This time last week we were anticipating the wrath of a storm which we
believed would be bad, awful even, but who thought it would irrevocably change
the lives of millions and almost the entire coastline of New Jersey, New York
and much of the Connecticut shoreline. Over a hundred lives lost from Sandy,
the heartbreak and misery she wrought on one of the most densely populated
areas of this nation will continue for a very long time. As one whose
writing-gig is to find humor in difficult situations I have failed miserably on
this one. I’ve heard only one joke: A new drink, ‘The Sandy’ a watered down
Manhattan. I laughed, sort of, probably because I don’t drink and it’s a little
too soon for jokes.
The stories I have heard, in person and on TV, break my heart, the
generosity of strangers mends it. I’ve spoken to many folks, trying to find the
humor angle, and other than family members and friends whose discordant
personalities have no business sharing two hours over a resplendent
Thanksgiving table of dead bird, let alone bunking together for a week, (when
one is out of power and the other out of patience); I find absurdity but no
humor. But I did discover something odd.
The morning after the storm, once my husband and son-in-law cleared the
downed trees from our driveway and country road, my daughters and I decided to zigzag
our way around town to check out the damage. Many roads were blocked, there was
no power, and it was still early, which means there was no one to tell us to
scram when we gawked in amazement at the damage.
One town over, and only few miles from where we live, there is a
causeway. It’s less than a mile long, bordered by marsh and cove on one side,
and Long Island Sound on the other. It’s a beautiful place and though it is vulnerable
we hoped it survived. After we twisted our way through town to get there we were
disappointed that it was barricaded. Huge trucks were parked at its
mid-section, which meant to us, the causeway had been breached by the
floodwaters. We were devastated. I parked. Walking around the barricades we
approached the work area. Other than the workers we were the only people on the
scene. It was comforting to see that the causeway was fine and that the crews
and trucks were actually there to cut up and remove the dozens of whole-trees
and piles of driftwood which had floated up onto the roadway during high tide
at the height of the storm. The immensity of the task seemed daunting
considering one of the pieces, scattered among the huge whole trees was a three
foot thick slab of tree trunk, at least thirty-six inches across. The tree it
had come from had to have been hundreds of years old.
We didn’t bother the DOT crew and they didn’t shoo us away. My
daughters’ snapped pictures as we slowly walked the causeway surveying the
scene. That’s when I noticed something odd. At first I didn’t mention anything
but finally I had to.
“What’s with all the tampon applicators?”
“I noticed them too,” one of my daughters said. Pink and white plastic
tubes were scattered everywhere in the sea grass and debris on the causeway. A
while back the son of a friend of ours told us that where he lives on Cape Cod,
they wash up on the beaches by the hundreds. I told my daughters, that though I
thought ocean dumping has been stopped, they were probably from trash barges
which dump city garbage way off shore. The rest of the trash must deteriorate
but the plastic tubes do not. It was a bit disconcerting to imagine that the
one thing which remains of our garbage, after many years in the ocean’s hostile
and caustic environment is a bunch of tampon applicators.
As we proceeded to leave the causeway we noticed something else that
was little strange; a black running shoe, bent and shriveled from being in the
water a very long time. Nothing rather odd about a soaked and shrunken left
shoe deposited in the detritus of one of this nation’s worst storms in history,
except that next to it, only inches away was its mate, the right shoe. They
were not tied together they just lay there, next to each other, as the pair
they always had been.
Of the many images of utter destruction I have seen on TV, and damage I
have witnessed in person, it is the pink and white plastic applicators which
speak to me of human-kinds odd lasting impressions, and the amazement of a
simple pair of side by side running shoes at the end of their race against tides
and devastation. There’s a lesson there somewhere. I’m just not sure what it is.
2 comments:
Definitely makes for an odd picture in my mind. Good to write it down because something will come to you eventually.
Glad all is well for you and your family.
Hey Jennine, what a time my little town has had. Nice that things are getting back to normal.
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