my family was planning our usual Christmas. It was our turn to have the clan at our place and my mother, Middle Cat and I had spent Christmas Eve doing all sorts of last minute preparations inside. The Senior Cat and Brother Cat had been making sure everything was tidy outside. The Black Cat was out somewhere. Later we went off to the midnight carol service and were looking forward to the day to come.
Early the following morning everything had changed. The phone rang about five in the morning. The Senior Cat answered it sleepily but then sounded wide awake and very, very alarmed. Then he called me, not my mother, and passed the phone over to me with the words, "There's been a bad cyclone in Darwin."
"Bad" was an understatement. It was catastrophic. News was filtering through but much more slowly than it does now. Even without that I had already been called in to help because I was on a list of volunteers with the necessary emergency response training. Like a number of local teachers I had done a short course run by someone who had spent a number of years working in disaster relief. No, I was not going to Darwin. There would be enough people up there. I would be here waiting for people who had nothing but clothes they were wearing to arrive.
I know I ate something but it was not Christmas lunch. Nobody felt like celebrating as the pictures slowly came through. A friend collected me in her car on Boxing Day and I left the house feeling very nervous. Could I really do what was required of me?
We were taken through procedures again. In my case it meant seeing certain information was gathered from people arriving. We were told nothing much more than "some people will be arriving but they won't have anything with them" and "some of them will be driving down".
It also meant directing them to the food and clothing that the Salvation Army was already collecting ready to distribute. My parents and my brother left the house not long after I did to help with collection and distribution. Fifty years ago they were young and quite fit. They needed to be because, by the following morning, they were dealing with the mounds of clothing and furniture I could see arriving at the other end of what was then the biggest building in the state's showgrounds.
People had begun to arrive. They came in looking bewildered and exhausted. Some of them had driven through a night and a day in cars which were sometimes literally tied together. The police at the checkpoints further north had simply allowed anything remotely road worthy to continue further south.
Most people were wearing nothing but shorts and flip-flops. One woman was wearing nothing but a nightie. There was a teenage girl with only a bra and pants and a beach towel hugged around her. Several men and boys were wearing nothing but a towel around their waist.
They queued in a reasonably orderly fashion I suppose but I hardly had time to notice. I remember one man blinking and squinting at the form he had been given and then breaking down because he had not been able to find his glasses in the devastation that had been his house. Someone handed him their glasses for a moment and that helped. It seemed such a little thing but the owner of the glasses was grabbed by both hands and it was done in silence. I remember how quiet it seemed. People were not talking.
Late in the afternoon though came the moment I doubt I will ever forget. I was helping a woman who was clearly overwhelmed by the situation. She was doing her best but she could not read or write and getting information from her had been difficult. Her exhaustion was evident too. She had a number of children standing silently behind her as we tried to find accommodation for all of them. I was asking her for the ages of her children and I remember saying something, "So that's you and eight children Mrs...?" She looked at me, blinked and then screamed, "No, where's... " One of her children was missing. It seems impossible but she had come all the way from the north of the country to the south without realising one of her children was not there. He was a boy in his teens and she thought he had been with a friend when the cyclone hit. I never discovered whether he was safe. I tried not to think about that woman but I have often wondered what happened to her too.
I went on to the next family and the next...and the next. Many of them were women with children. The men had stayed behind to do what they could. It was a moment of relief when a local woman came into the hall and took a friend and her two children away. Someone else arrived and took away a family to stay on the caravan in their property - instead of going on holiday themselves. It was little things like that which helped everyone.
My experiences at that time were the closest I have ever come to being a front-line worker in a disaster relief situation. It taught me a great deal, a great deal I would rather never have experienced. It was an experience which has enabled me to struggle with the role I eventually took on. And it has made me forever admire those who go out into the actual situations and deal with it all on a much more immediate basis, who sleep on the ground and eat the same rations as those they are trying to help. I was so lucky because I eventually went home to a fridge still with food in it. We eventually ate and slept normally but it was weeks before I stopped hearing the screams of the woman who did not know the whereabouts of her eldest son. She would be a very old woman now. If she is still alive I hope she is spending Christmas Day with her son.