Sunday, August 28, 2005

Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans?

Reading the National Weather Service forecast for New Orleans just makes me sick.

I can’t stand to think of that beautiful, lively, historic city flattened. I’m praying for a last minute miracle. We had such a wonderful time there on our South trip last May. I remember munching beignets at Cafe Du Monde, stopping to watch street performers in Jackson Square, examining Russian art in a gallery with Todd, wandering through the Voodoo Museum, trying on vintage dresses with Sue, riding the streetcar through the mansions of the Garden District, brunching on Bananas Foster at Brennan's, queueing up for Po Boys at Domilise's, downing endless daiquiris and hand grenades while hanging out in the French Quarter and yes, drinking hurricanes at Pat O'Brien's. The city laughed at these storms by naming a powerful drink after them, but they may not be able to swallow this one. Now the French Quarter has gone quiet, and the mayor actually said "God bless us."

People have been predicting this for years, but we've also been predicting a giant quake for LA and San Francisco, and a possible volcano eruption for Washington's own Mount Rainier, yet people still set up homes there, just as they did in New Orleans. We all roll the dice when we settle down -- no city is safe from every national disaster -- and this time it's beautiful old New Orleans on the block. Tomorrow it could be my hometown, or yours. God bless us, every one.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm so with you on this one--while I don't live there now, I still call NOLA home in my heart. And no matter where I live, it always will be.

I am praying for the safety of my family and my city, both very much loved.

Anonymous said...

Okay, I just got this horrible, sinking attack of the "ohmygod"'s. Did you by chance watch that movie on FX, Oil Storm? That movie predicted this exact occurance and it began something like the end of the world. Trying not to be an alarmist but- Oh my God!!!!

Anonymous said...

Not sure if you get posts from archives...but I was surfing through the archives today and read this story about pre-Katrina prep.
On a whim, I Googled the names of the people that were quoted as staying behind. The first one I googled was Mary Lind. Sure enough, that name comes up on this site as one of the dead: http://www.wwltv.com/katrina/wwltv/stories//wwl091206tpkatrinadeaths.24178d2.html.

Obviousy, not sure it is the same person, but what are the odds?

Weird. Random. Sad.