Ten Years Later

We Remember“Drop, Cover, and Hold!”

This coming Monday, my city of Christchurch, New Zealand will remember that ten years ago, an earthquake would strike and leave us forever changed. We who lived it will never forget where we were and what happened around us. My family will also remember that this is the day we changed.

I know what it’s like to live through a major earthquake… I don’t know what life is anymore. The land has shifted and I’m trying to see where the goal posts are now.

The land had indeed shifted, literally and we learnt all about earthquakes really fast. We had already learnt, from the first quake on 4 Septembein 2010, how earthquakes aren’t just about the magnitude or position on the Pacific Ring of Fire. Instead, what matters most is depth, distance and time. All these will go some way to determining what impact it will have. This one was really shallow, the epicentre was really close and it struck right in the middle of the day. But it was much more that had impact that day, and ten years later, it is good for me, if not still somewhat painful, to stop and remember.

I have written about the events and their effect on my life across this blog and my previous Infinite Sadness… or hope? blog. I don’t intend to repeat myself (too much) and I don’t intend to consider the some 12,000 quakes we went on to endure over the next couple of years. I’m not a geologist, although we all pretended we were. What I am is a person who lived those quakes, who lost, and who carries on.

In the days following the deadly quake ten years ago we came to be taught new advice for dealing with quakes. As I child I had learnt run to the doorway or to run outside. Now I knew that wasn’t necessarily the best idea. Now we were told to “drop, cover and hold“. Drop to the floor, cover your head and hold onto something secure. Perhaps hold on for dear life. What was meant was to hold onto something sturdy like a table or a doorway. But what I learnt as well was to hold onto what is precious, and most importantly who is precious. Those people are what matters.

“There are wounds that never show on the body that are deeper and more hurtful than anything that bleeds.”

— Laurell K. Hamilton (Mistral’s Kiss (Merry Gentry, #5))

185 people died on 22 February 2011. My Dad died suddenly six weeks later. I know it was the stress of loss, uncertainty and change that became too hard physically (but also emotionally) for his heart to bear .

The wounds of the quakes were far more than just those who died or were physically injured. Far more than broken buildings or homes. We were people who bore inward wounds, some that we would talk about and but many that we kept to ourselves in something of an effort to keep going day by day. Some of the wounds, we didn’t even realise we carried. That was perhaps especially true for children, but truly for all of us.

My parents walked away from that quake with only the clothes they were wearing. That was all. They lost their home, most of their possessions, friends, and knowledge and a certainty of where their future lay. They moved in with me that night. It changed them both. I’d go so far as to say that we never saw again the people they had been before.

At the time, my mother was beginning to show symptoms of dementia, but she hadn’t been diagnosed and wouldn’t be for several more years. But she changed. I can’t quite put my finger on what changed in her, but she was a different person, perhaps far away in an emotional and mental place somewhat distant from us. Of course, not only had she lost so much as I said  above, but very soon she lost her husband of nearly 53 years. How could all that not change her?

Did it hasten the onset of Alzheimer’s Disease? We will never know. I just put my finger on that date, and say this was the beginning of a dreadful journey, mostly for her, but also for her family as we watched her slowly drift from us. Eventually she would die from the disease in 2019.

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Of course, I had a hard time too, even just bearing witness to what my parents faced. I lost possessions, and I lost a friend. I lived for the next five years in a badly damaged house. But most of all? I lost my parents. Not on the day, but in the days to come.

Eventually, I would be an orphan. Funny thing. We don’t think about that before our parents die, but it’s strange to think that now there is no one there watching over me. Cheering meu on, perhaps. Hoping for good to come my way. Not everyone has parents who ever did that, but I was one of the lucky ones. My parents had stood by me for all my years and had loved me even when I didn’t deserve it.

Now, it was as if I had finally become a real grown up. I really had to stand on my own two feet. Of course, for me this happened before Mum passed, in that thought that I became her cheerleader, her hope and her safety, as she fell furthe into dementia. I guess that’s why I look back at the last ten years and think that day, eventually, took my parents from me. Another generation passed.

