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[personal profile] rowyn
So, last night, a thunderstorm took out the power on my block, at around 10PM. Lut was nearing the end of an eight-hour taskforce in City of Heroes, and was rather annoyed not to be able to finish it.

In the middle of the night, we both wake up. Lut checks the time on the cell phone, because we're both thinking it must be almost dawn by now. No, it's 1:30.

It's still raining. The power is still out.

Lut calls the power company. The power will be back on at 4:30AM. No big deal. We should be sleeping anyway.

Except that the power's out. During a storm.

The sump pump in the basement is electric.

So, my basement flooded, again. In a new and interesting way: the sump pump overflowed.

I guess I should buy a generator.




I didn't sleep well after that early-morning wake up. I kept having disorienting dreams about what was happening. I dreamed, several times, that the power had come back on -- only to wake and discover that it hadn't.

I dreamed that I was talking to neighbors that I'd just met in the dream, and telling them I'd decided to sell the house and move. "I'm sick of dealing with the basement. And I never did finish unpacking, so now I won't have to."

I dreamed one of my co-workers had set up for a garage sale the night before the storm, and left everything out and uncovered when it rained. I dreamed the basement flooded again. No, wait, that part really happened. I also wheeled the lawnmower back into the garage, through the rain, at 1:30 in the morning. It gave me something to do since I couldn't sleep anyway.

Tomorrow, I'll call the city and ask them when the work on the sewer will start, and what they plan to do around my house.

Re: Icky Night

Date: 2004-06-13 07:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sandratayler.livejournal.com
I've had nights like that. The ones where the more you try to find sleep the more it runs and hides from you. Or if you do catch it, it retaliates by making itself as unsatisfying as possible. I wish I didn't need Sleep.

Re: Icky Night

Date: 2004-06-13 09:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] level-head.livejournal.com
She is wrestling with the Basement of Sisyphus, it seems -- every time she pushes that water out of it, it finds some way to roll back in. But Sisyphus was among a wise and prudent mortal, and I believe that Rowyn follows in this path as well. She, too, may ultimately laugh at the fates that have tried to tie her to this recurring Great Deluge.

Ah, sleep! Would that we could do without it! What that extra quarter or third of our lives -- and the preparation and recovery on each end -- could add to our too-short times on this globe. Sometimes those are the most productive hours; you have your own thoughts for company, and can quietly nurture and shape them without interruption. But still you are struggling against biology -- your brain wants to shut down, at least partially, and you are not master of yourself after all.

But we win that struggle often enough -- and how hollow that victory can be if you aer trying to sleep but cannot.

===|==============/ Level Head

Date: 2004-06-13 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jordangreywolf.livejournal.com
Goodness. Those sellers must be gleeful over their luck at passing off this house - and its basement - on some unsuspecting buyer. =P I can't even imagine what could be done about a situation like this. (Dig a moat?)

Re: Moats

Date: 2004-06-13 08:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sandratayler.livejournal.com
A family I knew almost did build a moat to solve their perpetual wet basement. Here is their solution (Which, by the way, I don't recommend.):

Dig a trench around the entire house down to the level of the foundation so that all the underground basement walls are exposed. Then get lots of tar, make it hot and slather it over the basement walls until you have a layer about an inch thick all over. Let the tar cool. Rebury everything.

As you may imagine this was an incredibly messy and tedious project. It was done mostly by their teenage sons who actually seemed to relish the fact that the tar stained everything it got near. To add to the circus, they didn't do it in one big project, but in pieces over the course of about a year.

It did seem to work, but their basement wasn't as floody as yours sounds to be.

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