HURRICANE VACATIONS IN FLORIDA – Hurricane Irene • Sam North

 What kind of people would wait for a bus in a Hurricane?
floater

O.K. aside from the Hurricane, how was Florida? Alright aside from the $160 speeding fine, how was Florida? O.K. aside from all your photos going missing, how was Florida? Someone asked Kit, who was my trusty companion on said jaunt to Florida on how she enjoyed the trip and she had to think awhile, then finally said “I wouldn’t go again”. It was one of those moments. Unspoken fragile barbs that said “It is all your fault I didn’t have a good time.” Of course if I had those photographs I could have shown her smiling, laughing even moments before the ‘big’ wave knocked her for six and sent her sprawling for yards down South Beach Miami.

Perhaps she hadn’t intended to come back bruised. ‘See my tan,’ were probably words she would have liked to use, rather than ‘I’m black and blue’. But I can attest she was laughing before the wave hit her. So was I, until something large and grey bumped into me and I had this major heart attack scene where I had thought I had come face to face with a shark. Alright, I admit I scrambled shorewards as fast as my sad little arms could get me, expecting my toes to disappear any second. Only from shore could I look back and see five dolphins laughing at me, swimming so close to shore that we could see them open their mouths to eat the fish that were actually jumping into them. Now that is what I call convenience food. It was one of those remarkable days, at the end of the trip, a Thursday on St Augustine North Beach. The air is thick with acid from the red tide fumes which makes us cough, there are dead fish on the beach and no sensible Floridian would swim in this, let alone breath the air, but we’d paid for this jaunt and we were going to have a good time. Even if it kills us.

We knew there was something special going on when we saw the fish massing on shore and literally tossing themselves towards the Pelicans that swooped in from all sides to eat dinner. Dolphins, a perfect swell on the tide, a blue sky and 85F in mid-October, how perfectly impossible in England at this time of year. I thought then that this was too good to be true.


At midnight the rain started and Hurricane Irene had arrived. Hurricanes are strange. One imagines something like a tornado, but this was just a huge weather system that spread right across Florida and the Gulf bringing tropical torrential rain, flooding roads and farms. We knew we’d better leave a day early to get to Miami airport. We drove for 300 miles in this torrent of rain and wouldn’t you know it. Bang. A tyre blows at 80 mph. Actually Kit and I thought something had hit the roof of the car, neither one of us thought of the tyre until I lost steering capability. I had to hurriedly pull over on the busy Interstate 95 and change the tyre. Trucks were rushing by six inches from the car, sending great waves of water over us. The rain was sloshing around the car, rising by the minute. (Florida is actually at sea-level) and when I got the tyre out it was one of those stupid small emergency ones. The jack didn’t have anything to turn it with and right then I knew I was going to get hit by a truck and die. Turning a jack with a Parker pen isn’t easy, but anytime Parker want to send me a new pen for mentioning that it can lift a Mitsubishi Charisma off the road is fine by me. Of course Converse All Star canvas shoes aren’t that great for jumping up and down on the new stiff wheel nuts either! Occasionally I’d hear Kit scream ‘Hurry up you are going to die” and “It only takes Jenson Button 3 seconds to change four tyres”. It wasn’t the kind of encouragement I could have used either. Around 45 minutes later when I finally tightened the nuts and threw the debris in the trunk, we set off for Miami again. The road was now completely flooded and we could see in the distance the lights of Miami suddenly go out. It was going to be a long night.

We crossed the Bridge towards South Beach at around 116th street which was my stupididy as this seemed to be where the flooding was worst. Streets were completely inundated. Powerlines were down, telegraph poles skew all over, palm trees were actually flying past us as I drove through four feet of water. Someone close to my ear was yelling at me to ‘stop this isn’t safe’, but I could hear my long dead father’s voice in my head saying ‘keep going when driving through water, don’t let the engine get wet, don’t give the car an excuse to die on you’. I ploughed on, creating bow waves across the street, heading southwards.

Kit had this thing about wanting to stay in one of the art deco hotels on Ocean Beach Boulevard. O.K. anything to keep the peace, but I was favouring the Best Western which seemed to have electricity around 94th, but no, I was urged on past dead cars, (later we found out about eight dead people electrocuted by the downed power lines) and fallen trees. All around us the wind was whipping up trouble, taking out billboards, windows, phone lines. Roads were blocked every which way and it was a navigation nightmare. As we approached the forties the water was shallower, this area had to be an inch higher. Amazingly there were people waiting for a bus. What kind of people would wait for a bus in a Hurricane? I wonder if that was the bus we saw flooded and abandoned around fifty blocks northwards. Nearby we could see people getting out their surfboards and boats to get around. Florida old hands know the routine. 

