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Transcript of I Saw Half The House Just Collapse

I Survived
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Transcription of I Saw Half The House Just Collapse from I Survived Podcast
00:00:00

This is an ad from Betterhelp. As kids, we were always learning and growing, but at some point as adults, we tend to lose that sense of curiosity and excitement. Therapy can help you continue that journey because your back to school era can come at any age. And Betterhelp makes it easier to get started with affordable online therapy you can do from anywhere. Rediscover possibility with Betterhelp. Visit betterhelphulp. Com/newdirection today to get 10% off your first month. Hi, I Survived listeners. I'm Marissa Pinson. And if you're enjoying this show, I just want to remind you that episodes of I Survived, as well as the A&E Classic podcast, Cold Case Files, City Confidential, and American Justice, are all available ad-free on the new A&E Crime and Investigation channel on Apple Podcasts and Apple Plus for just 4.99 a month or 39.99 a year. Now onto the show. This program contains subject matter that may be disturbing to some listeners. Listener discretion is advised.

00:01:01

I heard this big noise, and I looked outside the window of the second floor, and I saw half the house just collapse.

00:01:09

Real people.

00:01:11

The ship listed all the way over to a 90-degree angle, and we all slid off the deck into the water.

00:01:18

Who faced death.

00:01:20

I didn't know whether we were going to drown, if we were going to be electrocuted, or if the fire was going to take us.

00:01:26

And lived to tell how.

00:01:28

I had one last phone call to make. I called 911, and I got all circuits were busy. At that point, I didn't think I was going to make it.

00:01:37

This is I survived. It's October 2012 in Tom's River Township, New Jersey. Mike lives with his grandparents in their house next to the Bay.

00:01:53

The news was saying that Hurricane Sandy was going to be a superstorm. I'd been through a hurricane before, Hurricane Irene a couple of years ago, and that was a mandatory evacuation. So I figured if this wasn't mandatory to leave your house, I was going to be okay. Before the storm hit, my father picked up my grandparents. They even told me, You should leave. Come with us. Come up north. Be safe. Don't be stupid. I thought by being down there, I thought maybe I could save the house. I just didn't want to go into that house, see it all wrecked and not know how it happened.

00:02:31

On Sunday, the day of the storm, Mike was alone in the house.

00:02:35

Around 2:00 PM, I was just watching the news. Just light winds, nothing major. A little bit of rain. Nothing to worry about, really.

00:02:47

At 9:00 PM, Mike saw water seeping under his front door.

00:02:51

You saw the water rising over the bulkhead and into the house, but it was only a foot of water. It There was really nothing to worry about. We get flooded all the time, but usually the water stops at a certain point. All I was doing at first was taking buckets and filling it with water, putting it into the sink. I still had power. I was still watching TV. I was still calm. About 20 minutes later, it got bad. The winds picked up about double. The rain picked up, the waves, everything. It was a disaster.

00:03:29

As the 820-mile-wide hurricane hit land, it created a storm surge 10 feet high. Winds of 80 miles per hour were battering the entire Eastern Seaboard. Hurricane Sandy was to bring New York City to its knees for over two days.

00:03:47

I tried to put towels underneath the door, bags of sand underneath the door, and the water just pushed them out like they were feathers. I tried to just bring most of the stuff that was downstairs, upstairs, any valuables. I tried to grab anything, flashlights to keep them close because I knew that the power was about to go out.

00:04:10

Mike retreated upstairs to escape the rising water.

00:04:14

The whole first four was foot. I still had the second four. I was still roaming around. I knew that I had to keep myself calm. All of a sudden, I heard this big noise, and I looked outside the window of the second four, and I saw half the house just collapse. Collapse. Water was rushing into the house, and it was getting higher and higher, and I thought the whole house was going to go. I thought, Maybe I should get out of here. May I have a better chance of swimming out there than if this house collapsed on me. When I went out the front door, I didn't realize that the water was eight feet in the streets, and it sucked me out.

00:04:56

Battling the current, Micah grabbed hold of his car and called his father.

