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BBruno's avatar

I’m in Franklin, NC and we are among the lucky ones. We had trees down and power out for a week but we have a generator and never lost our water. We just got cell and wifi back so things are starting to feel normal. I resonated with every word of this post. I saw black throated blue warblers feasting on caterpillars in my trees today as they fuel themselves for their journey south. The hummingbirds left a couple of days ago but I will leave my feeder up for a while longer. All of life feels tender and precious now, more than it ever has.

Wishing you gentle healing from the trauma we have all gone through, even those of us who are lucky.

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Lisa Wagner's avatar

Thanks for this reflective post, Jeanne.

I write in total comfort in our house in Quebec, mourning about the devastation in our mountains. But we both know nature can heal quickly. The loss of trees in Asheville and in our historic neighborhood and the surrounding mountains; well, I'm steeling myself to see the damage when we return in early November, to vote, and hopefully stay if we have power and water by then. Power, I think, water could be weeks.

The human toll and rebuilding. It will take a long time.

I was reminding myself this evening that when we bought our house in Asheville, the River Arts District was a relatively modest place of galleries in old warehouses. When we first started visiting Asheville back when we moved to Clemson, downtown Asheville was still fairly low-key, with relatively few restaurants and Malaprops. But an attractive place. We kept coming.

The mountains and its cities and towns will come back as will more remote place like where you live.

But the time frame will be longer than a lot of us wish, I think.

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