Mo Richter works to clear a tree fallen across the top of a house after Hurricane Irene in Washington, Sunday, August 28, 2011. 


Everywhere we turned Kit was taking pictures of falling trees, a bewildered Pelican sheltering in a pond on a busy street, people struggling to cross roads, wind-whipped waves across the road, stranded cars, animals. Your average holiday snaps. I wished I could be taking shots too but I was too scared to stop the car. On fourteenth, just after the world’s worst restaurant Wolfie’s, we turned toward Ocean Boulevard and found the Art Deco Penguin Hotel, which in sunnier days overlooks the beach . This twilight it overlooked Armageddon. Sand and sea was lashing the shore and things were crashing around everywhere and occasionally you’d glimpse a person clinging onto to something to stop them from joining Dorothy someplace over by the yellow brick road. I secured us a room, ground floor. They weren’t keen, maybe because were were dripping wet. Or something to do with the receptionist was called Frau Luger and had escaped from a Frankenstein movie. This was possibly the only restaurant open in South Beach that night too, so that was great, as long as we didn’t need a seat. Turns out the place is full of Germans playing cards. Even weirder, the Germans all seem to know each other and the German speaking waitress indicates that they have all come from the same car assembly line in Bavaria to holiday together in Miami. I wondered if the Ford Focus assembly line workers do the same? Is only me who finds that weird? For some reason Germans seem to resent any other nationality wanting to sit down and eat at a table, but eventually one has to pee and you race for the chair and sit there and the waitress quickly slams down a knife and fork to indicate that this is now your spot! Kit found a place opposite me pretty soon and we shared the last half-chicken being cooked in Miami that night. It was pretty tough going.

Since we were already soaked we decided to go for a walk. Well I did. Kit followed not wanting to be a wuss. Of course if we’d known how dangerous it is to walk around with power lines threatening to fall into the street and kill you, I might have heeded Kit’s quite sensible advice to “let’s go to bed and read’. There are physical difficulties in walking in a Hurricane. But I had always wanted to do that and now we have.

By the by, sand whipping off the sea at 120mph can make your legs bleed. We staggered off the beach to shelter a moment by some trees as Kit screamed in pain (O.K. we both screamed, we were being sandblasted to death and who was it who said, let’s wear shorts. Oh yes me – Dummy head)). Right here was a great point to watch what wind pressure can do to buildings. Two new apartment blocks were acting as a wind-tunnel and new windows were bulging under the pressure. Had anyone been in them and tried to open a window either they would have been sucked out or the whole building would have collapsed. It was remarkable. Thrilling to watch the wind vortex – sucking trees out of the ground and lobbing them towards powerlines. On Kit’s orders we fumbled our way back to the hotel and had to kick the door a while to make them open it again. Seems opening the door makes EVERYTHING fly around the entire hotel and Germans get pretty upset seeing their cards and money stick to the ceiling. We got glared at as once again we stoood there flooding the lobby as water cascaded off our clothes. 

We went to bed. The wind howled. The shower stopped working. Water seeped under our door, windows and metal slammed all night, just to make sure we stayed awake to enjoy every moment.

And then… In the morning it was a bright and sunny day. The sun shone out of a bright clear sky. The Atlantic Ocean was a smooth as silk and if it wasn’t for the palms trees being hoisted off the deck and armies of manicurists clearing the streets, it was the most normal day. Collins Avenue was almost dry already and we went to our favourite Diner located at around 10th and Collins and ate a breakfast on the side porch as we read the Miami Herald. Some kind of anticlimax really. The last moment of Hurricaneness was handing back the car. Alamo Car Hire has literally hundreds of cars in the lot. Over half of them were underwater. Might be some good bargains there if you like soggy upholstery. We checked in, we left.

OCEAN CITY, MD – AUGUST 27: Waves from Hurricane Irene pound the beach, on August 27, 2011 in Ocean City, 

Me. I miss swimming in an ocean everyday, in clear warm water. I miss feeling warm and relaxed. Holidays disappear as you fly towards home. Only by looking out of the window at the miles of flooded farmland do you realise that Hurricanes can do a lot of damage over a huge area. But by the time you land you wonder if it ever happened. Only the two suitcases of wet clothes serves as a reminder. We are in normal life now. One of us would never go back but niether of us will ever forget Hurricane Irene.