00:05:01

I'm hanging on to my one-sheet wiper on my car. I can't hold on too much longer. I started screaming, My dad, I never should have stayed here. I'm not going to make it. The water's too high. He kept on screaming at me, You got to fight through this. You can't leave me now. And I'm like, Dad, I love you, but there's no way I'm going to make this. Before you knew it, the windshield wiper broke and I got sucked out into the bay. The current was so strong. The more I tried to swim towards land, the more I got knocked out into the bay. I was just freaking out. I still have my phone in my hand. I don't know how, but it was still working in the water. I had one last phone call to make. I called 911, and I got all circuits were busy. At that point, I didn't think I was going to make it. The waves were crashing over your head. You're panicking, you're crying, you're screaming for help, and there's nobody out there to help you. It was just so dark. You couldn't see where it landed was. The only light I got was when the telephone poles, the generators were blowing up.

00:06:07

So you got 2 seconds of light. I knew in the back of my head that there's nobody going to save you. There's nobody out there but you. If you think you're going to survive, you just got to do it by yourself. At first, I was swimming against the current, just trying to swim directly straight back to the house, and it just kept on pushing me more and more and more away from it. I didn't know what to do. I'm I'm just trending water. And I remember putting my hands over my face, going underneath the water a little bit and talking to myself, and telling myself, You got to get it together.

00:06:41

Mike realizes he had to stop fighting the current and begin to swim with the waves.

00:06:46

The water was so cold. At first, you're not thinking about it, how the water was cold. I'm trying to swim. I'm trying to tread water. I'm trying to stay alive. But after 2 hours of being in the water, your body starts to get so weak. You're thinking like, Oh, my God, I'm going to die. There's no light, and there's so many things in that water. There's so many things just floating around. And at one point, I saw a fin. I didn't know if it was a dolphin, a shark, anything. I didn't know what it could be. It passed me, and it gave me the motivation and the courage to just keep swimming to land.

00:07:30

After swimming for over two hours, Mike made it back to the flooded streets.

00:07:35

There's still eight feet of water on land. You can't stand. You're just treading water. You can't see mailboxes, you can't see cars, you can't swim 10 feet without bumping into something. People saw their houses just in the middle of the water. You have Jacuzis floating from people's backyards.

00:07:54

As he tried to swim back to his house, Mike saw a flashlight in the distance.

00:07:59

I was trying to scream, like throw me a rope or something. He couldn't hear me. I couldn't hear him. And after a while, I just tried to ignore him because I knew that there was no way I could reach him. I tried to get back to my house, and I kept on swimming and swimming. It was just not possible. The winds were fierce. I still can't believe how a big object didn't just smack me in the head. I had a duck from everything that was flying over my head. I mean, anything from branches to sticks to people's fences. I didn't want to get stuck back into the current. I didn't want to go back into the bay. So I just tried to find anything that I could hold on to, and I just couldn't hang on to anything. All I I was swimming with the current, trying to get anywhere. And this one wave just put me into this white pillar of somebody's house, and I just held onto it as long as I can.

00:08:58

Mike pulled himself out of the water onto the raised porch.

00:09:02

It's a life-and-death situation. I need to break into this lady's house. I'm driving this brick into this lady's door, and I had no strength. It had to take me at least 20 to 25 times, even to break the door. When the door finally broke, I reached in, I unlocked the door, and I'm just screaming, Help, is anybody home? But there was nobody home. Their basement was all flooded, and their first floor wasn't flooded at all. I'm When I went in there, I'm crawling around. The first thing I do is take my clothes off, and I saw this white blanket on this couch, and I wrapped myself around it. My pulse was slow. My vision was going in and out. I was so clumsy. I was bumping into everything. I knew I had hypothermie at the time. I was freezing. I was never this cold in my life. I'm trying to feel around for any clothes in the house. I got a pair of jeans, a black jacket, and I put everything on me at once, and I just curled up in a pool. A half hour later, my body wasn't warming up. I was so tired.

00:10:12

I thought if I took a nap on the couch that I wouldn't wake up.

00:10:17

Believing he was going to die, Mike wrote a note for whoever found his body.

00:10:22

I just didn't want them to come home a few days later and see a dead body on the couch and not know how it got there. All I remember is I guess, me saying I got swept out of my house. I had a break into yours. It was a life and death. Please tell my dad I love him. Tell him that I made it here. I didn't think I was going to make it. I didn't know what to do. There was eight feet of water outside the house, and there was no rescue. I remember writing help signs on the window just in case I did fall asleep. Maybe people would see the help signs. I just I just prayed. I didn't want to die like this.

00:11:04

Mike passed out, but a loud alarm woke him 10 hours later.

