Name :: Caroline Location :: California (duh!) Age :: 17 Status :: single AIM :: Midnight Abyss03 Sign :: Libra Element :: Air[head] Hobbies :: Writing, thinking, laughing Goal in life :: achieve true happiness Car :: unknown Origin :: Korean Music :: anything really Shoes :: orange converse Guys :: JC Chasez & James Marsters Food :: unagi sushi Color :: yellow, orange, blue, black Care Bear :: Wish Bear Something random :: Honey in hot chocolate is yummy
Hey hey everyone in blogland! I have no idea why I said that, but, umm...yeah. Anywho, I've been gone for the past few days on a last-minute trip to Las Vegas with the family. We did our usual shopping and acting like a dumb Californian tourist thing, but this vacation, my family was acting....drumroll please....NORMAL!....or at least more than usual. It was kinda scary, but hey, there's a semi-first for everything.
I think the highlight of the whole vacation (other than the unusual amount of normalness) was getting a new book. I got All Over but the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg. Although I've read only the first few pages, it's beautifully written and I'm envious of his writing style. Mr.Mount recommended the book to the Journalism class and it's about Bragg's childhood growing up with an alcoholic father, two brothers, and his devoted mother in the countryside of Alabama. It's interesting so far and it's supposed to get better. Hopefully, he'll inspire me to finish up my first book, which is at 60 pages right now.
Another good thing (I think) was that I got another 5 hours of driving done on my permit, which is pretty cool. Except for my remaining two sessions of driver training, I have all the other requirements done. As for the car, I'm shopping around right now comparing prices and whatnot, but it won't come around until later this summer or next year. Oh well. For now, I'm sharing my mom's 2003 Dodge Dakota (V8 on 4.7 litre engine with 235 horsepower!).
Well, today, like other families, we went straight to the shopping centers. First we headed up to San Jose to do some Korean shopping and then headed down to the Gilory Factory Outlets. The bad part was when we did get to the outlets, there wasn't a single parking spot and when we did find one, somebody else was already signalling for it. Oh well. So we drove to Salinas and went to the mall there. Of course, it was CROWDED and you were virtually swimming in people (and they need to work on their ventilation systems...it was VERY stuffy). I got a striped sweater and extra long scarf from Old Navy and a pair of L.E.I jeans from JCPenny's. Total spent: $41. Woohoo!
I would write more, but a sudden spir of laziness hit me...
Christmas is here. My goodness...it seems like yesterday I was two and unwrapping my first gift without the help of my parents.
With the earthquakes and the constant rain, I couldn't ask for a more beautiful Christmas. It seems like the earthquake has brought families closer together and it makes cherishing what we have that much stronger. For the first time in ages, my family is being functional and being in the livingroom together watching 007 movies is something that I'll keep with me for a long time. We didn't get a chance to extange presents, but I think us being together in good health, in good life, and in happiness is the best gift for everyone.
With the Christmas spirit, I know that Paso Robles will bounce back from the 'quakes.
Well, it's finally time to make my wishes for everyone whom I love dearly and cherish everyday of my exsistance.
Here's all my shout-outs:
Friends-To all of you, I wish you the best of everything and a wonderful New Year!
(in no particular order)
Yvette- You're a beautiful person inside and through your constant showing and displays of strength and courage, I'm always learning from you. Thanks for being there for me :)
Riana- You never seem to have a bad day or a bad mood. Your cheerfulness is truly a blessing and whatever people say, you're a true original.
Chelsea- My my, the times we've shared for nearly 13 years. You've stuck by me through everything and I treasure every moment.
Darlene- Whenever I feel down, your giggles always echo in my ears. You've shown me that a balance between work and play is possible. Thanks for everything.
Cody- You've shown me true kindness from within and that's something hard to find these days. Your inner warmth inspires me to become a better person. :)
Matthew I.- Thanks for bringing reality straight forward. I appreciate everything you do for me, even if it's sometimes hard to accept. You're one of a kind.
Matthew W.- Hehe. You make being a nerd fun. Although we don't talk much, you've taught me that keeping some things inside can be a wonderful thing. Thanks. :)
Emily- Whenever I'm having a horrible day, you always make everyone laugh with your quirky jokes and humor. You have a beautiful heart...remember that.
