> I never met them...know very little about them...but today I rummage through the huge ruble pile that was their home.  That they survived is simply amazing.  Their trailer was ripped off the twisted frame, then rolled 3 times before landing in a heap of shattered pieces.  Adrenaline must have helped her lift the tub she was under about 5 ft from the pile.  Neighbors found him sitting in a stuffed chair nearby...white as a ghost & in tremendous pain.  x-rays found several broken vertebrae.  Their dog was missing for 2 days but finally wandered back.  That dog was our constant companion as we sifted through the pile salvaging whatever we could.  It's so strange what survived:  coffee cup, a goblet, plastic toothpick container, 2 fishing poles & half the tackle box, rolls of TP, random forks & spoons, various tools and 4 four ceramic dinner plates...each found in a different area.  We found one dresser drawer with folded clothes in it...and lots of wet, mud covered clothes strewed all over...some caught in fences & others in trees. Deciding what food to keep was trickle.  Cans with dents??  Smashed dirty boxed food with sealed insides??  Jars with lids on but 1/2 gone?? Mostly the stench made the decision easy.  
> With each find, I felt I got a glimpse of their lives and a great sense of satisfaction knowing I'd rescued a piece of their life for them.  Three other trailers laid in heaps nearby.  One had been rented by a handicap man who they found caught in a fence.  An older home in the back had lost it's roof.  The gray haired owner of that was the owner of all the demolished trailers...rental income he relied on.
> We were at one site.  There were many others.  And have been--as Dexter knows--and will be many more.  Random, sporadic, devastating.  I can't help them all...but it's the starfish story that brings me peace. 
> 
> Sent from my iPad