00:11:08

I went upstairs and saw this carbon monoxide detector, and I said to myself, There's no way I'm dying like this. You can't smell carbon monoxide. You only can smell gas. And I was about to leave the house. Before I jumped out, I heard this motor, and I went on the top balcony, and I keep on hearing this Waverunner motor, jet ski, and I'm screaming, Help. Could somebody help me? Could somebody help me?

00:11:36

The man heard Mike's cries for help and came to his rescue.

00:11:40

I had no strength. I couldn't even hold on to him on the back of the Waverunner. I thought it was just going to fall off. And he wanted to bring me to a shelter at first, but then he saw that I was in bad shape, and we went to his house. He gave me new clothes. His name was Frank. He was about a mile from me, and I owe my life. I called my father up, and for some reason, he knew it was me. He just picked up the phone. He's like, Mike, please tell me it's Mike. Please tell me. My dad, I made it. I'm like, I never thought I was ever going to see you again. I don't know how I made it, but I made it. I didn't give up. And you're the reason why I didn't give up. I survived the Hurricane Sandy because I didn't I gave up. My adrenaline pushed me through what I had to get through. When you're put in that situation, you do everything you can to survive.

00:12:39

Hurricane Sandy caused over 75 billion worth of damage. Over 150 people lost their lives.

00:12:47

If it rains, I get scared now. There's no way I'm going to put myself in that danger anymore. And if someone does, just try to get to safety as quickly as you can. Don't wait until the end where you can't do anything about it. As soon as you see that water drifting up, just get in your car and leave.

00:13:12

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00:15:24

The Bounty was a reproduction of the original Bounty. It was built in for the film of Mutiny on the Bounty. It was used primarily as a training vessel and also as a floating museum. My job was the engineer on the ship, responsible for keeping the generators and the propulsion engines going, water systems, electrical systems, and to keep the ship running.

00:15:51

The crew was preparing to sail down the East Coast to Florida. The captain called a meeting to discuss the impending hurricane.

00:15:59

His thoughts were that the ship would be in more danger sitting at dock if the hurricane happened to hit where we were than to be at sea. His thoughts were to go out east, southeast, and to see what the path the hurricane was going to take and stay out of the path of its most destructive forces. The Navy generally takes their ships out of port when hurricanes are coming. And so that made sense me. The captain told us that he wouldn't feel badly about any of us if we decided to get off the ship. Everybody had a sense of confidence in the ship and the captain, and and their fellow mates, and so none of us elected to get off the ship at that point.

00:16:50

The ship set sail four days before the hurricane was due to hit shore.

00:16:55

The seas were pretty good for the first two days. We were not only sail, but we were also under propulsion from our two main engines. We were trying to make time to get around this hurricane. We started preparing the ship. Anything that seemed like it could move, if it wasn't already lashed once. It was relashed again. We started to hit the storm before force on Saturday. The seas picked up dramatically. The wind was probably blowing 70 knots. The seas were probably running 20, 25 feet. You couldn't walk anywhere without holding on to something. I went flying at least twice across the deck. It was getting pretty hairy at that point in time. In the engine room where I was trying to keep When I got things going, it was extremely hot, well over 100 degrees down there. I was becoming very much dehydrated between the heat and lack of sleep. I probably hadn't slept at that point in time in probably a day and a half. It is quite an ordeal just to hold on down there, much less trying to work on anything.

00:18:03

Two large pumps, powered by generators, removed any water the ship took on board.

00:18:09

I never really started to have any worries until Sunday. We were having to switch the generators back and forth in order to change filters. I had shut one of the generators down. We had a backup hydraulic pump, Bilge pump, that ran off one of the main engines. We had taken that and put that down in the hole, and so we were pumping with two two pumps.

00:18:31

A fuel leak caused one of the engines to fail, leaving only one pump working.

00:18:36

I think we were probably taking on water later on that evening, probably at a rate about a foot, two feet an hour more than we were pumping out. It was obvious that we were getting in pretty serious trouble. I know that the Coast Guard had been contacted. The concerns were twofold. One of them was our safety, the other one was saving the ship, which everybody very much wanted to do. What we were going to try to do was to hold on to the ship until morning, and they were going to try to bring us some pumps so we could pump the ship out.

00:19:11

Below decks, water levels continue to rise at over 2 feet per hour.

