At the height of last summer’s hottest week a butterfly flapped its wings in China and as a result, only twelve days ago, I was reintroduced to a forgotten world.
The wind started blowing in the early morning, and by noon was shaking the house as though it were made of nothing more substantial than cardboard. Sentinel trees, some having stood guard for hundreds of years, suddenly grew lusty for the wet earth, and heeding the dim memory of their kind, sacrificed themselves to the dream of becoming nurse-trees. It was a fey dream. They fell by the hundreds over a thousand square miles, most harmlessly, but not all.
A tree down the road fell across a power sub-station and darkened the homes of 9000 residents, mine included. No power, no heat, no television, no telephone, no Internet. I played cards and scrabble with my daughter by candlelight. I read by the light of a camper headset with the red LED light activated to conserve the battery. After several hours of doing that I would turn it off and everything glowed with the bright green light of an aurora. I threw out the entire contents of the refrigerator after two days, and I took very cold showers in a very dark bathroom. I wondered how friends I could not talk to were doing. I thought a lot.
After 5 days the power came back on. Another two days and the cable worked again, but because power surges had damaged my router the Internet and telephone (VOIP) were only restored today.
I had missed a lot, but I know my problems were trivial, nothing, bumps on a toad.
I didn’t learn of Virginia Tech until two days after it happened. It took my breath away and I have a lot of catch-up grieving in absentia to do. I’m still at it. I found out that in a town just to the west of me a tree fell on a truck and killed the driver. A man I know, a teacher at my youngest daughter’s school, was fly-fishing and was struck by a falling limb a foot in diameter. He’s still in the ICU.
There’s no big lesson in all this, no wisdom I’ve gained. Life went on, and death, and love and war, and commercials and everything else that normally goes on. But dammit, it did bother me to be disconnected from it, even for a few short days.