Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Salt + Water

The rain rain rain came down down down
It's raining here at PLNU. As I type this the soft pattering of droplets against my window I am reminded of a saying I heard not to long ago. "The cure for anything is a mixture of salt and water- sweat, tears, or the sea." But as wave after wave of destruction hits the coast of Japan, the very waves that offer me such calm each day when I glance to the west I wonder if salt and water is not only a cure, but also a curse.
In rushing, rising riv'lets
What many people don't know is that a tsunami is actually not one huge wave, it is a series of waves that hit one after the other. How many times has the phrase "trouble comes in threes" been uttered? For Japan, it's true. The tsunami that caused so much destruction there, was a spectacle here. People grabbed their boards, jumped in their cars and headed to the coast, video cameras in tow hoping to catch their slice of the action. The morning after the tsunami my dad woke up and made his coffee as he does every morning. He sat down at the kitchen table, cereal on one side, coffee on the other, and computer in the middle. His home page is Surfline. As soon as he opened his web browser for the surf report his coffee and cereal were forgotten, found soggy by my mom and I hours later. He sprinted to the garage, grabbed his board and sped to the beach ready for what he hoped would be an awesome aftermath. How awful is that we find sport in their pain?
Til the river crept out of it's bed
In San Diego, the tsunami caused a high tide to occur in a matter of minutes that would normally take several hours. In Japan, the ocean left it's place in a much more violent and aggressive manner. Here, the ocean approached San Diego gently, caressing it awake with all the nurture of a mother easing their slumbering child into the new day. In Japan, the alarm went off with all the abruptness and obnoxiousness of a car alarm. Japan was slapped awake by frothy wave upon frothy wave. There was no easing Japan into the destruction that was about to happen.
And crept right into Piglet's
Did the waves really creep into Japan's coast. It seemed more like a charge from here.
Poor Piglet he was frightened
We were scared here when some boats came umoored in San Diego Harbor. Can you imagine the fright of having an entire building being swept out from under you? I can't.

1 comment:

  1. I like how sinister the Piglet portion of this becomes in connection with the rest of the information you highlight.

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