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Showing posts with label too much water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label too much water. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Invisible threads

Sometimes I write blog posts in my mind, while I wash dishes or when my head is on my pillow. They're perfect in every way. Then I tuck them into the deepest part of my brain and they're gone forever.

Sometimes when I feel inspired, I take on the challenge of expressing a word or phrase as a photograph or two. I find a way to wrap some interesting and appropriate (or not) text around them.

Sometimes in the days that I seem absent from this blog, I write with free and reckless abandon from the darkest depths of my soul. For me alone. These sit here silently, never to see the light of day. They hide between the posts that are public.

Sometimes I share pieces of the chaos that makes up my days.

Sometimes I write not knowing why. These are the posts that spew forth onto the page as they will, regardless of what I do to try to control them. They're disjointed. The photos land in odd places. They jump back and forth through time like a confusing movie. They never have a satisfying ending.

_______________________________________________________

It was May.

We had gone to the Big City to bury my husband's grandfather. I had finally connected with him in just the last few years. We would talk about gardening, canning, raising chickens, how to use what was harvested. He was an incredible man, a wealth of knowledge, and so much more.

honor

Before saying goodbye to him, we took a few minutes to pay our respects to something else.

It's impossible to express the enormity of an impending event to your children, when you can't quite imagine the fullness of it yourself. The river looked peaceful but strong. The battle had already begun.

on the dock

The green all around promised that Spring had finally been delivered to us, but water was promised too. And the numbers? They were just that. Completely mind boggling.

Despite the sandbagging fury that was building in town, here by the river I felt the calm before the storm.

the edge

There were invisible threads connecting my heart to everything around me. This had been my playground. The threads ran from my heart to the trees, to the meadows where I chased butterflies, to the paths you wouldn't find unless you knew where to look, to the dock where my husband asked me to marry him.

There was already water where it didn't belong.

In a few short weeks, another local blogger would find these few words appropriate: "My city looks like a war-zone right now".

But it wasn't just the big river causing trouble in our state.

Mid-June, a friend posted this on facebook: "As we watch round-the-clock coverage from the Minot tv station, we are thinking and praying for everyone there who is facing flood waters that are nearly unimaginable."

By that afternoon, she posted this: "When I evacuated from Fargo with a 5 wk. old and 2 yr old, I left (husband) there knowing he and others were staying with confidence of holding back the water. I can't imagine leaving knowing that there was no way to hold it back....we wish there was more to do to help in Minot right now."

I feel guilty. I complained when our roads weren't worthy to be called roads. I complained about our early Spring puddles and our mud.

wet


I complained about our soggy basement.

cleaning up

Often the only way I manage to keep myself together is by repeating that things could always be worse. Always. We are blessed. Always. I tell myself this over and over.

Puddles. That's what we dealt with here at our place. Inconvenient. Laughable.

We stood at the edge of the river three weeks ago, again. Blinking in the harsh mid-day sun, it was hard to believe what my eyes told me was real. The water had been fast and powerful.

Compare with the third photo above:
looking north

The entire shore had been changed. Huge chunks of land had been eaten away.

looking south

Even more bizarre, the road and parking lot had been plowed of sand. At first glance the gigantic heaps looked like out of season snow piles. In the heat of the day, part of me couldn't help but wonder why they weren't melting.

sand dunes

But what we saw here was nothing.

Along the river elsewhere, homes were destroyed.

Roads disappeared.

road gone

No one alive can remember this amount of water across our state. But after two and a half years, too much water is starting to feel normal.

My children draw pictures of sump pumps. They decorate their lilac play-house with discarded (stolen) bits of plumbing from our attempts at moving too much water. They ride their bikes through a freshly dug drainage trench at the edge of their backyard. They wear rain boots that are nowhere near tall enough for the puddles they romp through in Spring.

I can't help but wonder about the invisible threads that will connect the children of these wet years to their own childhood. How will they see their world? What stories will they tell when they're old?

more water

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Peace in the flood

This morning I was boiling over with sarcastic joy for Spring.