00:19:16

The engine room became entirely flooded, and we lost all power. We might have to abandon ship. We might not be able to save her. We might not be able to stay on her until the morning. The decision was made that we We should dawn our emergency suits, our emersion suits. And then we were ordered up on the main deck. We were in the full blunt of this hurricane. I'm going to say it was blowing 70, 80 knots easily.

00:19:44

At midnight, with the ship slowly sinking, the captain decided to abandon ship.

00:19:49

The ship was listed very heavily, and so we were all up holding on to something. The plans were that we were going to do a controlled descent into the life rafts. Before we had a chance to do this controlled descent, the ship heeled over violently to the starboat side. We were all on the port side, and we all went sliding off the deck of the ship in an instant. You didn't have any choice. You were going in the water. And that's when things started to get very scary. This is in the middle of the night, in the middle of a hurricane. It is raining, the wind's blowing, and you're in these confused 25-foot seas, 30-foot seas. I look up when I hit the water, and what do I see? But coming right down at me, this tremendous mask and all the rigging that are in them is lifting up out of the water and coming slamming right back down at you. My thoughts were to get away from the ship just as fast as I could. It became a matter of survival. I was hung up in the rigging three or four times, but I finally managed to get away, far enough away from the ship, so that I wasn't in danger of being hit by these masks anymore.

00:21:05

Despite the darkness and 30-foot waves, Chris found five of his crew mates.

00:21:11

We grabbed hold of a piece of thick oak a crating that came off the stern of the ship. One of the five crewmates that was with me had been injured pretty severely. He had a couple of crushed vertebrae, several broken ribs, and a dislocated shoulder. And We were trying to make sure he was okay and trying to keep him with us as well. If any of us had become separated, that would have been it. There was no way you could have swam or gotten away or gotten back to where you started from with the way the seas and the winds were blowing. It was just one of those, Am I going to make it? Is this the end of it for me? One of my mates had said, Well, we need to find one of those life rafts. It wasn't too much longer after that, that, Lo and behold, what do we see? But it was one of the life rafts. It was still in this canister. They are stored in these big white canisters. For some reason, this thing had not deployed. It was deployed by a small explosion, explosive device. And so you didn't want it so close that somebody would get injured by it.

00:22:24

I managed to get the life raft deployed. That was only half the battle. In these raging seas and in this wind, getting inside the life raft itself turned out to be quite a challenge. The entry side that we were trying to get into was probably a foot and a half, two feet off the water. These seas were just pounding the hell out of us. We're all trying to hold on to this life raft. We're also all physically exhausted. None of us had any sleep. All of us have been to death, and the winds were howling. It took a long time, but we finally managed to get that one person in the life raft. And then after that, it really helped because you had somebody that was inside helping to pull the other people up. Once we got inside the life raft, the ordeal didn't end there. The large waves were probably hitting the life raft probably every five minutes. We came close to being flipped over. That was pretty scary, too. What do you do in an upside a life raft? These life rafts were built for 24, 25 people, and there was only six of us in it.

00:23:36

We were concerned about the life raft getting flipped over. Every time one of those waves had hit, we would get a little bit more water in the life raft And I'm not sure that that didn't actually help us because it helped us to a little weight in the bottom of it to keep us from being flipped over. One of the shipmates I had on board with us, she had one of the EPURBs with us. And an EPURB is a signaling device that relays our location to the satellite, and the Coast Guard, therefore, would know where we were.

00:24:06

For over six hours, Chris and his friends were thrown around in the life raft.

00:24:12

About an hour after day break, the helicopter, we heard it, and it was really a good feeling. There's a canopy over top of this life raft with two openings on it, and I stuck my head out of one of them to make visual contact with them to let them know that we were down there. And they got close enough and you could see that they were deploying one of the rescue swimmers. He made it over to the life raft, and he told us, Hey, my name's Dan. I hear you guys need a ride. What we wanted to do was to take one at a time, and he would swim us over and put us in a basket, and they would lift us up into the helicopter. The first person they took was our injured mate since he was in the worst condition. So they took him over and Dan proceeded to come back and gather us one at a time. There was three people that he had gotten out of the life raft when a huge wave came and hit the raft and flipped the raft upside down. I didn't know exactly what to do.

00:25:17

Who had ever been in a situation like that before? What is the next step I'm going to take? And how do I get away from this? I don't know how we got underneath that life raft through the opening and out on the other side. I think we were just all running on adrenaline.

00:25:31

The Coast Guard swimmer, Dan, returned to rescue Chris and his friends.