© Sam North/AKA Hawksmoor 2000 (reposted 2017) 
Author of Another Place to Die: Endtime Chronicles 
The Sam North Novels 

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Sam North
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Jim Carrey doesn’t exist anymore

Carrey has always been a layered, intriguing actor – but a new documentary and a radical approach to life have made him eternal.

What is it with truly great comedians, that they spend most of their lives trying to figure out who they really are?

Buster Keaton, Andy Kaufman, Robin Williams – since comedy was silent, the funniest actors have sprung from the saddest men.

When cloaks fall, there is alcoholism, cancer and depression.

It shocks us because we’re used to seeing them smile and making us laugh.

For Carrey, it was a tragic incident, the suicide of his girlfriend, which seems to have catapulted him from The Cable Guy to one of the most interesting artists in Hollywood.

Two years ago, Cathriona White was found dead in her apartment. She had been dating the actor for three years.

TIPPERARY, IRELAND – OCTOBER 10: Jim Carrey attends The Funeral of Cathriona White on October 10, 2015 in Cappawhite, Tipperary, Ireland. (Photo by Debbie Hickey

Photos taken at her funeral show a shattered Carrey carrying her coffin on his shoulders.

But from that point on, he was nowhere to be seen; no films, no guest show appearances.

The actor who once made four films in a year became a recluse.

Then, nearly two years later, a short film was spotted online, showing the 55-year-old star painting weird, fluorescent canvases showing Jesus faces and bleeding hearts.

“I needed colour,” he says to the camera. So he went and got it.

At first, I wasn’t sure what I was looking at. Is it a sketch? A mockumentary? Is he teasing us – the media, the audience?

With comedians, you never know.

But then, somewhere throughout the film, Carrey’s paintings became interesting to me – they felt true. So did his words.

“You can choose not to do it,” he says, his voice a distant echo. “You can choose to try to do something safer.”

“Your vocation chooses you,” he said. He might have a point, I thought.

Jim Carrey: I Needed Color from JC on Vimeo.

Whether or not you think his art is any good, here’s a public figure taking an enormous risk being someone people don’t want him to be. Serious, sad, troubled – is there anything less funny?

After that, a series of headline-friendly interviews followed. Public outbursts, philosophical rants.

The latest one happened at a fashion show in New York, when the actor was spotted walking the red carpet by a reporter.

“There’s no meaning to any of this,” he started by saying. “I wanted to find the most meaningless thing I could come to and join and here I am.”

The fashion reporter, in her obliviousness, reminded the actor the gala was celebrating “icons”.

“Don’t you believe in icons?” she asks. He laughed.

“Boy, that is just the absolute lowest-aiming possibility that we could come up with,” Carrey added, and then proceeded to explain why he does not, in fact, believe in icons – but rather personalities.

“I don’t believe that you exist, but there’s a lovely fragrance in the air,” he tells the reporter.

The media had a field day. “Bonkers interview,” said Esquire

 I get it. Stars annoy us. Particularly those who, at a certain point, refuse to play ball.

And although I tend to sympathise with any good star-bashing member of the public, with Carrey, I don’t want to.

Because he is right. Fashion shows are meaningless, “icons” are ridiculous, peace does “lie beyond invention in disguise”.

“I believe it’s deeper than that,” he tells the camera.

In Venice earlier this month, he premiered a documentary titled Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond. In it, he shows behind the scenes footage of his most brilliant and most misunderstood role, in Milos Forman’s Man On The Moon.

Jim Carrey as Andy Kaufman in Milos Forman’s Man On The Moon

Man On The Moon, Jim Carrey
Film and Television

In the film, he is the comedian Andy Kaufman and his own alter-ego, Tony Clifton.

In the end, Andy dies but Tony lives on. In the documentary, Carrey claims he was not himself playing the film, but Kaufman.

“Jim Carrey didn’t exist at that time,” he said.

He wasn’t talking about method acting, I don’t think.

I believe that he believes that, at a certain point, Jim, Andy and Tony were one.

One comedian, performing on stage – pretending to be someone he’s not.

