I took the warnings in earnest. I filled three 1/2-gallon ball jars with tap water, and I took the children to buy special storm snacks, and we moved all of the important things off of the basement floor, lest it flood (as it did this spring, when three feet of snow tried to melt all at once). The girls and I picked the blossomed sunflowers from the garden, and arranged them in vases throughout the house, assuming we would otherwise lose them in the wind.

But at the pet store, where I went to buy dog food (not because I was stocking up out of fear or preparedness, but because we'd been completely out for weeks, feeding the dogs canned tuna and the kids' neglected dinner meat), there was a dramatic sign posted on the door: "WE DON'T HAVE ANY BOTTLED WATER OR BATTERIES." And as I hefted the 50 lbs. of kibble over my shoulder, the cashier handed me my receipt, looked me straight in the eye and said, with her whole heart, "Be Safe."
For serious?! Come on, people.
And by the time Irene got here, she wasn't even a hurricane anymore. Of course, we referred to her that way, anyway, for the excitement of it. And for what she lacked in rage outside our little house ("but when is the storm going to get here?" the children complained, at the very height of Irene's intensity), we made up for on the inside. I've begun referring to us as a "blended" family, and the blending is at times feeling rather like being swept up in a cyclone.
Children are resilient. They are adaptable. They are open-minded. But change is hard, even when it's a long time in the making. And these kids aren't shy about telling us what they think about all of the changes our families have gone through in the past couple of years. They aren't shy, and they aren't quiet. And sometimes, we (the mamas) feel like we are just putting out one fire after another.
And, sometimes, we (the mamas) just make a big pot of chili.


The basement didn't flood, but the backyard did, and when we'd had enough of the chaos inside (and when it seemed the storm had done all that she was going to do), we sent the children out, for a swim in the grass.
But even water wasn't enough on this day. Littler children had to be rescued by medium-sized children. Bigger children had to be thrown in puddles by frustrated-and-trying-to-help-them-snap-out-of-it mamas. Space was then enforced.
And then, at the end of the day, when Irene was well gone, when we could have, reasonably, put them all into bed, we chose not to. Instead, we declared it "family movie night!" and told the children to make some popcorn and a cozy spot for us to gather on in the living room. And, for the first time maybe all day, they listened to us, and they obliged.
And, together, we sat and watched Billy Elliot. The littlest ones fell asleep in our laps, and the biggest ones couldn't always understand the actors' accents, but no one complained, not at all. It was too special.
When it was over, they begged to "please, please let us do a family movie night again soon!"
And we said ok, yes, we promise. And we carried them upstairs, and tucked them in to their very own beds. And we tucked ourselves in, too, and left the window open, so all the post-storm air could blow over us while we held each other, hard, and slept.