Ryan- Whoa. This year has been crazy so far, but in the short time I've known you, you brought my thoughts into a greater perspective and shown me that being direct is the best way to go. Thanks :)
Wesley K.- For some odd reason, I trust you. lol. Thanks for encouraging me to do my best, from my column to my writing. You're my best critic.
Courtney- I've missed you so much. Even though we live 400 miles apart, you're lessons of simple kindness are still with me. It's amazing what a simple hug can do.
Helen- I still say you're a better writer than I am, but you've opened a new door in writing and it's an example I continue to follow. Thanks for all of your help.
Sean- My "big bro." Even though I've been a pain, you've always been patient with me and have been there in my times of need. And even though you're 300 miles away, it still seems like you're here.
And if I forgot anyone, please know that I still love you and cherish our frienships. I don't know what life would be like without you and everyday, I'm eternally grateful for every one of you guys. Thanks for everything.
To my family: please know that I love all of you everyday and I would do anything for you. You've raised me to become a good person and keep pushing me to do my best. Please know that even though I'm a total pain at times, I still love you no matter what.
To the world: May peace dwell in all of our hearts.
To my friends and collegues at Target: You're all the best from showing me the basics to helping become a better employee and friend. Shout outs to John for being a fellow car nerd and Jordan for being there for me since the beginning. I love you all!
Merry Christmas Everyone and Have a Beautiful New Year!
You are mist... or are you? No one ever knows what
you're thinking, even if you tell them! You're
probably wise and it's likely that people find
you relaxed and confident. You like to think
things through. Maybe philosophy is your thing?
The adult world is pretty irrelevant to me. Whether
I'm off on my bicycle (or pony) exploring, lost
in a good book, or giggling with my best
friend, I live in a world apart, one full of
adventure and wonder and other stuff adults
don't understand.
An update on the earthquakes:
So far, we've had no aftershocks in the Paso Robles area. Most of them are occuring near the epicenter at San Simeon and have been below a 4.0. Check out this site for earthquake afterschocks. It's updated every minute to keep you on your heels. Nothing too serious has happened, but there's an aftershock that's been predicted to have at least a 5.0 magnitude or greater.
As for my personal life, there's nothing much going on. Last night, Yvette, Ryan, Riana, Darlene, and I were in one huge group conversation on MSN Messenger and we were dueling one another at checkers. You could say that I pretty much lost. Oh well. It was fun :). Everyone at one time or another flirted with Ryan, but I didn't care...that much. Oi. Anywho, we were up close to midnight just chatting. It was kinda like an up-all-night party.
Yvette and I might go shopping tomorrow (that is if a building doesn't decide to just fall and smash us). It'll be fun. Just the girls (and maybe Riana) hitting all the Christmas sales! Woohoo! And yours truly will be driving. Mwa ha ha!!! Hopefully, it doesn't rain ALL day like it's been for that past few days.
Right after the earthquake, it's like Nature just said, "I gave them a rumble. Why not put a damper on the party?" and decided to give us a week of rain when we're trying to get back on our feet. I guess in a sense, it's bringing the community more motivation to get everything back to its original state (minus the downtown district...it got butchered), but it's not the best thing to look out your window in the morning to see rain clouds when you're trying to stay positively motivated for the day to come. At the same time, just looking out the window and watching the rain fall is peaceful. It keeps your mind off of the big picture and allows you to appreciate the smaller things. I just laid in bed this morning watching raindrops go down my window and listened to its tapping against the glass. It's almost hypnotizing. *sighs* Crap. Now I'm in my dreamy romantic mood.
Here's a letter I wrote to Justin yesterday about the earthquake:
Justin-
Thanks for showing your care and concern with your e-mail. Fortunately, I was out in Las Vegas when the entire thing happened, but as soon as I got word, I came back home. The family is in one piece, but the house took a pretty good hitl. For a 6.5 magnitude, it wasn't as bad I thought. The main worry right now is one of the livingroom walls which shifted a good 1/4 inward, bringing the fireplace with it. The water heater, all pipes, electricity, phones, internet (phew!), and everything else is in good shape.
