Since freezing temperatures hit Texas, causing power outages and water shortages across the state, many have struggled to keep warm, wash, drink, and even flush their toilets. With neighbors in dire straights, nurse Emily Grigsby passed on the opportunity to leave her cold-stricken Austin neighborhood in favor of staying behind to help.
Speaking to The Epoch Times via social media, the 39-year-old mom of two reflected, “Above all, may we be reminded of the importance to love thy neighbor!”
At the peak of Winter Storm Uri’s wrath upon Emily’s neighborhood, the power was out for 72 hours straight. On one of the first dark nights without power, Texas native Emily, her husband Will, and their kids made the most of it, playing piano and sleeping in a makeshift fort by the fireplace.
Some of Emily’s elderly neighbors quickly found themselves without food or the means to stay warm. Many began boiling snow to use as drinking water and to flush toilets. But there were also casualties.
Emily trudged through the biting 32-degree-Fahrenheit (zero-degree-Celsius) weather when a neighbor burned herself badly on Feb. 18 by accidentally pouring boiling water on her leg. One of Emily’s neighbors who uses a wheelchair also required help.
“We’ve been feeding her since last Thursday, three meals a day,” Emily explained.
As power outages persisted, Emily began visiting her elderly neighbors each morning. Calling it “just a really sad situation,” she lamented having to explain to her boys, aged 9 and 12, that she had to check their pulses to make sure they were still alive.
Yet Emily suspects the situation could have been much worse had her family not stayed behind.
“I think that for us, it was just really important to recognize the needs around us,” she said. “I think knowing your community, knowing the needs, being able to respond, is really important when it comes to an event like this.”
The mom of two hopes that state leaders can learn from Winter Storm Uri and make sufficient provisions for the future, so that Texans don’t have to endure such horrific conditions again. She says it is the worst storm she has seen in Texas in her lifetime.
The nurse plans to continue caring for her neighbors until the situation improves for all, at which point she will return to work at the hospital.