I once drove through a tornado. I knew I was driving through a tornado too. The people in my car had no idea until we got home.
I was about 17/18 I think. It was one of those oppressively humid July days in Chicago. The air was so heavy that it was actually hard to breathe. Since there was a large group of us (about 10-15) we couldn’t all hang out at one persons house, and god forbid we disperse so that we could be in air conditioning. Nope, instead we went go carting. There was a pretty decent place about 20 minutes away from us. The prices were good, the track was big and we could do some real damage, and the guy knew us and liked us enough to put up with our shenanigans.
We had all started out racing, but me and a few of the other girls got bored after a few laps and decided that we wanted to go sit and smoke and watch the boys basically make asses of themselves.
What I remember clearly is how one minute it was so hot and I was just sweating in the sun, and the next minute there was a really cool breeze and the sky was dark. I looked up and realized that the sun had been blotted out by the green sky. It’s kind of terrifying to realize that you are looking at green and not hearing any alarms. I got into my car and turned it on and was listening to the radio only to hear what I already knew. There was a tornado watch, and funnel clouds had been spotted right around the area that we were in.
I left the car running and flipped my seats forward (it was a 2 door car and we had ridden in full capacity) and ran over to the fence to tell my passengers that we had to go right now. I then told the other people to do the same thing that I had done (start the car, open the doors) so that we could get everyone into cars quickly. Around the same time, the alarms started and the go cart guy decided it may be time to close up shop, so luckily there was no whining.
My passengers got into the car quickly enough and I was able to get into my car and hit the gas and get out of dodge before anyone else. While we were on our way home, the passengers were just talking and had no idea really why I was freaking out. Of course they had no idea because they weren’t seeing what I was seeing in my rearview mirror or in my moon roof. And what I saw was swirling.
I’ve never been a fan of tornadoes. I’ve actually never been stuck in one, I haven’t been in an area where one has hit while I’ve been there; it’s just something I fear because I see the destruction it leaves in it’s wake. My boyfriend at this time had taken me to see Twister in the movie theater, and the whole time I was convinced (because it was the right weather) that a tornado was going on outside the entire time we were at the movie.
When the hail started, I should have pulled over. When the horizontal rain started, I should have pulled over. When I saw the swirling, I should have pulled over underneath an overpass. When I saw a funnel cloud drop just a little, I should have stopped underneath an overpass and made everyone get out of the car and go cower with the pigeons. But, I didn’t. I hit the gas and went even faster. I just wanted to get home. I had no intention of dying under an overpass. Nope, I wanted to die in my car trying to get home. If my passengers knew what I was doing, they may have insisted that I pull over to what they thought would be safety. I was not dumb, I had no intention of telling them what I saw. Instead I had to field a million stupid questions.
“That hail didn’t last too long, did it?”
“Wow, the rain is coming down sideways. Is it really windy or what?”
“What does it mean when the sky is green?”
“Can you see the others? You left really quickly.”
“Why are you going so fast? Doesn’t 90 seem excessive?”
“Do I hear storm sirens?”
“Can I turn the radio back on now?”
“Why are all of those other cars pulling over?”
“Did I just see people under that bridge?”
We all made it home safely. I just happend to make it home safely first. I remember pulling into my boyfriends driveway, shutting off and crawling out of the car. Then I crawled to the front porch and proceeded to chain smoke for about 15 minutes. I was still smoking when the others arrived. It was when the others showed up that my passengers had found out about the funnel clouds. They were a little angry, but the drivers of the other cars were impressed by my ability to drive so quickly and safely.
By the time we had gotten home, the storm had already passed our area so we were safe there and the weather had cooled off. This allowed us to be able to sit outside it realitive peace, and give me shit for the rest of the night about how stupid and reckless (according to the people who had been in my car, who not only made it home alive, but safely too) I had acted.
Next time you have GOT to pick me up! I LOVE storms, in a freakish obsessive way. I have only been near one tornado and it was relatively small. The heavy green sky is AWESOME!
(do you like all the capitalized words?)
I can say with all the honesty that I can muster; I will never be doing that again. I still shake just thinking about how stupid that was.
You’re the second of my blogger-buds to blog on tornadoes in the last few weeks!
I’ve had a few close calls, not too much fun. Especially when we lived in a trailer in the Midwest and I was home alone with my then-infant son. I put him in the interior hallway as far from windows as I could and I sat in the addition on the back of the trailer, watching the rain being blown through the cracks in the windows until it ran down the walls.
Amusingly, despite the years in the Midwest, the closest call I ever had was one evening about 10 years ago when we were back visiting the family in Virginia. Rain, harder rain, big wind, hail, and we finally said “Oh, fine, we’ll go to the basement.” Turned out that an F0 threw down some trees about a quarter of a mile over the hill.
The craziest part was the BUCKETS of marble-sized hail in the bed of my dad’s truck, and how it was so warm that when we walked up the hill to my uncle’s house to see about damage to one of his barns, the hail was already melting, so the asphault (still hot from the summer day) was turning it to steam. For a foot above the roadway it was pea-soup fog.
All the tornadoes are what made me think about this. I’ve tried to block it out.
And your close calls, those are close enough for me.
“We all made it home safely. I just happend to make it home safely first.”
Screw racing the track! You won the race that really counted!
Yeah, but from that moment on I was considered a real driver.
What is it about tornadoes that makes people use less than rational judgment? A tornado literally missed our house by 3/10 of a mile a few yeas ago and while corn husks were hitting our windows we were debating if we should go get out 3-mo. old baby out of bed (because of my fear of waking a sleeping baby). I am still kicking myself for that. My grandparents almost died in that tornado (20 people did)…my grandmother got buried underneath their mobile home and my grandfather got thrown from the mobile home into a corn field. I get the heebie jeebies about tornadoes now, and completely regard watches and warnings.
Thank goodness you guys made it home okay. That sounds like a definite adrenaline and then crash situation.
Oh my gosh, your story is far scarier than mine! Thank goodness that your grandparents made it out of that situation alive. They were the lucky ones.