It went something like this... Scrape a two-inch thick layer of ice and snow off my car. Bundle the kids up. Drive across this extremely safe-looking section of highway to take the Kindergartner to school.

i need a boat

The school bus couldn't get through. From the other direction, the direction behind where I stood to take that photo. Because a gigantic car-sized pothole opened up just a bit North of the exciting waterfall you see here, only hours after I drove across that very spot yesterday.

Knowing the road was closed in that direction was weirdly nostalgic for me. Should I have warm fuzzy feelings remembering being in labor and walking across a washed-away road on planks in my quest to get to the hospital in time? Maybe yes, if the story ended well.

So this has become our Spring these last few years.

The snow melts. The water rises. The Bean has her birthday. Our roads disappear.

Not necessarily in that order.

But, you know, a funny thing happened to my day. It warmed up enough to make the snow drip off the trees.

I found beauty in my flooded backyard.

drip bubble

Stillness and peace.

drip bubble2

Amid the brown there was hope of green things to come.

lilac leaf bud

Spring will arrive here, after all. Eventually it has to.

We may not drive on our roads confident that the road is actually beneath us. We may not have a County that has the resources to fix things properly the first time so they don't wash out again and again, however ridiculous that may be... but Spring will come.

You Capture "Spring"

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Peace Like a River

Our snow melted. Most of it. There is still a surprising amount left in the tree rows. All that melted snow? It's less than ten feet from our house.

My kids have been boating.

flood

Wood Ducks have moved in.

The roads are a mess.

Our neighbor was moved by the Spirit to request the song "I've Got Peace Like a River" during church on Sunday. It was only the day before, on his birthday, that he'd been standing in waist-deep ice-cold water trying to unplug a culvert with my husband. As we were singing, I was moved by the Spirit to turn around and look at him in disbelief. He was grinning from ear to ear and waving his arms around doing the actions to the song. Clearly, in my professional opinion, he was still suffering from hypothermia.

Peace like a river?

The minute I saw those ducks in our backyard, I should have known what kind of day it was going to be. A Monday in every negative sense of the word. I should have known.

So it was that our power went out on a beautifully sunny day. And our sump pump, and our drain tile pump, and our septic tank pump quit running. And our sewage came pouring into our house like a river.

I sacrificed The Bean's squishy pink ball and shoved it down that ancient crusty shower drain in the basement, with a stick, and wedged it in with a concrete block. Apparently I'm not superwoman, because the pressure change caused a geyser of poo water to shoot straight up from a crack in the floor beside me.

Peace like a river.

I made an executive decision that the situation was out of control, and slogged my way back through three inch deep sewage in my rubber boots.

Peace like discovering that by some miracle, the cell phone actually had good reception without having to climb the windmill. My lucky day, indeed.

Peace like good neighbors who dropped a driveway/culvert project to rush over with a generator.

Peace like a quick lesson on how to use the shiny new generator my husband raced home with.

Peace like a few Japanese origami cranes to remind me that others need my prayers and truly, I have nothing to complain about.

cranes

Oh, Japan.

I have. Nothing. To complain about.

cranes2

Peace like knowing He will Never Let Go

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Rain

I am so thankful for old plaster walls and ceilings.

Our littlest one has a habit of leaving a trail of complete destruction wherever she goes, like the Peanuts character Pig-Pen, except it's not dust.  It's everything.  Absolutely everything.  I really do try my best to stay a step ahead of her, but it's just impossible.  I cannot win.

Our little Bean dumped some water onto the floor.  In her defense, she then brought me the lid of the container and said, "UH OH!".  I ran upstairs to the scene of the crime with a gigantic towel, to find only a little water.  Perhaps more impressive was the fact that my guilty little Bean was completely dry.  Not even a drop on her socks.  But the evidence, the empty container, spoke the truth.  It must have gone through the floor.

I made it back downstairs in time to hear the four-year-old announce in his don't-worry-I've-got-it-all-under-control voice, "we will call this room the rain forest".

Sure enough, it was raining.  If we hadn't been in the house and also in the deepest part of January, it might have been a soothing sound indeed.

Thankfully, our old plaster ceilings can handle a bit of rain much better than the drywall of a fancy new house.

Later that afternoon I giggled at my preschooler as he sat in the living room with an umbrella.

blue umbrella

With a sister like that around, it's always a good thing to be prepared.