Questions that keep smoldering
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JOSEPH N. BELL
We held a double-header birthday party last Saturday and Sunday for
my wife’s Arizona sister and several other family members, but part
of the family couldn’t come. My brother-in-law, Dan, and his wife,
Cindy, and their three children -- from 13 to 20 in age -- spent
Saturday hosing down the roof of their home in the Alta Loma section
of Rancho Cucamonga as they watched a raging line of fire bearing
down on them.
They stayed at it until they were asked to evacuate. Then they had
to decide very quickly what to take with them. That problem was
complicated by the fact that they were in the process of moving, and
most of their belongings had been packed away in boxes. But there was
little disagreement about priorities. Home videos and family pictures
came first and then vital papers. Because Dan is a film writer and
producer, work that was on master tapes came next. And even though it
would have survived the fire, Dan couldn’t abandon the Emmy Award he
won several weeks ago.
The kids’ decisions were easy. They were concerned mainly with
saving pictures. The biggest problem was that all these items had
been packed away willy-nilly since there was no expectation the
contents of the boxes would be unpacked prematurely. So in what might
have been their last hour in their home for the past decade, family
members were grubbing frantically through piles of cartons in search
of artifacts to carry over into a new life. The only missing treasure
was the last picture of Cindy’s father, who died four years ago.
Dan had booked hotel rooms early in the crisis, and family members
went there to await the fate of their home. They were sleeping
fitfully when Dan got a call at 6 a.m. Sunday on his cell phone from
his next door neighbor who hadn’t yet evacuated.
The message was grim: “The fire is nearing the edge of our
houses.”
Dan gathered up his 13-year-old son, Matthew, and headed home,
stopping on the way to pick up a close friend. The corner below his
house had been set up as a staging area, and there were a half-dozen
sheriff’s cars there. They let Dan through, and he pulled up in front
of his home.
“It was all very surreal,” he remembered. “The field next door was
blazing, winds were gusting, and flames were rising behind what I
assumed was the house, which I couldn’t see because it was entirely
obliterated by smoke. The situation seemed hopeless. My friend
started to jump out of the car to look for a hose, but I stopped him
and told him to forget it.
“You don’t think great thoughts at a time like that,” he said. “I
had a sense of numbness that made it possible to calm others. And the
lady who lived below us needed calming. She had just moved in two
weeks ago, and had been aroused by a sheriff pounding on her door.
While I was trying to help quiet her, the wind suddenly changed,”
he said. “One moment, my house wasn’t there, and the next moment, the
smoke lifted and there it was. The fire was blowing away, and the
only things left burning were a pile of unread newspapers in my
driveway and a bush in the lot beside us. I didn’t consider the irony
of that burning bush until much later.”
They were all able to re-enter the house in mid-morning and spend
the rest of the day in a residue of acrid smoke cleaning it. When his
wife and two daughters collapsed, exhausted, at the hotel, Dan
brought Matthew to what was left of the birthday party, where we all
heard his story.
When I asked what these frightening two days had told him about
himself and his family, Dan thought it over, then said: “I guess the
best thing is knowing that in a crisis, my family would stick
together and support one another. We had a great sense of community
when we went back into a dangerous situation to try and save our
home. There was also great satisfaction in having my son fighting
beside me on that last day, and -- even better -- telling me when we
knew we were safe that we needed to go help some of the people who
weren’t.”
I couldn’t get these pictures out of my head when I went to bed
that night. When I hear about people in crisis, I always wonder how
well I would have performed in the same set of circumstances. The two
questions that kept recurring to me are what would I try to save
under the urgent stress of time and how would I respond if my home
was destroyed -- questions I’m sure a lot of us are asking ourselves
as we watch these fires on television.
Thinking about those two questions as I write this in my home
office makes me acutely aware of the importance we give to things
that we collect over the years -- things that become life markers to
us. I am surrounded in this place by the stuff of a lifetime. A
bookcase that fills an entire wall holds hundreds of magazines, some
50 years old, all containing pieces I have written. The wall is
cluttered with documents attesting that I have graduated from
college, served in the military, crossed the international dateline,
planted a brick at Edison Field and various other milestones in my
life. The shelves hold the only baseball I ever retrieved from 60
years of going to Major League games, along with an array of small
and significant gifts given to me by people I love.
There is no way I could choose among these things to save, but
that leads to another question. Is this how my life, finally, must be
defined? Or if I were to lose all of them in a disaster, would I
discover that I had been diminishing the possibilities of today and
tomorrow by leaning too frequently on yesterday? Where is the balance
between using the past to cast light on the present or to obscure its
possibilities?
I don’t know. Nor do I know what I would do if we were to lose our
home in a disaster like the fires still raging about us. Would I
stand in the charred remains and resolve to rebuild and restore as
fully as possible what I had lost? Or would I take this as a sign it
was time to move on to a new life in which I was free to create a
whole new set of life markers from a different vantage point?
Clearly, there can be no answers to these questions until we have
to face them directly. Dan and his family were the fortunate ones,
delivered by a sudden shift of wind from losing their home. I ache
for those less fortunate.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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