Stepping into the house was a real shocker. Everything was on the ground, from dishes to my dad's prized liquor collection. The piano in the livingroom moved two inches from it's original spot. Picture frames were shattered, and all the lighting fixtures has lost at least one part of them. The garage and my dad's truck are just fine except for some insulation that fell from the ceiling. Target, where I work, I've heard has suffered majorly. According to one of my good friends, the ceiling of the entire store caved in and everything on the shelves was on the ground. I called earlier this evening (it's 1:50 am Tuesday as I'm writing this) and Craig said everything was okay. I called John there, but he didn't answer.
I was horrified that my friends were hurt. I called a few of them up and they were fine, but shaken up (no pun intended). I'm still worried about Ryan though. I haven't been able to reach him (btw, he and I went to Homecoming together and it was our first school dance). Yvette called and left a message and everyone else sent e-mails.
The worst thing about this quake was it's effect on the family. Dad was crying as he was driving us home, mom was about to have a nervous breakdown, Calvin was worried about our finances, and I was worried about our living conditions. Even though we made each other laugh on the way home, you could still feel everyone's anxiety and worries bouncing off one another. For the sake of each other, none of us cried freely. We all kept our mouths shut. I think this is going to test the relationship of the family, but I'm hoping it's something that can be overcome.
I'll keep ya posted on any new updates.
Blurted on 04:53 pm by :: Caroline :: Comments (1)
Earthquake Shakes My Neighborhood
Schwarzenegger declares earthquake emergency
Calif. governor signs declaration paving way for state aid
Nick Ut / Pool Via Ap / REUTERS
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger surveys the destruction in Paso Robles, Calif., on Tuesday. Rescue workers ended their search for survivors from a 6.5 magnitude temblor that killed two women in the town 180 miles north of Los Angeles.
FREE VIDEO
• Glad to be alive Dec. 23: Many in Paso Robles are grateful that besides the two deaths, there were few serious injuries. NBC’s James Hattori reports.
MSNBC
The Associated Press
Updated: 4:22 p.m. ET Dec. 23, 2003
PASO ROBLES, Calif. - More aftershocks rattled the area Tuesday following a magnitude-6.5 earthquake that jolted the central California coast, killing two people, injuring dozens and wrecking a landmark clock tower. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger visited the battered area and vowed aid for rebuilding.
Residents from San Francisco to Los Angeles were shaken by Monday’s quake, the first to cause fatalities in the state since a magnitude-6.7 temblor hit Northridge in 1994.
The bodies of two women were pulled from under the roof of Paso Robles’ 1892 clock tower, which pitched into the street and crushed a row of parked cars in this San Luis Obispo County community of 25,000, some 20 miles east of the epicenter.
Mayor Frank Mecham said Tuesday that 82 downtown buildings had been identified as having at least some damage, and predicted that the quake’s economic impact on the city would be significant.
“All we’re waiting for is the governor to declare an emergency. Then we’ll be asking for federal assistance,” Mecham said.
Schwarzenegger pledged aid for the town. “At 11 a.m. yesterday this was an American main street, alive with energy. ... Today this is a site of devastation. But we will come together once again as Californians and as neighbors. We will rebuild this town square,” Schwarzenegger said.
Power restored for most residents
About 75,000 homes and businesses in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties lost power after the quake, but service had been restored to all but about 1,600 by Tuesday morning, were said Pacific Gas & Electric spokesman Bill Roake.
The main shock was centered in a sparsely populated area about 11 miles north of the coastal town of Cambria. It was followed Monday and early Tuesday by more than 80 aftershocks larger than 3.0, the biggest of which was estimated at 4.7, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The total included seven aftershocks of 4.0 to 4.6 on Tuesday morning.
The state Office of Emergency Services said there was a 90 percent or greater probability that aftershocks of 5.0 magnitude or greater would follow in the next week.
By Monday night, search and rescue crews in Paso Robles had combed all seriously damaged buildings and were confident they had found all the quake’s victims, though the owner of one car crushed in the rubble had not yet been located.
'Out of rescue mode'
“We’re out of rescue mode and now it’s just going to be general debris removal,” said Battalion Chief Scott Hall of the Ventura County Fire Department.
The earthquake shook the Hearst Castle in San Simeon, the estate of the legendary publisher William Randolph Hearst.
Earlier in the day, the bodies of Jennifer Myrick, 20, of Atascadero, and Marilyn Zafuto, 55, of Paso Robles, were found on the street outside a dress shop, police Sgt. Bob Adams said.
