Children of the storms

Young hurricane survivors face years of emotional strain, Katrina’s kids say

NEW ORLEANS -- The children upended by Hurricane Katrina have no psychological playbook for the youngsters displaced by Harvey, which flooded southern Texas, or Irma, the hurricane that clobbered Florida and the Caribbean.

In the aftermath of Harvey, more than 160 public school districts and 30 charter schools closed in the sprawling Houston metropolitan area. Families scrambled to higher ground, some to other cities like Dallas or San Antonio, others into shelters. Thousands of children will have to adjust on the fly, bused for hours to new schools from makeshift housing. Texas officials are scrambling to coordinate mental health support; the state's psychology board is issuing temporary licenses for out-of-state therapists.

In a series of interviews in New Orleans, 12 years after Katrina's devastating floods, young survivors now in their early 20s agreed only that overcoming the mental strain of displacement is like escaping the rising water itself -- a matter of finding something to hold onto, one safe place or reliable person, each time you move.

"I was so homesick I moved back here soon as I could, right after graduating high school," Craig Jones, 22, a freelance graphic designer and musician, said near Pigeon Town, the working-class neighborhood of small houses, diners and shaded porches where he grew up. "I got here and it was the same place but not the same."

A fifth-grader when Katrina hit, Jones spent the intervening years on the move, living in hotel rooms and finally settling in Houston with his family. When he moved back to New Orleans in his late teens, the streets of his childhood had a new mix of people and an undercurrent of menace he couldn't place. He became anxious; then he began having panic attacks, seemingly at random.

He was home-sick, as well as homesick.

"I was walking around with my eyes bugged out," Jones said. "They wanted to put me on Xanax, but I wanted no part of that." He moved away for a time and the anxiety subsided.

Therapists and social scientists have been trying to characterize the effects of all variety of traumas for more than a century. They have found no equations, no way to predict who will be laid low, who will adjust or who will become stronger.

But they do recognize some distinctive effects of hurricanes. Unlike an earthquake or a fire, flooding from a storm like Katrina or Harvey leaves homes and buildings still physically standing but uninhabitable, simultaneously familiar and strange, like a loved one sinking into dementia.

JUMPED 9 PERCENT

Surveys done in the seven years after Katrina found that the rate of diagnosable mental health problems in the New Orleans area jumped 9 percent -- a sharper spike than after other natural disasters -- and the effects did not discriminate much by race or income.

"Our reading of that is that the stressors were so severe they overwhelmed the coping skills of most kids," said Kate McLaughlin, director of the Stress and Development Lab at the University of Washington, who led the research team.

Lacey Lawrence, now 22, escaped Katrina's waters on an air mattress, as police officers shoved away bodies with oars, and some proprietors guarded businesses with shotguns. An uncle disappeared, probably drowned. A 12-year-old cousin got lost, alone, and wasn't heard from for hours.

She and her parents landed in a dry area of the city, staying with relatives.

"I was at this new school, my friends were gone, and kids would be saying things -- about my old neighborhood, about my family," Lawrence said. "I was getting into fights; real fights, violent ones. That was something I never did before, ever. But you lose everything and you don't know how to deal with it -- no one prepares you for that."

She finished school and now teaches young children precisely those skills: how to stay safe; how to manage emotions; how to stay focused on what they can control and adjust to what they cannot.

THE SAFE HARBOR

In the years after Katrina, a pair of sociologists, Alice Fothergill and Lori Peek, made regular trips to New Orleans, interviewing hundreds of people who had been hit hard. They tracked these people over time.

After seven years, the pair identified a rough pattern among displaced children: Some had not regained their footing, losing years of schooling and later sinking into unemployment; others adapted, even thrived; and there was a third group, of young people in an uncertain holding pattern, keeping themselves upright

but unsteadily, managing lingering effects, like depression or anxiety.

Those in the first group tended to have few resources to start with, and lost them all. "It's a cumulative vulnerability, in which for instance the family struggled before the storm, then could not get out, and the child lost the fragile supports he or she had," said Fothergill, a professor at the University of Vermont.

Peek, a professor at the University of Colorado, said that children who adapted fastest typically had family and networks with resources that held together, or they acquired strong allies along the way: teachers, ministers, shelter workers who fought for help on the child's behalf.

The third group -- "fluctuating equilibrium," the sociologists called it -- usually had lost virtually everything but had one solid anchor: a mother, a father, a teacher, an older sibling.

Fothergill and Peek published a book laying out their thinking, Children of Katrina (University of Texas Press, $24.95, print on demand), told through the lives of several children.

Five years later, as those children have moved into young adulthood, it's clear that trajectories are not always smooth lines.

Jordan Bridges, 29, evacuated with his mother and siblings ahead of Katrina to a friend's place near Washington. His father stayed behind to work. Bridges' life in Washington was a fire-shower of emotion.

"My mom was overwhelmed," he said. "I had to get my little brother to school every day; it was like every day I woke up and had to forget everything that had happened the day before." He now works for a New Orleans social justice nonprofit and sings in a band, Melomania.

RESILIENCE

Although "trauma" can mean many things and is generally considered destructive, its demands can force people to learn what their abilities are and which are most useful when all seems lost.

Studies by Roxane Cohen Silver, a psychology professor at the University of California, Irvine and others have found that adults who report having taken no serious hits -- like, say, the death of a friend, a serious illness, a natural disaster -- generally do not score as highly on measures of well-being as people who have survived traumatic events. It is people who have been through at least two traumas, and less than six, who score highest.

After returning to Louisiana, Bridges said, he was blindsided again, this time in Baton Rouge, while he was studying for a degree in biology from Louisiana State University. He and his brother tried to stop a fight, he said. The police arrived and beat them both, he said, and shattered his jaw. He spent months in the hospital.

"I honestly believe that having been through Katrina helped me get through that," he said. "I don't know that I would take either of those back, honestly. It's part of who I am. I became a storyteller. I'm an optimist; going through those things, I know nothing can put my light out."

The young men and women interviewed for this story had one thing in common. They all came back -- not home, but to a permutation of it, one with an existential uncertainty that is no abstraction.

"Now I know, I'll never stay in any big storm," said Shaysa Shief, 22, who was trapped with her family for days after Katrina, with no power, little food or water. "No one's going to come help you; you are on your own."

You look over your shoulder here, they said, literally and mentally. And you watch the weather forecast.

ActiveStyle on 09/18/2017

Upcoming Events