00:25:36

Besides the six of us, we had no idea if everybody else was safe. We just didn't know. They explained to us there were some other people in the life raft that they had got picked up, and they wanted to go see if they couldn't go get them to. They deployed Dan again down into the Raging Sees, and it was a cheer that went out every time we saw a new face because it was somebody we knew somebody else was safe. It ended being, I think, a total of nine of us survivors in this helicopter. We still didn't realize on the flight back who had made it and who hadn't. And we didn't know until we got to Elizabeth City that we were missing the captain, and Claudine Christian.

00:26:18

The body of crew member Claudine Christian was found the following day.

00:26:23

She drowned, and there was also some bruises on her head. I'm assuming that she got hit by some of this rigging that I was dodging out there.

00:26:32

The body of the captain, Robin Walbridge, was never recovered.

00:26:36

I think that the reason that I survived this ordeal was because of everybody else. If it wouldn't have been for all of us working together, a lot more of us would have been lost. And I think that's the reason that I'm here today.

00:26:57

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00:27:24

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00:27:28

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00:28:35

In my home, we are about eight people, and it's my brother, his wife, his two children, myself, my husband, my mother, and my daughter. We had heard that Hurricane Sandy was coming, and quite frankly, to move eight people to one location was a little bit difficult. So we decided to wait and see.

00:28:54

Nezha evacuated in 2011 for Hurricane Irene, and their house was badly damaged. So her family decided to stay and protect their home during Hurricane Sandy.

00:29:05

We had the generator, we had the pump ready, we had food, we had flashlights, candles, we had everything we needed, and most importantly, we had each other. We had some comfort level knowing that we are not the only ones on the block. Everyone was there. So we figured, what can really happen? If they're not panicked, we're not panicked. The morning of the hurricane, the eight of us are at home, and we are just watching the news, and we're just downplaying it thinking, Oh, she usually over-exaggerates. It'll be okay. It'll be okay. We look out the window, we walk outside, and the wind is fine. There's no rain inside. There was a little bit of sunshine, actually.

00:29:43

At 6:30 PM, as his sister-in-law suddenly raced downstairs.

00:29:48

She says to us, The water's coming. There's water outside. And we didn't understand it because I look out the window and there's no water coming from the sky. Where's this water coming from? I went upstairs to the third floor and looked out the window when I saw our neighbor's boat floating past our driveway and headed up the block. I hear my brother from downstairs screaming. He's never screamed before, and he's a pretty calm person. Everybody out of the house now. My brother was screaming for us to get out of the house. Get out, get out now, get out now. And when I ran down the stairs from the third floor, I just didn't I don't understand. What are you talking about? Until I looked at his feet. The water was already at that level, so that meant that the water was at least 4 feet high at this point. The water is rising so rapidly. You're putting two and two together. It's not coming from the sky. It's coming from the ocean.

00:30:48

The rapid flooding was a result of the hurricane combined with an unusually high tide.

00:30:53

For something like that to happen so rapidly, you don't know how much time you have till your Our whole home is submerged. We all just frantically, frantically, searching for our rain boots, searching for our coats, and putting it on the girls. My brother and my husband are telling us to get to the car, get to the car. They'd park the car earlier in the day, up the block, further up the block, figuring it was a little bit of a higher elevation. Maybe the cars won't get flooded. I'm waiting through this water with my daughter in my arms, trying to get to the car. When I look up and the power lines above me are just sparking working. And I just stopped. And I thought to myself, Oh, my God, this is how we're going to die. We're going to get electrocuted. What do I do? Do I move forward? Do I go back? And you don't know what to do in that moment. You just don't. And I just snapped out of it and I said, Keep going, keep going. And I just made my way to the car. We get into the car and I am screaming to my sister-in-law, Go, go, just go.

00:31:55

Drive, just drive. Hit the gas. Just go. She was looking straight ahead and she just said, Nes, I can't go.

00:32:03

The street was full of people trying to drive to safety.

00:32:07

There was a line of cars just stopped, stopped, and the water was just rushing up. I said, Back to the house, everyone, back to the house because at this point, the water was reaching the door of the car. I didn't want to remain in a car with power lines blowing up around us and, God forbid, getting electrocuted. I was screaming at them, Everybody back, everybody back, everybody back.

00:32:31

As they waded back to the house, they passed their boat parked in the driveway.