“It appeared as though they were trying to get away,” he said.
About 40 people had minor injuries citywide, including a young boy who suffered a broken arm, said Adams.
The quake shook the Hearst Castle in San Simeon, the estate of the legendary publisher William Randolph Hearst. The castle reported no injuries and no immediate signs of any serious damage but was evacuated as a precaution. It was scheduled to be open Tuesday.
The quake also shook the federal courthouse in San Francisco, 165 miles to the northwest of the epicenter, and made the building’s upper floors sway for about 30 seconds. People in downtown Los Angeles, 185 miles southeast, felt a sustained rolling motion.
Minor damage elsewhere
“It was pretty sharp,” said Sharyn Conn, receptionist at the oceanside Cypress Cove Inn in Cambria, population 6,200. “It really went on and on. I just got everyone under the door frames and rode it out.”
Other than Paso Robles, damage appeared minor elsewhere in the region known for wineries and horse ranches. Several people were reported hurt by falling barrels at a winery, San Luis Obispo County authorities said.
FREE VIDEO
• Dodging a bullet California geophysicist Ross Stein says Californians are lucky the quake occurred in a rural mountain region. He talks to the "Today" show's Katie Couric.
MSNBC
Paso Robles’ historic clock tower structure, sometimes called the Acorn Building, was made of wood and unreinforced masonry, a type of construction no longer allowed under modern building codes, Adams said. Such buildings tend to fare worst in quakes, and many California cities banned unreinforced masonry in new buildings after a massive temblor struck Long Beach in 1933.
Marilyn Curry watched the buildings collapse from her law firm across the street, then ran to a city park where people frantically searched for friends.
“There were people shouting outside ’Oh, my God! Oh, my God!”’ she said. “Everybody was just shaking, then we were all just grabbing onto each other. There was a lot of hugging going on. We were all just accounting for each other: ‘Have you seen so and so? Have you seen so and so?”’
Centered downtown and overlooking a park, the Acorn Building constructed in 1892 housed a jewelry store, dress shop and storage space.
A local law requires Paso Robles buildings to be retrofit by 2018, said Doug Monn, a city building official.
The 11:16 a.m. quake was the state’s first deadly earthquake since the 6.7-magnitude temblor that hit Northridge in 1994, and the most powerful in California since a 7.1 quake struck the desert near Joshua Tree in 1999. No one was killed in that temblor.
At least 50 aftershocks
The main aftershock Monday was centered in a sparsely populated area about 11 miles north of Cambria.
By early Tuesday, it had been followed by at least 90 aftershocks larger than 3.0, the biggest of which was estimated at 4.7, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The state Office of Emergency Services said there was a 90 percent or greater probability that aftershocks of 5.0 magnitude or greater would follow in the next week.
Paso Robles hardest hit Paso Robles, about 20 miles east of the epicenter in a region dotted with wineries and horse ranches, bore the heaviest damage.
“My roof basically jumped onto the street and landed on cars with people in them,” said Nick Sherwin, 61, who operated Pan Jewelers in the Acorn Building. The cars were “crushed like little toys, nothing left.”
The smell of sulfur quickly filled the air: The quake had ruptured a capped pipe that used to deliver artesian well water to mud baths for which Paso Robles was once famous.
The quake opened cracks on Highway 1, and state crews were checking cracking and buckling on Highway 46, but both routes remained open, the Highway Patrol said. A rock slide closed a rural road.
Felt at nuclear plant The earthquake was felt in the control room of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant operated by PG&E. Nelson said that there appeared to be no damage to the plant and that it was functioning normally, but officials would conduct a “walk-through” to be sure.
The quake struck in a known fault zone on a series of faults that run parallel to the San Andreas Fault, said Lucy Jones, scientist in charge of the U.S. Geological Survey office in Pasadena.
Monday’s quake was the state’s most powerful since 1999, when a nonfatal magnitude-7.1 temblor struck the desert near Joshua Tree. The last one of a similar size in the area was in 1952, said Ross Stein of the USGS in Menlo Park.
The 1994 Northridge quake hit a densely populated area near Los Angeles and killed 72 people, injured 9,000 more, and caused $15.3 billion in insured losses.