Saturday, June 23, 2012

A HOUSE IS DEFINITELY NOT A HOME

The house two doors away from ours was destroyed by fire in a matter of minutes. A young family with a son, age 4, and daughter, age 2, lived in that house.  The father had left for work as usual that morning while his family still slept. But just as he was going to clock into work he got the phone call that his house had caught fire. Smoke alarms had awakened his family. His wife was sleeping in the same room as their daughter and his son in his own room. The mother yelled for her son to come quickly and he did. She said the smoke in the girl’s bedroom was so thick she couldn’t see her daughter’s face. Once both children were with her, she lifted the window and set them on a ledge of a roof outside the bedroom. She then climbed out with them and yelled for help. The little boy helped her yell.
Finally, a neighbor heard her calls for help and came to her rescue. He quickly located a ladder and got all three of them down to safety.  Within four minutes of being called, the fire department was on the scene. It was just as they were coming onto our street that we had gotten outside, having received a call from our daughter-in-law who lives across the street telling us the house was on fire and that she had called 911 already. Ken was prepared to go inside that burning house to save those children. As we ran up the street, the firetrucks came down. Ken yelled as loud as he could, “There are children in that house, two little kids.” It was then that we were told they had gotten out all right and were sitting on a neighbor’s deck.

We watched in horror as the flames shot out of the living room window, then upward. Before long they spread to the other side of the house downstairs and smoke was curling out around the roof.  All of this happened within less than a half hour of the father leaving for work to provide for his family.
His wife sat wrapped in a neighbor’s robe in the back of an ambulance with her two children, all of them with black smudges across their cheeks. Through all of this, she remained calm and her children acted fine.  After being checked by the EMT’s they were allowed to exit the ambulance. Neighbors located some clothes for the family to wear while they waited for the father to come home.
The house that this family rented was gone along with all of their belongings. Four people united as a family had no place to live, no clothes to wear, no toys to play with, and no furniture. Yet through all this trauma they remained calm. Their parents arrived soon and held them close, took the children and carried them.  

This family may not have a house to live in yet it is apparent they have a home, wherever it is that they live. This young couple spend time with their children. They didn’t have all the material wants of this world and bought furniture off Craig’s list when they could. They did not have cable tv by choice, something rare in today’s society. They prefer to spend time together as a family rather than watching t.v. They did have a collection of children’s movies that they enjoyed together. The children had a trampoline in their backyard that I enjoyed watching them play on. Sometimes the parents would get on it with them or the mother would be on the outside of it retrieving items that fell off it. I’ve watched as this family sat outside and played in the children’s plastic playhouse, or sat in chairs in the back yard.

Today the house sits boarded up, charred wood and melted vinyl siding hanging. In the yard is some of the furniture the family had bought from Craig’s list, the black remains of a couch that her brother had slept on only weeks before. The children’s playhouse still sits in the backyard along with a small plastic sliding board. The father asked Kenny if he would take down his children’s trampoline and store it for him until they find another place to live.
Having no renter’s insurance, this family will have to start over. Through the good will of neighbors and friends, things are starting to come together. They have been given clothes and toys by the bagful, a donation of a used washer and dryer and stove. Already they are looking for another house to make into a home. 
A house can be destroyed, repaired, replaced or you can move to a different one. But a home is something you build to last, no matter where that house sits. A home represents security, love, fun, family, laughter and stability. It is a place to relax and act yourself.  A place to learn values, responsibility, about faith, government of body and family, respect. In a home there is always someone there for you.

Have  you checked the batteries in your smoke alarm lately? Does that fire extinguisher you have even work or is it expired? Take a couple minutes today and check.
 Smoke alarms that were all hooked together in this family’s home is what saved their lives. They made that house their home and will do so again in the next house they find. Good luck to all of them.

1 comment:

  1. a house is a house but the family is more important..they are so lucky that they all got out in time..things could have turned out much worse..here is hoping that they find a place and 'fill it with the love of neighbors, friends and strangers.

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