Jim Carrey has stopped making us laugh. Like with Kaufman, Keaton or Williams before him, we are left faced with a deeper persona than what we paid for.

Now, he is defying us. Making us think about the absurdity of our world.

I welcome that, and firmly believe he will be funny once again – great comedians always are.

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Kechi Okwuchi is a woman of strength courage and inspiration, Kechi is an example to all of us on the gift of life and living it in any and every way you can.

My shows with Kechi have been ones of such warm and illuminating inspiration, that they have stayed with me deep in my heart. Come hear her story, listen to her songs and celebrate her life and gift. 

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Addiction comes in many forms, it is not only drugs or alcohol, it is a state of mind trying to flee, or feed the heart and soul. Here are some shows that address addictions in their many forms and how people found their way out of them.

These are shows done on addiction, please do share and mostly, do not judge, for we are all addicted to something in life.

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Freelance Journalist Writes Ice Cold Open Letter to Trump That Is Officially Breaking the Internet! [Read Here]letter

Freelance journalist and entrepreneur Tucker Benedict just wrote an open letter to Trump to remind him what it means to be American.  Benedict’s message has officially set the internet on fire!  Read it below:

Donald Trump,

My family immigrated to the United States of America on the third boat after the Mayflower. Our heritage precedes any records of Trumps, or Drumpfs, in America. Members of my family have served in every major conflict in US history with the exception of Iraq; your family cannot say the same. Yet, you continue to act as if you’ve sacrificed for the betterment of our country when the reality is: we don’t even know you’ve paid taxes half the time.

Instead of acknowledging your past though, and honourably promising to change from a position of great entitlement, you accost service members you don’t care for, threaten democracy with attacks on the media, and worsen divides that threaten to tear America apart. Moreover, there’s a part of me that’s angry from a personal standpoint, my father founded the criminal division of the EPA, and was the senior environmental prosecutor in the country until 2014, and whose storied career began with work on Watergate. You’ve destroyed his life’s work in under 7 months, but I’m not writing this from a position of anger or even from a personal standpoint, I’m trying to speak for a great many Americans who are understandably frightened for the future; who feel they’re watching the degradation of our way of life. This letter isn’t about me, or my feelings, but it is intended for you, Mr. President.

There’s a storm coming and as our enemies around the world lick their chops watching the division within America, we continue to charge towards a future in which we tear ourselves apart. Many of us, yourself included, seem to have forgotten what it means to be American. If our memory continues to fail and we forget entirely what being American truly means, we’ll not only lose our status as the world’s leader, we won’t deserve it anymore.

This is not a world I can imagine nor that I have any desire to. Without America to serve as an eternal source of light within the darkness the world will be cast into chaos. In order to preserve what so many gave so much to obtain, we must first remember what it means to be American. While we seem hopelessly intertwined in a national, and very partisan, identity crisis we can only hope to pull out of it by remembering the lessons our founding father’s taught us all those years ago when they first defined, through their actions, what it means to be American.

Currently, there are a few misconceptions on what makes someone American; there seems to be a great deal of entitlement when considering the term. I was born a white male and a citizen of The United States of America but I don’t think that makes me an American. There seems to be a lot of controversies swirling around this notion but the reality is being born a certain way entitles me to nothing. The circumstances of birth don’t make you American, they never have, but actions do.

We earn our status as American through our actions day to day, month to month, and year to year. In doing the right thing by our loved ones, our countrymen, and ourselves we become American. There’s not flashy gesture or a fancy piece of paper that can make you truly American but living the right way can; waking up and doing the right thing every day, no matter how big or small the action, is what makes us American. It isn’t a static definition either, it’s a dynamic one just like we are as people; always changing, growing, and working towards the betterment of not only ourselves but our society as a whole. When considering how we define being American it’s worth noting those criteria.

When I voted it was in a densely populated, urban sector of Philadelphia. There were four booths for hundreds of people; many of whom were elderly and couldn’t stand for hours. It was a very telling few hours. Some of those elderly individuals struggling the most sported Make America Great Again hats. Instead of being happy at your supporter’s misfortune though I spent my day making trips to a conference room located at the back of the line hundreds of people long in order to ferry chairs to those who couldn’t stand. It wasn’t a big gesture or one that required a tremendous effort, it certainly DID NOT deserve any praise, because I knew it was merely the right thing to do for my fellow American. This attitude seems to be dying though, as we forget more and more what being American means.

