After a Hurricane It’s Hard To Go Home
Families who live in such high possibility of a hurricane disaster suffer a low grade to acute anticipative stress. Often every hurricane season the fear and anxiety rises as to the possibility of a hurricane disaster.
It’s important that if you select to live in such a higher disaster risk community that you also take care of your emotional needs, particularly those surrounding the potential of a hurricane disaster. Often emotional hurricane survival depends on how well you have done your hurricane preparedness.
In many articles I have written about the physical emergency preparedness. That is vital to your physical well being. There is also the emotional emergency disaster preparedness that individuals, families and households must also deal with. The more you are able to deal effectively with the emotional issues of hurricane preparedness the more likely that you will also a better disaster recovery experience.
I personally believe that every one needs to have an emotional emergency preparedness kit as well as the physical low cost emergency survival kits. These emotional emergency preparedness kits are different for each person. Only you can really design and establish your own emotional emergency preparedness necessities.
Such an emotional disaster kit may include some of the following sort of items:
o Photos of your family
o Small but meaningful items like baby bracelets from the hospital or birthing center you have saved form your children.
o Recordings of your loved one’s voices. These can become priceless years later when they are no longer alive and with us.
o Spiritual support items if so inclined like a favorite rosary, Bible, Koran, prayer shawl or head covering.
o A holiday keepsake item if that is important to you
o A copy of a hand written letter form loved ones. Often there is great comfort in reviewing the greeting cards or letters that some one significant in our lives that we can refer to later in our life. Just seeing their handwriting and the way the affectionately referred to you can be extremely important and comforting
o Drawings that your children or grandchildren have given you.
o Hair clippings of you children’s first hair cut perhaps.
o A loved one’s memento that tells you that you are very special. For you really are special to many.
o You may also wan to take with you a favorite pet item if that is helpful also. Remember pets are also for many members of our households and it is special to remember items form bygone times around pets as well.
All of theses and many more are just some of the items that are emotional comforts to us, especially during times of difficulties and challenges. So as you prepare your emergency kit and review your emergency preparedness checklist to include your emotional emergency preparedness kit as well this kit will certainly help in the hurricane recovery process.
I’ve included a copy of an article about trying to go back to your community after Hurricane Katrina. I hope it gives you a clearer understanding of how challenged it can be for some communities and families after a disaster.
Terrie
Parish still struggling to rebuild from Katrina
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hu4uOyj0HC53UWOu1XAJGGHogR6wD9160ERO0
By one estimate, less than half the 67,000 pre-storm population is back in this
There is no hospital, shopping options are limited, and teachers are in short supply. Many returnees cling to the life they once knew at remnant neighborhood hangouts.
Broken streets, concrete slabs where houses stood and abandoned strip malls are the veneer. The unseen wrath of Katrina is its theft of the soul of St. Bernard.
Taffaro believes the clock is ticking on St. Bernard's future. His priorities: speeding up the pace of rebuilding homes, schools and other infrastructure, and taking the politically risky step of proposing a smaller habitation footprint.
"I want St. Bernard to be the hardworking, determined community it always was," he said.
Isolated in the Mississippi River delta between the Gulf of Mexico and
Canary Islanders who settled fishing communities in the 1700s, white flight to the suburbs of New Orleans in the 1950s and '60s and deep-rooted black communities created a blue-collar independence set amid oil refineries, alligator-infested swamps and the site of the Battle of New Orleans.
Generations of families lived within blocks of each other. They had what they needed — shopping, ball games on Friday nights, friends and crawfish boils.
Since Katrina, things have changed.
Henry Rodriguez Jr., longtime parish leader defeated by Taffaro last fall, remembers when he could walk into a store and know almost everyone in it.
"That's not true today," he said as he drove his pickup along streets so warped and broken that doing the speed limit can be risky.
Some residents, black and white, complain about Hispanic workers in the area now, many talk about crime, and it's hard to find anyone who says rebuilding hasn't been agonizingly slow.
"This whole entire thing is a joke," said George Tustin, who left
At least $1 billion in federally funded infrastructure repair is being done. Taffaro said parish leaders have made strides in penetrating the recovery bureaucracy to get work moving on sewerage, fire stations, schools and post offices.
But the task is enormous. On Aug. 29, 2005, flooding from Katrina came from almost every direction. A survey showed virtually every building in St. Bernard was damaged. As in neighboring
One of the biggest challenges, as in other areas lashed by Katrina across the
Red X's brand thousands of houses that parish leaders want demolished. The state plans to transfer to local control thousands more bought from homeowners who didn't want to return. Some might be renovated and attract new residents. Others may be torn down. Taffaro said he envisions neighborhoods with more green space and homesites with larger yards.
Few expect St. Bernard to reach its pre-storm population soon. A major obstacle is the lack of a hospital, though efforts are under way to build one. Parish estimates put the population at 32,000. Chief administrative officer Dave Peralta says he'd be happy to have 45,000 by 2013.
"Will we have as many schools? No. But certainly things will be a lot better and more progressive," he said.
Jeff Pohlmann hopes so. He's been doing a one-hour commute from north of Lake Pontchartrain to
Pohlmann puts up with the drive because he feels a deep connection to
There are signs the St. Bernard he remembers is there. Some neighborhoods are ghostly quiet at night, but in others children play pick-up games in their driveways. Store clerks presenting your bill still tack "baby" onto their thank you in an unmistakable St. Bernard drawl. Softball leagues are back, and schools are re-establishing community hubs.
Still, Taffaro fears more serious day-to-day struggles could be overwhelming. He knows moving forward will take digging deep into St. Bernard's emotional reserve, and getting over a sense of being forgotten.
Just up the road from St. Bernard is
So they take out their frustrations by singing karaoke or shooting darts at hangouts like the Dog House, one of 15 bars, casinos and grills the local tourism bureau lists as nightlife. Others replant roots at the festivals that are quintessential St. Bernard.
A spring crawfish festival drew families and friends, many out of touch since Katrina.
Anthony Mendoza said he doesn't regret returning. He has a new neighbor, his only one, a woman from
"This is home," he said.
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