Saturday, September 21, 2013

Blown Across the Highway



Thursday evening, I was driving home along I-70 from a meeting in Columbia and could see imposing clouds gathering ahead of me. Checking the radar while stopped for gas, I realized that a massive cold front with a squall line and heavy rain stood between me and home. It was inevitable that I would run into the front, and I hoped only get as many miles behind me as possible beforehand.

I drove alertly, with both hands on the wheel at 10:00 and 2:00, as I drew closer to the dark clouds ahead.  Suddenly, my car was blown across both lanes of the highway. I will never know how I missed the truck I had been passing, or how I didn’t blow off the road. It was like hydroplaning, but sideways and without water. My steering wheel didn’t budge, I was simply picked up and blown across the road.  In those harrowing moments, I realized one of the ways my darling little fuel-efficient, plug-in hybrid keeps its mpg so low (70.6 mpg for the first 5000 miles).  It is a light car. Even when I was fully prepared for the blast that was coming, my car was too light to withstand the wind. I couldn’t do anything to stop it. I still love my little car, but it’s not the vehicle for storms on a highway.  

This morning, I was at Hopefest, a day of fun/music/food/social services provided by five Blue Springs churches for families that live year-round in the motels along I-70. I’ve been in those rooms more than once before, delivering food or other necessities to families in need.  The rooms look just like any motel room anywhere else: 2 beds and a television on a dresser, with a bathroom at the back.  Perhaps a microwave oven.  Families with children live there. Let me repeat. Families with children live year-round in a motel room.  School buses come by to pick up kids for school each morning. After school, they return to a motel room, a pool that is shuttered for the winter, and some weedy fields to play in by the side of the highway. There is no privacy, and beds are shared. Food is whatever the parents can afford that can be cooked in a microwave. There is no ability to make the food budget go farther with scratch cooking, nor can one make healthy food choices that would involve a cooktop or regular oven. Don’t get me wrong- families that are fleeing bad situations are thankful for a place to stay. However, a motel room is no place to raise a family over the long term.

As I’ve stood in various overcrowded motel rooms with my too-few gifts, I’ve heard stories of leaving in the middle of the night to escape physical violence.  Some people need to get away from an environment that threatens them or their children with drugs or gangs. Others have lost jobs. In general, the folks are doing the best that they can, but they have few options.  The rest of us have the privilege of taking for granted that we live in a safe place, are in relationships with caring and gentle people, and have family and friends that would take us in if we knocked at the door.  

For folks that have none of those things, there is no safety and no safety net. Even when they try as best as they can, sometimes they end up blown across the road by circumstances. Today, for awhile, those families that have gotten blown across to our piece of the highway were able to enjoy a lovely fall day with people who care.