Waiting for Sandy
I grew up in the middle of the country, not right in tornado alley but close enough. So hurricanes are not part of my birthright. They are, however, something I've gotten used to living on the East Coast. What sets them apart for me is not the strong winds (those were worse with the derecho we had in June) or the copious rain, but the fact that you know they're coming.
Tornadoes catch you unaware. A sultry spring afternoon, a strange light in the sky, and before you know it you're huddling in a stairwell while your roof is blown off.
Hurricanes are charted and observed. We woke up today to this photograph in the Washington Post. As I write I think of what we still need to do: fill up the cars; charge the phones, laptop and iPod (heck, even the toothbrush); secure the deck furniture.
Time to prepare — and also time to worry. I remind myself that — all talk of hybrid cyclones aside, headlines that call this the storm of the century — at the end of the day there's often more hype than hurricane.
What will these waves look like a few hours from now?
Tornadoes catch you unaware. A sultry spring afternoon, a strange light in the sky, and before you know it you're huddling in a stairwell while your roof is blown off.
Hurricanes are charted and observed. We woke up today to this photograph in the Washington Post. As I write I think of what we still need to do: fill up the cars; charge the phones, laptop and iPod (heck, even the toothbrush); secure the deck furniture.
Time to prepare — and also time to worry. I remind myself that — all talk of hybrid cyclones aside, headlines that call this the storm of the century — at the end of the day there's often more hype than hurricane.
What will these waves look like a few hours from now?
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