This morning I woke up to two bears outside, a little cub sitting on our front steps eating the pumpkin that my daughter recently carved, the mom nearby completely sprawled out lounging in the sun in a bed of freshly fallen yellow and orange oak leaves. This is the “fall” that I look forward to every year in Asheville.
I wanted to hold onto this feeling, all of us standing at our screened-in window talking to the bears as if they understood us, our dog enthusiastically joining in the conversation. This feeling is alive and vibrant; however, so is the visceral awareness of the horrific despair that has engulfed my beloved community and so many communities in Western North Carolina.
Each time I leave my house, even six weeks after the storm, I drive down the hill, and there it is, a scene straight out of the Lion King during Scar’s reign: dusty trees uprooted, cracked, and tossed around, all the buildings gutted and obliterated, cars and trucks thrown and shattered in the most unlikely places.
I remember the first time I walked down that hill after the storm, standing at the edge of the road that was left, aware that bodies had been recovered, imagining the horror of the flash flood that ripped through this area after a nearby damn broke, tears streaming down my face, when a car pulled up next to me. A man and his teenage son stepped out of the car. I glanced over and said, “it’s a lot to take in,” to which he nodded and then replied, “do you need an emotional support human?” “Yes, I think so,” I said with a smile.
Adjusting to a natural disaster is nuanced and layered. According to studies, Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is the most commonly diagnosed mental health disorder, and occurs in 30%-40% of individuals who live through a deadly hurricane. What’s interesting to me, as a mental health professional, is the 60%-70% of us who don’t meet that clinical diagnosis. What’s a “normal” response for the rest of us during a time like this? If you’re wondering about the same thing, here are a few things to keep in mind.
Professional Development Specialist
Leadership Immersion
Discover More
Growth Immersion
Discover More
Teleios University (TU)
Discover More
Register Today!
An organizational model that allows nonprofit hospices (Members) to leverage best practices, achieve economies of scale and collaborate in ways that better prepare each agency to participate in emerging alternative payment models and advance their charitable missions.