00:32:35

I noticed that there were life preservers there, and for some reason, I just grabbed three of them, and I ran up, and we brought everybody up to the third floor, and I started to put them on the girls. I had just gotten the life preserver on the girls and then on myself when my brother screamed, The house is on fire. And I said, What do you mean? And that's when I heard the explosion and I saw what It looked like fireworks out the window. The electric lines had caught fire to our home, and basically, one whole side of our home was exploding. And here I have my child asking me if she's going to die, and I have to lie to her and tell her, No, baby, we're going to be okay. I didn't know whether we were going to drown, if we were going to be electrocuted, or if the fire was going to take us. The first floor is now submerged. Is it going to reach the second floor? We don't know. We're on the third at this point. And now there's a fire. A fire is happening. It's erupting. It's exploding. And I'm thinking, No, no.

00:33:38

This is not. It can't be. This cannot be it. And I just screamed out to God, God, please help us. Help us now. Help us now. And that's when it happened within moments. My brother said, the fire is out, the fire is out. I felt this immense need to get out of this house. To me, it was a death trap. There was one explosion, one fire already. What was next? The gas line was going to explode? When my brother said, Everyone out, we said, How and where? And he screamed for our neighbor next door, and she opened her door. She was screaming for us, Come, hurry, hurry, hurry. And the look of fear on her face, I'll never forget.

00:34:22

A raging torrent flowed between the houses.

00:34:26

When you look out onto this water, it's dark, it's dingy. There are things floating floating by at a rapid pace. The current is fierceful. It's forceful.

00:34:35

The family's boat was still secure on its trailer in the driveway.

00:34:39

That boat acted as a bridge that we were able to leave from our home onto this boat and climb onto our neighbor's stairwell.

00:34:49

Water was rushing in through the neighbor's open door.

00:34:53

The water that was rushing in was now rushing into her downstairs basement. I'm at the doorway trying to help everyone in and somehow I lost my footing. The current then took me, and it swept me off my feet, and the current was pulling me down to her basement. If I didn't have that life preserver on. I don't know what would have happened because that life preserver gave me that moment that I needed to grab onto her banister. I held on while everyone is screaming my name, and they just pulled me right back up. If I did not have that life preserver on, I would have went down into that basement, and there was no getting me out. That's how forceful the current was.

00:35:37

Neza and her family retreated upstairs as the water continued to rise.

00:35:42

I had asked my brother, How much higher is this water going to get? And he said, No, it's not going to get much higher. We're fine. It's almost over. High tide is almost over. Throughout the night, there were power lines were just sparking everywhere. And you can see the gasoline and the water glistening. So my fear at that point was, My God, there's going to be a mass fire on this island. I couldn't sleep. I needed to wait for help. I needed to constantly try to call 911, and it just didn't work. No one was coming. My mother and I had waited up the whole night and waiting by the window with a lantern, with a battery-operated lantern. Our fences that were 6 feet high in our yard were completely submerged, and so we kept an eye on that. And once we can see the of the fences, we knew that the water was now subsiding, and that was a relief. I took my daughter's life preserver off, and I laid her on the sofa, and I told her to go ahead and go to sleep.

00:36:41

The next morning, the water had receded enough for them to escape.

00:36:45

So we made it out. We just waded our way out into more the knee deep of water, and we just got wet again and went over to the car, the one car that was remaining, and we drove away. As we're driving away, I remember thinking, I never want to go back to that house again. I never want to see that house again. But we had to do what we had to do. We have a mortgage. I have a child. We have nowhere else to go. What am I supposed to do?

00:37:17

Hurricane Sandy left over 30,000 people homeless.

00:37:22

I survived because of my family, because of my neighbor, and because of my brother's quick thinking. If there is another hurricane or any other warning, without a doubt, we'll be leaving. Don't mess with Mother Nature. She's the boss.

00:37:44

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AI Transcription provided by HappyScribe
Episode description

Mike attempts to protect his grandparents home as hurricane Sandy hits. When the house starts to collapse around him, Mike tries to swim to safety only to be sucked into the bay by the powerful current. Chris is a crew member on the HMS Bounty when they leave port in hopes of calmer waters during Hurricane Sandy. When the crew are forced to abandon ship, Chris and a handful of others make it on a life raft only to face capsizing in the rough seas. Neza and her extended family try to wait out Hurricane Sandy only to have their home catch fire after power lines start to explode.

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