...as Grace said mid-morning on Friday morning. I know I shouldn't be amused that my 5 year old says "sucks" but I laughed so hard! I guess it is a line from a penguin in Madagascar II, but I'm sure she's also heard me say it.
This was the longest weekend of my life. Or as Homer Simpson would correct me, the longest weekend of my life SO FAR. Friday, Grace didn't have school because we were supposed to go to parent teacher conferences and the elementary school book fair. This is what we did instead:
4am: Hattie crying "mommy". mommy goes to check. Hattie and her bed covered in vomit. mommy cleans up and brings Hattie back to bed with her.
4:30 am: just after getting back in bed, we see all of the nightlights and power indicator lights go out. power is out. Oh, did we mention it was forecasted for freezing rain? we did hear TORRENTIAL rain outside, but it hadn't frozen at our house, so we weren't worried. oh well, no power, go back to sleep. (not sure what the thinking was there - should have checked the basement the second the power went out...)
4:45 am: apparently we didn't get the message from God that we needed to wake up the first time, so Hattie threw up again. big enough mess to force me downstairs for towels. heard the siren coming from the basement. what is that? David get up! check the basement. David goes downstairs. Michelle hears a SPLASH like he dove into a swimming pool. NOT GOOD!!!!!!!! The siren was telling us that the battery backup to the sump pumps was used up and the pumps had turned off.....
We headed immediately downstairs with Hattie vomiting on my shoulder to start rescuing things from our super messy basement. We've been moving things around, tossing things down there to make room for Christmas decorating, moving toys from the playroom down there to make room for holiday visitors in the playroom/guestroom. Needless to say, everything wasn't organized neatly into plastic bins as it should have been.
The basement has several levels to it. Little steps up a few inches here and there. I moved everything I could to the most open room up a few inches from the water. Soon, the water spilled into that room and I threw everything I could into the highest room. In the mean-time, David goes to my car to harvest the battery and try to get the sump pumps running again. It will only run one of the three pumps. We figure out quick that this is not going to be good enough. Water rising... what time does home depot open??? 6am. good, it's almost that time anyway. David gets in the car with the credit card. He calls from Home Depot to ask "how much do we want to spend on a generator? The 7 people who beat me here bought all the lower-end ones and the few left are pricey." I'm standing in water half way up my rain boots with my pajama bottoms soaked looking at thousands of dollars of potential water damage with a throwing up toddler and say "seriously?!!! BUY ONE!!!"
Merry Christmas to us. David got half a generator. I got the other half. It may be our Christmas present next year too.
By the time he finally got back from Home Depot the water was flowing through the entire basement. We got the generator hooked up to the pumps and thankfully, the water quit rising. Also, thankfully, God answered our desperate prayers and the rain let up too so that the water wasn't coming in faster than we could get it out anymore. We got so much water in 24 hours. If you look at these pictures, the first one is how much water we got in one day, and the other one is the last time we flooded this badly. (by the way, our pond usually doesn't go past the line of bushes you see on the right.) It took 10 days to get that much rain water the last time we flooded in May 2006. I've never seen so much water come down so fast as it did on Friday.
(December 12, 2008)
(May 2006)
Now, no power, wet things everywhere, vomit laundry everywhere that can't be washed. Sick child. No heat. No running water (we have a well with an electric pump.) We flush the toilet with buckets of water from our new basement swimming pool. I wrap the kids up as best I can and we huddle while David does a long wiring job to get the house on auxiliary power so that we can turn on the furnace. We did get a space heater fixed up to the generator and started warming up the playroom. We spent most of the day in there.

Most people we knew ended up going to distant towns to a mall or the movies for the day to stay warm. Where was I supposed to go with a vomiting kid? What friend would want us in their house even? I did plan on imposing on someone with a wood-burning stove for the night if we didn't get our heat back. But, thankfully, David did get the house wired so that we had the furnace, the well, a few lights, a TV, the internet, and the fridge running.
Rita called to check on us and brought us hot soup and corn bread in the middle of the day. COUNTLESS people offered us help, and we felt really lucky. I felt so lucky that we were able to buy a generator. Whether you could afford one or not, by the time most people woke up, the generators were long gone from the stores. I really am thankful that Hattie woke up throwing up at 4am. I feel bad that she had to take one for the team, but she saved us.
Our power finally came back on at dinner time. 13 hours in the dark. We were VERY lucky. We still have friends (4 days later) who don't have power. We've loaned out our generator and have done what we can to help people. It's amazing how generous people become in a time of crisis. Everyone would have done anything for someone else.
We spent the night cleaning up what we could and started the laundry!
Saturday, we had planned to really do a big clean-up job, buy lots of plastic bins, and try to get out to help other people. I also had a huge conference call I was supposed to do at noon for YouthLINC. Unfortunately, David ended up going on a scout activity to go flying (we thought it had been cancelled, but it was back on.) He left me to deal with the day alone and do my conference call with sick, tired, and screaming kids in the background. It was an extremely long day too. I got nothing done and I counted the minutes until he would be home to help again.
By the time he did get home, we had to start getting things ready for church the next day. We knew we already had to be there early, I had a thousand things to do for my calling, and to add insult to injury, one of the Stake Presidency called on Saturday afternoon to ask if we could meet with him Sunday morning. I knew this only meant one thing. From the second he said "this is President Durham" I knew exactly the next turn our lives would take.
On Sunday morning, David was called to be the second counselor in the bishopric of our ward. By 1pm on Sunday, he was ordained to be a high priest and set apart in the calling. He started his duties immediately after being called, which meant I was left alone at church. Something I will be for a long time now - alone at church. I almost threw up, literally, when they sustained him in Sacrament meeting and made him leave our bench to go sit on the stand.
I had so many things to do for RS that day. We were doing our gift delivery for our angel tree (sub-for-santa) and a myriad of other things. The aftermath after church was another marathon in tests of patience and running around like chickens with our heads cut off. David finally got home last night near 9pm from the Christmas broadcast at the church building and the kids were finally in bed. I have rarely felt so much tiredness and relief fall on me in one moment. It was similar to the moment after giving birth. In that one moment of utter exhaustion you feel the most intense sense of relief - even though you know the moment will definitely and quickly pass.
Back to reality today. Well, almost. Grace doesn't have school today since half the school district is still without power and roads are still impassable. David did leave us and go to work. Thankfully though, we have power, the kids are healthy (Hattie was only sick that one day and none of us got it from her), and we have minimal damage from the storm. It was a kind little reminder that when it comes to emergency preparedness, we were UNPREPARED. We were not as well off as we thought. We will be better prepared for the next time, although, I'm sure there are still many things we need to do to be in a better position. If we were still without power, or if it had kept raining, or if we hadn't found a generator, we would not have been in such good shape. I will say though, the next time the power goes out, I will head to the basement IMMEDIATELY!
I called my mom to tell her how lucky she was that she came to visit LAST weekend!