As I walked back and forth with chairs under each arm I watched many of my young peers barely look up from their phones; some even seemed noticeably annoyed that a fellow millennial would go out of his way to help your supporters. Make no mistake, those watching seemed to have forgotten what being American means just as much as anyone. When nobody joined in to help I was only made more aware of the change I’ve seen in my lifetime; the gradual shift many of us have noticed in our culture. It might seem subtle to some, but many have forgotten to do the right thing for no other reason than it helps another American.

If this lack of support for each other continues to proliferate we’ll witness the decay of American values and worth This is something I attribute to the win at all cost/look out for yourself mentality that’s taken over politics and permeated into our culture; winning has become more important than standing up for each other. Americans used to do the right thing automatically, while many still do, others have stopped if there’s no reward or personal incentive. Americans used to help each other no matter who was President and that’s truly what made America great; our uniquely American loyalty. That loyalty, love, and solidarity saved us from the greatest threat the world has ever known, liberated Europe, and won two world wars.

There’s been a change though. It’s apparent everywhere. We saw it when 23 of 24 Texas congressmen voted to deny aid when Hurricane Sandy hit, now faced with Harvey, Texans find themselves in an unfortunate position. This is merely one example of a larger problem within our society though and if this cancerous divisionist mentality continues to spread we’ll witness our downfall.

Hope is not lost though because it isn’t too late to start putting America, and each other, first again; all that’s required is remembering what made us Americans in the first place.

In school, when I was young and studying our history, I learned a great lesson; one I think is important enough to share. I learned that being an American isn’t something you obtain from being born here, or even from keeping other people out; being American is something you become through your actions and character. Defining what it meant to be an American was something our founding father’s sacrificed all that they had for.

Today, with all the modern luxuries we have it’s hard to understand being so passionate about something you’d die for it but our founders had that passion for the characteristics which would later define our nation. By fighting so fervently amongst ourselves that we forget the value of other Americans we put into jeopardy all that we have. It’s all of our duty to honour that which our founding father’s felt defined America.

Honoring those traditions can mean different things to different people but all of us must find a way to honour them, every day if we are ever to truly Make America Great Again. This isn’t hard to do, it only takes remembering to do the right thing. I’m not perfect, in fact, I would consider myself the last person for anyone to take their cues from, but for me, I honor those traditions by trying to do the right thing every day to the best of my ability, whether it’s big or small, seen or unseen, noted or unnoticed.

You see, if you remember to do the right thing, to treat others how you’d like to be treated, and do everything to the best of your ability, I promise everything else, all the nonsense in the media, won’t matter a single bit, because we’ll once again have a country of people who look out for one another. The alternative is unacceptable.

So Mr. President with this in mind I wanted to give you some advice for salvaging your presidency:

  1. Tell the truth. In times of doubt, the truth is always the right answer. If lies are allowed to be believed as fact America will continue to forget that the real enemy isn’t each other, it’s those who seek to end democracy, freedom, and our way of life.
  2. Stop defining what it means to be American from a partisan stance. You have no right. None of us do. Being American is defined by those who came before, and it’s defined by those whose examples will survive the test of time. If someone is willing to come here, work hard, abide by our laws, and protect our way of life, then you, Donald Trump, have no right to tell them they cannot be Americans. Being born to millions in New York, dodging your country’s call in its time of need, and verbally accosting service members does not make you the one to decide what it means to be an American.
  3. Stop attacking the media. You bear a great responsibility; millions of Americans look to you for guidance and comfort during hardship. If you continue to point their anger at the media we may lose an integral pillar of democracy. If you do not you will cement your legacy as the enemy of democracy. History will condemn you.
  4. Stop using radical Islam and immigrants as scapegoats to bring people together. We’ve seen in history scapegoats unite the masses but at great cost. Instead of pandering to the fears of your base you could teach them to accept. You’ve uniquely been able to reach the individuals that make up your base unlike any before you; you have the opportunity to take advantage of their love for you and to teach them that being American really means doing the right thing above all else. In doing this you could not only save your legacy but America as a whole.

There is a storm coming and it cannot be defeated by a divided nation; a storm that doesn’t care if you’re liberal or conservative, a storm that seeks to upend democracy, freedom, and our way of life. As Americans, we have to do the right thing even when it isn’t easy, even when there’s no reward because that’s truly what makes us Americans and if we forget that, we’ll truly be lost.

Respectfully

Tucker Benedict.

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