1.17.2007

Happy Anniversary, Los Angeles


13 years ago on January 17th, at 4:30 am, those of us dwelling in the land of perpetual sunshine were rudely awakened by the earth having a temper tantrum.

I was sleeping in a water bed. If you've never had the pleasure of trying to escape a riptide under the sheets, let me tell you, it's not easy.

Or fun.

I could hear my parents yelling from the other side of the house. Once I finally stumbled out of the wave pool, I ran to the doorway. Finally, after what seemed like forever, the shaking stopped. The family met in the living room.

My little brother, who had been sleeping in there, was thrown from the couch and was still lying on the floor. The aftershocks would continue all day. As soon as the sun came out, he and my cousin set up shop outside away from the cracked walls, and slept under the sunshine. They refused to come back inside after the pre-dawn ordeal, afraid the walls would collapse.

And they did. All over the city. My sister-in-law's building was condemned. The university across the street fell to pieces. Freeway overpasses fell down and went boom. It was so very unsettling.

A few days later, they reopened our high school. By that point, most of us were used to the aftershocks. We no longer evacuated at the slightest tremor. But one day, in 5th period pre-algebra, we had another one and the girl sitting in front of me freaked out. She dropped to her knees and scrambled under her teeny desk. The rest of us just stared at her for a few seconds and then broke into hysterical laughter.

What doesn't kill us makes us laugh. Like hyenas.


Where were you that morning?

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

i was safely tucked away in the midwest, where they have no fault lines or anything else of distinction. boring ass place. no wonder i moved.

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

That's not an exciting story. You're so fired.

Anonymous said...

i was living in texas thinking how it was great that i didn't live in california. and now i live in the middle of LA so i'm not sure what happened.....

i'm actually waiting for that next "big one" to come. i studied geophysics as one of my myriad of majors in college so earthquakes are interesting now. i'm not sure i want my building condemned, i'm sure that would suck.

The littlest Princess said...

I was sleeping in my nice safe bed but woke up My friend was asleep in my sister's bed, we were supposed to have been at her house. We both went for the doorway and fell as we reached it. The worst that happened in my house. IF we'd been at her house a 400 pound book case with books and all would have landed right on the bed where we would have been sleeping. Her mom came flying over to our house to make sure she was okay, and told us the story. My friend and I then spent the next month sleeping on the pull out couch in my living room she would only return home to spend time with her family and get her clothes then she was back at my house. We finally grew a pair and decided to spend one night back at her place. Once she realized nothing was going to fall she was fine. She had a new bookcase, and a new bed because it broke from the impact of the book case but all was well and life went back to normal. And GPG I know you remember the sizable aftershock that rocked durring Finals that was so upsetting to the AP kids that they extended our day by an hour so that they could finish their finals.

Anonymous said...

I remember running into our hallway and hugging my Mom, then wondering where my Dad was. We looked down to the bedroom and he was getting dressed, while the shaking was still going on! My parents had a garage full of food, water and supplies in case of a disaster. My Mom was all excited so she went out and ate a can of tuna even though we had some in the house.

When school started again there was an aftershock that forced everyone to evacuate to the field. My Spanish teacher freaked out and flew under a student's desk, forcing her to find another desk to take shelter under. While on the field there was another temblor (I sound like Paul Moyer now)and you could see the top of students heads go up and down like waves travelling along the field...really bizarre.

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

JTS, the Princess and I were all at the same high school that year. I remember being stuck out on the football field during those aftershocks. Crazy shit. I can't believe we didn't get more time off, dammit!

J, your mom dug into her emergency tuna? That's classic. I always did adore your parents. Such nice people.

Anonymous said...

I was probably sitting in some Midwestern high school class (perhaps Spanish?) writing notes to my friends because paying attention was a waste of my time. And counting my lucky stars that I didn't live anywhere near California.

Go figure.

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

The good thing about earthquakes is that they rid us of all the people who don't belong in LA. Imagine how much better traffic would be if all those riff-raffs ran away to the midwest.

Anonymous said...

jeen yes, there are fault lines, they are just not very active.

and I can do you all one better because I announced the night before that we were going to have a huge quake before sunrise the next day, remember that princess???

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

I do. Can you hurry up and predict another one so we can trim off a little fat in the local population? Traffic is getting worse by the day.

The littlest Princess said...

Yes KM I do remember that. I also remember you telling my mom that we weren't done after we had a little earthquake when you were living with us, and low and behold a second roller came along. She tells that story a lot. Yeah being in school when an earthquake hits is not fun. It caused me to carry my winnie the pooh around with me for weeks just so I would stay calm. We had a few aftershocks from that one while in school. I just remembered the one durring finals because I heard something then turned to look out the window behind me only to have the temblor start and cause the blinds to pop me in the fore head. It sucked. We then dove for the desks, and sat on the foot ball field for hours which isn't fun. Kinda freaky.

Anonymous said...

KM--yes, there is a fault line running through nashville, or some other useless city down there. but i lived a few states away, where tornados were the biggest threat. come to think of it, i wish that fault had been more active. imagine how much cooler the midwest and south would be without tennessee, kentucky and a large portion of missouri!

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

Bourbon comes from Kentucky. And it's abbreviated KY. It stays.

And yes, I am five years old.

Anonymous said...

They say California is going to crack off and drift off into the ocian. Jokes aside though, I have to admit that I couldn't even imagine what it must be like to have the ground shake under my feet.

Anonymous said...

I remember it like it was yesterday. I was drinking chocolate milk and eating pizza during my friends' lunch period -- I liked their lunch time better than mine and I didn't mind skipping math class.

We were discussing the UN's role in preventing international slave trade and how cool those blue helmets looked. None of us could have guessed what was about to happen... Wait, what was the topic?

Anonymous said...

GPG...bourbon doesn't come from THAT part of kentucky. you have a point with the abbreviation though. tennessee and missouri must go. kentucky can stay. for now.

David N. Scott said...

Holy crap--I don't remember this at all. Don't know if it's because it was so much easier on the burbs or my usual memory that is the suck, but there you go....

Anonymous said...

tennessee has memphis and nashville. i can't speak for nashville, but memphis is one cool city.

now illinois on the other hand.... get rid of everything that's not chicago and it *might* become tolerable

Anonymous said...

yeah, i almost went down there because they were desperate for carpenters and the money was good. but then i, you know, didn't.

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

Skooky, you're so funny. Pretending you're a carpentar like Jesus. Smashing!

Anonymous said...

Actually, I was on the other side of the tracks in '94. I was an Indian.

Ghetto Photo Girl said...

It took me about 13 seconds to figure out what the FUCK you meant by that. Then I remembered you went to the OTHER school. Poor thing. The Princess followed you the next year. Which is when you came back, no?