Last summer my
husband and I were parked at the beach. We go there often after dinner; it’s a
peaceful time when the beach isn’t crowded and the heat of the day blends with
the breezes off the Sound. With the tide exceptionally low we watched as birds
searched the flats for food and dawdling beach goers lingered during the calm
of the pleasant evening. Within a few minutes of our arrival the peacefulness
of the evening took an ominous turn. In the distance behind us we could hear
rumbles of thunder and from inside the car I could see in the side mirror the
pattern of lightening approaching from the northwest.
I was amazed by how
many people continued to walk in the water or along the beach as the storm
approached. Hearing some voice concern did not rattle the few who continued
their evening stroll along the beach. A van pulled up next to us. The two people
in the van I assumed were father and daughter. She was adorable; perhaps nine
or ten with long dark hair. As she stepped out of the van a rumble of thunder
and flash of lightening frightened her. I was a little surprised they didn’t
get back in their vehicle but the father, obviously clueless to the hazards of
standing on the beach while a storm approached, walked with his little girl
down the sidewalk away from us.
As I often do
during thunderstorms I related to my husband for the hundredth time my
experience when I witnessed my uncle and another person being struck by
lightning. We were in Rockland, Maine, I was twenty-three at the time and
we were all inside an enclosed building when it happened. It was one of the most
frightening experiences of my life. My uncle and the other man survived, but
outside on the breakwater in Penobscot Sound, which we could see from inside
the building, a father and his little boy were struck and killed by the
lightning.
The storm at the
beach rolled toward us, the sky darkened and thunder shuttered over us in
earnest. While continuing to watch the lightening
in my side mirror, I heard a child whining. Glancing away from the mirror, the
father and his little girl slowly walked in front of our car. She was the one
whining, trying to smooth her long hair down. It was standing straight up on
end.
“Look at her hair,”
I said to my husband.
“I see it."
“Get in your truck!”
I shouted from my open window. She looked at me as if I had just yelled
fire. I screamed at her. “Get in your truck now!” She ran for the van, climbed
in and slammed the door; like saucers, her eyes were wide with fear; then a flash, and almost immediately, thunder shook our car.
Looking
at me, the father now between our car and his van, smiled. I thought it odd. How could he so calmly smile at a strange
woman who had just yelled at his little girl?
“It’s dangerous,” I
said to him, “to be out in the storm.” The women in the car on the other side
of us looked at me as if I just threatened the pair with an Uzi. Continuing to
smile I realized the man hadn’t understood a word I'd said. Even if he didn’t
understand English he should have heard the urgency in my voice, I had
just scared the shit out of kid for Christ sake. She was now crying. All of
this was happening while the thunder and lightning intensified. He finally climbed into his van. We left the
beach along with about half the other cars.
To say my husband
was upset puts it mildly. He believed I over-reacted. My knee-jerk reaction to her hair standing on end meant she was in
imminent danger of being struck. I believed the last sign, and perhaps the only
sign, someone gets is a tingling and static sensation, like hair standing on
end, as the charge of the lightning bolt searches for a ground.
Did I scare the girl,
absolutely? What plays over in my mind is if I had remained silent; knowing
what was happening and saying nothing, she might have been struck right there
in front of us.
Did I save her
life, perhaps, I will never know but what I do know is that if it were to
happen again I’d probably react exactly the same way.
Is scaring a kid to
safety right?
5 comments:
You did the right thing.
You absolutely did the right thing. Was the father deaf????
Frank and Patty
Thanks for the back-up, my husband still thinks I overreacted. This is from a guy who severed the tip of his finger and sealed it with duct-tape and kept on working until he went to the clinic.
Yea I'd say you did. Maybe your husband's just embarrassed cause it was strangers and the dad reacted weirdly. Either way, you know you won't have to live with the sight of lightening striking her and she gets to live, period. In instances like that, better safe than sorry.
Thanks Jennine. Yeah he was embarrassed for sure. I've always wondered about how we are embarrassed in front of people we will never see again.
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