During my years in Puerto Rico and Miami I experienced
numerous hurricanes; some with devastating force. But I can tell you very easily I’d rather
live through a hurricane than a tornado any day. With modern weather prediction technology,
with few exceptions they can predict how strong it will be, where it will hit
and what we can expect. I even got to
the point where I could look at the animated radar, the air circulation, the
high and low pressure systems and pretty accurately predict where the storm
would go. It became a hobby.
Tornadoes are completely unpredictable – except for the fact
that they can look at weather radar and predict that there could be a tornado
in a specific area. The predictions have
become somewhat better but they are still just predictions, not accurate forecasts.
Tornadoes come down from the clouds when they decide
to. They stay on the ground as long as
they want to and dissipate when they’re ready.
Hurricanes at least are predictable, not only their path but how and
when they will most likely dissipate due to changing conditions, terrain, etc. Give me the hurricane any time.
As a father who has lost a child, I can also feel empathy
for the parents who are grieving for their children tonight. It’s difficult
enough to lose a child who has been sick and isn’t expected to survive. To lose a child suddenly, particularly to a
traumatic event, with no warning and no preparation is far worse.
I also feel for the first responders who had to go and find
everyone they could who was still alive, transport them to area hospitals, and
then go back and look for the dead.
Sometimes people don’t realize that first responders have to deal with
death almost daily. As a former
paramedic in the Air Force, I can tell you that dealing with death on a regular
basis can make you cold hearted. One can
easily get to the point where life or death doesn’t matter as much as whether
or not you did everything correctly. It’s
easy to forget that the victims you’re working on are people, with families and
lives of their own. It can make you
cold. That’s one of the reasons I didn’t
pursue a career as a paramedic when I left the Air Force.
May God bless the victims and the families of the victims in
Oklahoma. They are living a hell on
Earth. They need prayer and intervention
– and people who have not been so hardened by tragedy that they don’t much care
anymore.
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