Sunday, March 12, 2023

Times That Try Men's Souls



Our valley is reeling. A levee broke, and flooded the city of Pajaro, on the edge of the local river which heads to the Pacific Ocean. The rain storm caused my school to have to be evacuated on Friday. The streets surrounding my school fill up with water from the Salsipuedes Creek with extreme rainfall. Also, our school is only a few blocks from the larger Pajaro River. I am worrying about the friends and the families that I know in Pajaro. I am praying for their safety. The levee broke down on Saturday morning. As with the recent wildfires, it is such a feeling of helplessness.  

My body is physically unable to do anything useful. This morning, I woke up at about an "8" on the pain scale. Even filling the water bowls for the dogs hurts. I have to be ready to go back to school, and to provide comfort, and stability to my students. Some of them were very stressed on Thursday, when we heard that school was cancelled on Friday. Many experienced the flooding in December, and were worried about safety. There is a distinct feeling of being "let down" by infrastructure. I realize that building on a flood plain is a precarious business. But, why were the levees not adequately reinforced? They were built in the 1940's, and the area certainly has a history of frequent flooding.  

Working on glazing some pieces helps to take the edge off of the pain. Hoping that as a community, we can rise to the occasion, and aid those in need. Thinking of all of the jobs that will be lost, due to the crops being ruined. Hoping to figure out a way to help.




 






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