Double strike: Tornado, virus push Tennesseans to the limit
Now, living in a rental apartment, Cojom's family faces an uncertain future, unsure whether to rebuild or move on.
“The tornado was a monster, almost killed us,” Cojom said. “Now, I'm off work for two weeks. It kind of hurts me because it makes me stay home and think about all the things that we went through.”
Like thousands of other Middle Tennesseans, Cojom's life has been upended by back-to-back disasters.
The storms that tore through the region killed 25 people — 19 in
Then the coronavirus pandemic complicated the recovery efforts. The virus has sickened more than 2,600 in
The emergence of COVID-19 closed business and schools and set off a wave of hotel cancellations. As the virus encroaches on the county where twisted metal still hangs in trees along
“It’s been tiring and a little stressful, but we’re working through it,” Porter said. “We live in a loving, come-together community.”
At
“We are trying to be very cautious and very proactive on how we use those,” Korth said.
The hospital had four COVID-19 patients Wednesday, spokeswoman
In most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness and may be life-threatening.
For
Grooms’ wife owns a salon, now temporarily closed. His industrial filter service has lost business.
Grooms said they are lucky to have a rental house but with shops shuttered, it's been hard to make it feel homey. Restaurants and other distractions that initially took their minds off the destruction aren’t open.
Grooms has been told he can't rebuild until next year at the earliest but expects to stay in the neighborhood.
“The whole neighborhood is just so tight, so close that we can leave the place, but it’s hard to leave the people,” he said.
More than anything, though, he wants to restore some normalcy for his 6-year-old daughter.
“We can’t take her to the bounce house. You can’t do this. You can’t do that,” Grooms said. “It makes the tornado, that environment afterward, the shock, it just prolongs it.”
Cojom, the 42-year-old
The storm's terror still lingers for his family. In the dead of night, their house shook violently, the roof collapsed on him and a wall fell on one daughter. '
At first, he thought it was a bad dream. He held tightly to his bed to keep from blowing away, and his wife and their other girl hid in their crumbling bathroom. Somehow, they all escaped with only cuts and bruises.
They left it all behind. They're living in a three bedroom apartment, their rent covered by home insurance for about six months. With food in the refrigerator, they're staying home as much as possible.
He doesn't know when he will get his job back, but in an odd way he feels up for the challenge.
“I don't know what's next,” he said. “We've just got to stay strong.”
——
Sainz reported from
Follow AP coverage of the virus outbreak at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak.


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