All Content from Business Insider 10月29日 10:09
飓风中的坚守:家庭的避难与日常
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

面对飓风“梅丽莎”,Ines Pacheco和家人在坚固的家中共同度过。尽管内心充满恐惧,她仍努力维持日常作息和语言,以安抚年幼的孩子。家中挤了八个人,包括邻居和朋友,大家共享食物,互相支持。在蓝山社区,邻里互助精神尤为重要。Pacheco通过保持规律的用餐和游戏时间,以及用积极的语言安抚孩子,传递着安全感。即使面临断电和不确定性,她也专注于当下,相信家人能够一同度过难关。

🏠 **安全避难所与社区互助**:Ines Pacheco一家八口,包括孩子、保姆、邻居和宠物,共同挤在坚固的混凝土房屋中避难。房屋的预先准备和社区邻里间的互助精神是他们应对飓风的关键。邻居们共享信息,并互相依靠,体现了在灾难面前人与人之间的温暖连接。

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 **维持日常与安抚儿童**:为了让4岁和6岁的孩子感到安全,Pacheco努力维持家庭的日常作息,包括规律的用餐时间、游戏和睡前故事。她用朴实但年龄适宜的语言解释风暴,避免过度渲染恐惧,同时也在孩子害怕时给予安慰,强调“我们是安全的”。

🍎 **食物储备与资源再利用**:Pacheco利用她为学校制作午餐而储备的食物,为家中所有成员提供餐食。她积极地将现有资源用于满足大家的需求,展现了在困难时期灵活应变和有效利用资源的智慧。

⏳ **时间感知与不确定性**:在飓风期间,时间感变得模糊,雨水和风暴持续不断。Pacheco一家需要为可能长达一周甚至更久的停留做好准备。断断续续的电力迫使他们需要有策略地使用电子设备,并用棋盘游戏等传统娱乐方式来打发时间。

🧘‍♀️ **情绪管理与积极心态**:尽管内心充满恐惧,Pacheco有意识地将积极的态度传递给孩子。她反复提醒自己和家人“我们是安全的”,相信即使房屋受损,生命安全才是最重要的。她认为家长的情绪状态会直接影响孩子,因此努力保持镇定和希望。

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Ines Pacheco. It has been edited for length and clarity.

It's very scary. The storm is intense, but we're safe. The house we are in is made of concrete with a slab roof, and we did a lot of preparatory work. Currently, there are eight of us here: my husband, me, our two girls, ages 4 and 6, our nanny and her two children, ages 10 and 13, and a gardener from our community whose roof is made of zinc, which offers less protection. Plus a dog and a cat.

We're just waiting it out and doing a lot of mopping.

We are in the Blue Mountains outside Kingston, where even normal rain can trigger landslides. Because hurricanes come with notice, we've been talking to the kids for days about what to expect — lots of scary sounds, bad weather, and the importance of staying calm and listening. We were here for Hurricane Beryl last year, so they are familiar with some of the signs, but this is much worse. We don't sugarcoat it as a little rainstorm, but we keep it age-appropriate.

Neighbors take care of each other where we are

They heard "life-threatening floods" on the news and latched onto that phrase. I told them that's why we stay home and follow directions — so we'll be OK. One thing about Jamaica is that, in my experience, neighbors take care of each other, and I keep telling them that.

The view from a house in the mountains in Jamaica.

We stocked up on food and supplies. We already have a deep freezer and an extra freezer full. I also make school lunches for our local schools, so I had a lot of stock on hand. I've been repurposing it to feed everyone.

Time is strange now. Up here in the hills, it started raining on Friday and hasn't really stopped. The wind gusts picked up on Saturday. Kingston felt it more at landfall today, but in the mountains, the wind has been something to behold, especially at night. We're in a community chat with neighbors sharing photos and road updates; some are already blocked. We might be here for a week or more.

We keep the kids' routines despite Hurricane Melissa

With the kids, routine helps. On weekends at home, we like to sit down for meals together three times a day, so we're doing that now. We have regular mealtimes and talk like it's a normal day, even though it isn't. The girls are generally having fun — a full table, older kids to idolize. When the wind howls, they get scared, and we comfort them, reminding them that we're safe.

We've been losing power here and there, so we ration device time to keep everything charged. I'll say, "OK, iPads down — Uno or Bananagrams." But it's also like being on an airplane: some rules go out the window. If they want chocolate cookies at 8 a.m., fine. We're all just trying to survive.

I won't pretend I'm calm. I've had moments where I feel like I'm going to throw up from fear. I'm not a natural optimist, but I keep reminding myself: we are OK. The house might take on water, and some things might break, but we are OK. I try to bring that energy to the kids because they emulate what they see. If they see me scared, they'll be scared. So I tell them, "We're OK. People are protecting each other."

I'm proud of how they're handling it — tiny troopers. For now, we'll continue to mop, cook, charge devices when possible, play games, and eat together. We'll listen for updates, check on neighbors, and wait for the storm to pass.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

飓风梅丽莎 家庭避难 社区互助 儿童安抚 灾难应对 Hurricane Melissa Family Shelter Community Support Child Comfort Disaster Response
相关文章