I feel lucky to be here, writing at the desk that came to me from my grandparents, safe in my mountain home. It was a harrowing drive home yesterday.
At first it was lovely. I put gas in the car and was on the road by 7 a.m., which was 45 minutes later than I wanted, but finding a luggage cart and checking out of the hotel took more time than I anticipated. Still, it's summer, plenty of daylight, so I wasn't too worried (I try to avoid driving in the mountains in the darkest part of the night). I thought I might even stop along the way, maybe have lunch in Berea, Kentucky, see if I could discover some places where I might support local artisans.
I was in that part of Kentucky by lunch time, but I was in the beginnings of the torrential rain that would leave much of Kentucky flooded. My phone sounded an emergency alert: flash flood warning until 1 p.m., do not drive, seek shelter. The last time my phone alerted me about a flash flood warning, I was driving home from Spartanburg the evening before Hurricane Helene. I said to myself, "Flood? I'm in the mountains! I'm on an interstate!" Twenty-four hours later, that part of the interstate was indeed under water.
Yesterday I decided that the safest option was to keep driving. Mind you, it didn't feel safe: so much water both on the interstate and falling from the sky, such reduced visibility. But I knew that if I left the interstate, I might drive to some place less safe. So I kept going at 45 mph on I 75, thankful that everyone else was driving slowly too. And I did drive out of the weather. At my next gas/rest stop, I checked the radar to make sure there weren't additional weather surprises ahead.
Even though I checked, I knew I was traveling through a very unstable weather pattern so I kept going. As I got close to the Virginia/Tennessee line, the phone wanted to take me on US 70, so I pulled over, just to check before I proceeded. I wanted to make sure the phone wasn't taking me back to I 40, which I wanted to avoid, if the weather turned bad. I knew that US 70 would be twisty, but I decided it would get me home faster than other routes.
It was indeed twisty. A storm had already been through; at one point, I had to stop, wait for oncoming traffic to clear, and then drive around a downed tree.
I pulled into the driveway just before 4, almost weeping in gratitude. We were expecting heavy weather in Arden, so we unloaded the car, watched a bit of TV, and collapsed into bed. I made this Facebook post late in the day, and it seems as good a way to end as any other:
"I am safe at home in Arden, having taken many scenic routes on my way back from Indianapolis. Whenever I feel fretful about the state of the nation or our place in the world (either me individually or some collective we), I should take a drive through some part of the Appalachian mountain range to get some perspective."