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I sat there in my apartment eating a cheeseburger from Hardee’s on 15th Street. The sound of my VCR and my own thoughts comforted me. My friend the internet kept me connected to my boyfriend which I appreciated. The weather outside had told me of strange burst of winds. The radio had told me of tornadoes in Tuscaloosa. A girl in December told me I was safe to go home if I lived nearby. School was over and I didn’t feel like cooking, which explained the Hardee’s. I chewed and chewed like I had not a care in the world. I was eating, I was in my apartment, I was safe. Then everything went black and silent in my apartment. Everything except the strange sound outside my apartment. I heard it just after my apartment was silenced. “What the hell is that?” I asked myself, because I lived alone. I walked to the window, the blinds already shut. I peeked outside. I saw the devil outside my window. It was as tall as the sky, as wide as a mile, and angry. It roared and threw everything it swallowed randomly. It was 100 feet away, and coming closer. I closed my blinds and blinked.  Disbelief set in for a moment. “I did not just see that.” I told myself. “You should look again”, myself told me. So I peeked out the blinds again. The devil was still there and coming closer. It was not a nightmare. It was not a figment of my imagination. It was there and I was in danger. I felt the danger wash over me. Fear tasted like impending death that day, bitter and stuck in my throat. I grabbed my cell phone and a quilt that use to rest on my parents’ bed until I was allowed to take it. I ran to the bathroom, still tasting fear. I called my mother as the devil came closer. “Mom! There’s a tornado outside and it’s coming to get me!!” I’ll admit, I panicked, but you would too if the devil was right outside your door and you didn’t know if this was the end.   “Now is the time to go into survivor mode” my mother informed me in a calm voice. So after screaming and panicking and not dying of a panic attack, I closed my eyes and became calm. I waited for a calming outside before I explored the outside. There was some damage to my apartment, significant damage to my apartment building, 7 out of 8 of my windows in my van were imploded from the pressure of the devil, worse damage to my connecting neighborhood (but no deaths, though somewhere not far from there a house killed some students) and no Alberta City. My damages felt insignificant in comparison to that.
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Apr 13, 2020
Apr 13, 2020 at 10:47 AM UTC
The Devil
I sat there in my apartment eating a cheeseburger from Hardee’s on 15th Street. The sound of my VCR and my own thoughts comforted me. My friend the internet kept me connected to my boyfriend which I appreciated. The weather outside had told me of strange burst of winds. The radio had told me of tornadoes in Tuscaloosa. A girl in December told me I was safe to go home if I lived nearby. School was over and I didn’t feel like cooking, which explained the Hardee’s. I chewed and chewed like I had not a care in the world. I was eating, I was in my apartment, I was safe. Then everything went black and silent in my apartment. Everything except the strange sound outside my apartment. I heard it just after my apartment was silenced. “What the hell is that?” I asked myself, because I lived alone. I walked to the window, the blinds already shut. I peeked outside. I saw the devil outside my window. It was as tall as the sky, as wide as a mile, and angry. It roared and threw everything it swallowed randomly. It was 100 feet away, and coming closer. I closed my blinds and blinked.  Disbelief set in for a moment. “I did not just see that.” I told myself. “You should look again”, myself told me. So I peeked out the blinds again. The devil was still there and coming closer. It was not a nightmare. It was not a figment of my imagination. It was there and I was in danger. I felt the danger wash over me. Fear tasted like impending death that day, bitter and stuck in my throat. I grabbed my cell phone and a quilt that use to rest on my parents’ bed until I was allowed to take it. I ran to the bathroom, still tasting fear. I called my mother as the devil came closer. “Mom! There’s a tornado outside and it’s coming to get me!!” I’ll admit, I panicked, but you would too if the devil was right outside your door and you didn’t know if this was the end.   “Now is the time to go into survivor mode” my mother informed me in a calm voice. So after screaming and panicking and not dying of a panic attack, I closed my eyes and became calm. I waited for a calming outside before I explored the outside. There was some damage to my apartment, significant damage to my apartment building, 7 out of 8 of my windows in my van were imploded from the pressure of the devil, worse damage to my connecting neighborhood (but no deaths, though somewhere not far from there a house killed some students) and no Alberta City. My damages felt insignificant in comparison to that.
On April 27, 2011, there was a large tornado that tore through Tuscaloosa. I wrote some poetry about my experience and made it into a small booklet. This was my experience in a nutshell.
Written by
35/F/Selma, Alabama
Apr 13, 2020
Apr 13, 2020 at 10:47 AM UTC
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