I think I said it, I’ve been posting stuff everywhere.
(1) Go through your closets, and if you’ve got clean clothes that you’re not going to be using, put them in a box. Go through your workshop, and if there are tools and screws you’re not going to use, put them in a box. Etc. etc. If you go in every square inch of your house and your shop, that’s exactly what these people have lost. They need it all.
Don’t wait to get it all organized and get it correct. Fill up a box and ship it. Then fill up another, etc., don’t wait.
Where do you send it? Ship the boxes and on the label write:
To:
Disaster aide/Sheriff/Police/Fire Dept
C/O US Post Office
State & Zip code
No specific address needed.
(2) if you can afford a few dollars after that, Red Cross is the real deal. They were great when I went through a tornado and I don’t think they’ve been politicized. Check with your church, maybe some other folks’ churches, ask your local sheriff. On the chance they’re not doing something, tickle them the way I’m tickling you.
(3) set a calendar reminder on your phone, and do it all again in a week. And a week after that, etc. When we got hit, we had hotels and water and electricity, etc., and it still took a year and a half to get back in the house. Insurance paid for the two by fours, not much else. Send duct tape and sardines, and spoons and forks and knives.
In closing, I’ll tell you to post something here about how it’s all being handled, but that
@Uncle Gump guy and the site owners will bite your head off!
And it should’ve been the first thing I said, but stop what you’re doing for a second and clear your head, and pray to the Man upstairs for wisdom on what to do, and for the health and safety and salvation for those affected, as well as all the service people, public or private, who are coming to their aid. Don’t think for a second it doesn’t have a profound effect.
My two cents from having been there once or twice…