been through so much before nine years of age. I placed my hand on his head and whispered a small prayer for a peaceful night. Then I kissed Lorelai on the head before heading to bed. Eli was waiting for me. And I crawled in the bed and let him wrap me in his arms.
โI know itโs a lot. Youโve got a lot going on.โ He said softly. โAll I know is a turtle walked in your house.โ
I laughed at the memory.
My brother, whoโs stationed in Germany, called me the day Russia dropped bombs on Ukraine. He told me he was on standby to be deployed.
It was an emotional conversation. But when I walked out of my bedroom, Eli was sitting on the floor next to my front door. A turtle had walked in my house.
โI didnโt do it.โ Eli lifted up his hands. โHe did it on his own.โ
I had been cooking and got distracted, so smoke filled my house. I had to open all the doors.
Hence, the turtle.
โRemember?โ Eli said, stroking my hair. โItโs shell was a little cracked. You looked it up and a turtle means protection. Protection walked in your front door.โ He held me tightly. โItโs gonna be okay, Sandi.โ
It was an uneasy night. But Eli was there when I woke up in a panic. He pulled me in closer when I tossed and turned.
The next day. I spent seven hours singing.
Singing.
I felt so ridiculous, so utterly useless.
โYou know what stood out to me when your brother called you?โ Eli said.
โWhat?โ I responded.
โHe saidโฆ Iโm proud of you for being a musician. When he was told he might get deployed for war, thatโs what he wanted to say to you.โ
And so, I sang. I sang all day framed in smoke.
Iโd never be the same after the hurricane. Once youโve experienced disaster, you know the exact terror. You know the ache of loss. You know the sting of grief.
And not just your own, but the grief of everyone you know, experiencing it all at the same time.
My whole town held our breath that night and every night since.
Today, my town is on fire.
It was just underwater.
But this morning, I woke up with old words in my head.
โWhen you pass through the waters,
I will be with you;
and when you pass through the rivers,
they will not sweep over you.
When you walk through the fire,
you will not be burned;
the flames will not set you ablaze.โ
Old words my town taught me.
So today, Iโm going to take my children out for a kayaking adventure.
There will be smoke framing our view.
Disaster all around.
But my children, who are 9 and 7.
They already know how to laugh in the face of terror.
They already know how to live when there are threats of death.
And we will do it again.
My town is not cursed.
My town is a Phoenix.
And we will rise from these ashes.
We will laugh. We will sing. We will kayak, dammit.
Weโll help our neighbors rebuild.
Weโll comfort the broken-hearted. Weโll take care of our people.
Because thatโs who we are.
We cannot always choose what happens to us, but if thereโs one thing I know my town can doโฆ
Itโs that when we get struck down, we come back ten times better than before.
And if it is our lot to do it again.
Then we will do it again.
Wonderful!!!
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