Of course, it wasn’t just people. Ten years later I still cringe at the sound of helicopters. Living near the CBD where the worst damage was, and on the edge of the red zone (residential land quickly deemed unsafe for housing and so it was permanently evacuated), there were always helicopters protecting the thousands of empty, damaged buildings and homes. I hate the sound of helicopters to this day.

Sirens are another thing that make me cringe. This was later added to when the Mosque Attacks happened here in 2019. Sirens no longer meant there was going somewhere but rather that help was needed. Something was very wrong here.

As for more quakes, even the slightest tremor has me hold my breath to see if it is going to continue, even get worse. Should I “drop, cover and hold“. Should I head to the doorway? Is this going to be another big one? And relief when it stops.

Ten years later, I have lost people, I have lost possessions. My house is finally fixed. But there is a sense of security that is gone. The worst can happen and what matters can be taken away. But with it, is a sense of what is important. Now I know my neighbours, because we looked out for each other. I know who is alone, and who might have no one to check on them if something bad happens. I know for myself whether anyone will check on me and I know that I can survive.

I can dig a hole in the garden if the sewer has failed. I can live on cold baked beans out of a tin. I know where the torch is and I have batteries. I have many bottles of water. I know I can survive without all the things we thought were important. Perhaps the biggest thing is that I know what is important. And that is the people in my life.

That day in a 6th floor apartment I watched the floor go up to the ceiling and back down again (A concrete floor.) and I watched my parents being thrown on the floor. I couldn’t stand up and it took too long for me to find a safe way out of the apartment for us. We needed to get out “Now“. I looked out the window and all I saw looked like a dust storm. I would later know it was from buildings damaged or collapsing.

All these things, I lived through as did all the residents of Christchurch. “Were you here for the quakes?” is perhaps the indicator of  something shared, something lost, but something we lived through. I think there is almost a comradery in the shared nightmare, that wasn’t just a few minutes but a journey of ten years and beyond.

I learnt to whom I mattered, and who mattered to me. I learnt about empathy and compassion for those who were worse off than me. I learnt how far I would go for the people around me. Perhaps in that, I learnt how I would go on to support my mother through her Alzheimer’s. Perhaps I wouldn’t have been able to do that, without having already have gone through the quakes with her and eventually lost my Dad. She mattered. And that was enough.

I’ve concluded that taking one day at a time is not an option. It’s essential. It’s what I have to do because I simply don’t know what tomorrow will bring. I don’t know if I’m going to be able to say “I love you” tomorrow and I don’t know if I’m going to be able to say “I’m sorry“. I don’t know if my precious possessions will be gone, and whether my house will still be standing. Think that’s going too far, and in my opinion (now) you’re fooling yourself. My aim now is to take each day as it comes, because I really don’t know if tomorrow will actually come. Simple words but still hard to do.

And finally advice to the residents of Christchurch at the time, from the man who was the then Mayor of Christchurch:

“Cut people a bit of slack today. There will be grumpy people, we all express our stress in different ways. Some laugh and get silly and that can offend someone else who is feeling really depressed and sad….We’ve got to keep working together, we’ve got to hang in there as a city.”

– Sir Bob Parker

Thanks for reading!

Cate
(All images are copyright to Cate Reddell)

All That Glitters Is Not Gold

Back when I was a child, I remember eyeing up the presents under the Christmas Tree. We were not allowed to touch them until the appointed time when the family would gather around the tree and carefully open the presents one gift at a time. Before that moment came though, I (with my brothers) would eye up which present looked the best. Maybe which was the biggest, maybe what gift wrap was the shiniest, a ribbon added for extra effect, anything that would indicate that one might be better than another. I would conclude from this which present I wanted to be for me. But there was no handling the gifts to see who the gift card determined the present to be for. It was very much a guessing game.

Of course, what we thought would be the best, what we thought would be gold, was not always as we suspected. Sometimes that gold was simply gold paint. We were duped. All that glitters is not gold.

