Natter 31 But Looks 29
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Yeah, but I'm a native Californian, and tornados scare me much more than earthquakes.
We all seem to prefer our own natural disasters over all others -- I have a decade-long disagreement with some Cali friends about whether or not earthquakes are worse than hurricanes. Dude, at least we have time to buy ice and/or get out of the way.
Hurricanes are much less scary to me.
ETA: Holy crap! I just clicked on ita's link. Freaky. (And yet, not freaked by the pictures of boats in trees that show up when a hurricane passes through here. Huh.)
Hurricanes and blizzards are not that scary to me. I've never experienced an earthquake, but they seem creepy, and tornados look really scary.
Actually, I prefer packed snow to black ice and slush. But...only if ther are no other drivers. I'm safe on packed snow. The rest of the world is what scares me. (I learned all my snow driving techniques on pole-position sytle curvy mountain roads with unguardrailed dropoffs.)
But other than that really minor and unlikely-realized distinction, I agree with you, ita. And it needs to have heated seats in every venue and covered or underground walkways, and OH! 10 hours sun daily.
So I'm not moving any further north.
Earthquakes are quick, and hard to predict. So I like them, because no anticipation. As a Jamaican, hurricanes suck, because there's nowhere to go, except uphill.
Tornadoes are a mix of anticipatable and sudden. Don't make me feel good. I prefer to not be warned, if prevention is impossible.
(I learned all my snow driving techniques on pole-position sytle curvy mountain roads with unguardrailed dropoffs.)
You want to see blind terror? Stick me on
any
road with a steep dropoff and no guardrails.
I'll be on the floor, thankyouverymuchandpleasepasstheValium
I guess when it comes down to it, it's which city you love. I'd rather be in danger (the Big One *is* coming) than bored.
I like anticipation. I can be in the same room with an unopened birthday present for WEEKS.
I like planning ahead. Even if I can't do shit. I can pretend.
Tornados get my lizard brain in a tizzy, though. I'm blaming it on my parents being midwesterners. Despite being next to a freight line for a while, sometimes the sound catches me wrong and the adrenaline hits. And I've only been in the vicinity of actual tornados twice thrice- forgot the local baby tornados, and only once close enough to hear the eerie call.
Huh. ita intrigued me with krav to the point that, as I was reading 100 posts or so, I had questions. That other people asked. And ita answered. This post? Not even needed anymore.
Thanks for the link, ita. I think I am going to check it out. Hoping someplace down here can work with a "no running" caveat as running leads to tendonitis flare-ups which lead to steroid shots in my hips and frankly I want to avoid those as much as possible. The needles are ginormous long and hurt like hell.
I like anticipation. I can be in the same room with an unopened birthday present for WEEKS.
This is so me.
I like planning ahead. Even if I can't do shit. I can pretend.
Yes, this too. Plus, I find a kind of comfort in the ritual of preparing. Buying jugs of drinking water, filling the bathtubs and buckets with extra water to flush the toliet and clean (we have always had wells, so no power means no water), setting out flashlights and battaries and candles. It may be an illusion, but it's comforting to me nonetheless.
However, I definitely have to defer to ita in terms of locale. New England almost never gets the really big hurricanes, and we do have a lot of higher ground and inland to flee to.