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A few years ago I received a gift, a gift that over time I concluded to be gold. It looked so good. All the right words were there. All the right sentiments. What seemed to be the right motivations. It was an unexpected gift. I didn’t go out looking for it, but instead, it just seemed to happen. Maybe I couldn’t be let down by the gift, because I didn’t set out to get anything from it.

But it wasn’t that easy. Nothing ever is. Even when you think what you are getting is gold.

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Image credit: L.L.Musings https://www.facebook.com/LLMusings/

It’s true. Most people in my life thought the gift was a beast. Not gold at all. Many people were quick to judge. Judge it and probably me. Fair enough, I suppose. We all form opinions and sometimes make judgements on only a very small amount of information. Usually wrong information.

I learnt this very quickly when I was spat at for my association with my gift. I had been fortunate enough to have never been spat at in my life. I can tell you that it’s quite a wake-up call.

I realised very quickly that my decision to accept the gift had consequences. Some of those consequences have continued to live on to this day, even though the gift is no longer mine. I lost along the way, in ways that will not be obvious to anyone in my life. I am of no doubt. I lost a very great deal, and in ways I did not expect.

To be clear, this gift that I thought was gold was not without its faults. I could see that. I was going into it with what I thought were wide open eyes. It’s just that eventually the gift turned. It turned from one of gold to one of darkness. One of lies and a lack of respect for me.

In hindsight, I learnt my gift to be one of darkness and pain, but I very clearly believed it was one of goodness. Do you know how cheated I felt when I learnt? I had gone to bat for the integrity of the gift. There was both financial and emotional cost involved in accepting the gift. The air was literally bashed out of my lungs and I struggled to breathe, let alone accept and move on from the gift.

I have learnt a few things in this journey:

  1. If it glitters it probably isn’t gold. While it seemed wonderful for a long time, wonderful was the last thing that it was. It was a con. And it hurt me a great deal, more than I  ever said to anyone.
  2. How quick humans are to judge, usually on the basis of just a scattering of opinions and of course, very big assumptions.  Because while we all know that all that glitters is not gold, we also know that just sometimes, what looks like shit is actually gold. We all hope our gift will be gold. How can we determine either way, on just a few pieces of information? It doesn’t matter anyway because people will already have judged, already have spat.
  3. Not all monsters are hiding under the bed. Some are lying in the bed with us. Others are very much installed in our minds. I encountered all of them. All installed by the gift.
  4. I finally accepted that I am scared of the dark. Maybe not so much scared of the dark as what might be hidden in the dark and is actually right in front of my eyes without me realising.  That is downright scary. So yes, I’m 52 and I sleep with the light on. Actually, I sleep so much better
  5. The only possible way forward from this gift was forgiveness. That’s right. I had to forgive the gift for everything because without being able to forgive the gift, I truly would have been destroyed. I forgave the gift (eventually), not for the gift’s sake, but for my own healing and survival.
  6. I also had to forgive myself. For decisions I had made on the basis of things I didn’t know, for missing/ignoring what was staring me right in the face, for ignoring the gut instinct that warned me without me realising and for simply being me, a person who in spite of all the flaws you could all see in this gift, I chose to see beyond them.
  7. Sometimes we are bound to get it wrong. I might think that gift is going to be so precious to me that it is a soulmate but in fact, is a thief. It just happens and while it seems entirely impossible to survive, somehow we do. We are, of course, only human, even when it hurts like hell.

This isn’t something that has happened to me only recently. Rather it is something that hurt so much, that it is only now that I feel able to write about it. I simply didn’t have the words, and I’m not sure I yet have adequate words. Sometimes it takes other people’s words to explain too, and that is always okay with me.

sometimes we’re silent
because our soul knows
how it feels, but hasn’t
found the words that
the mind can understand.”

 – JmStorm

I felt too, that I owed the gift some privacy in spite of the pain it inflicted on me. I know better now. I don’t owe that gift anything. All that glitters is not gold. And when it’s not gold, you don’t owe it a thing. Sometimes I’m slow to learn but eventually I get there.

Thanks for reading!

 

Cate

 

Other Reading

Grieving For My Red Balloon

Letting Go Of Balloons