She is ok. She rang us from the scene almost straight away; we left home immediately and headed toward the accident site. Anita and I managed to beat the ambulance there by about 15-20 minutes, and no, Glenn wasn’t driving, Anita was! She was talking, and the fact that she could call us gave us a good indication that she was not badly injured. When we got to her she was leaning against the bonnet of the car, being given some alternate healing by a lovely passerby who provided a beautiful calming influence. Thanks Chris. No broken bones, no large gashes or guts. A bump on the forehead, some scratches on her neck/upper chest, and lots of little nicks on her knee from the glass appeared to be her lot. Amy complained of a sore neck, and so when the ambulance arrived, she had a neck collar put on and was taken to hospital. She had precautionary neck x-rays and had to stay for few hours observation, and then she was allowed to go home.

I am convinced that Amy had a Guardian Angel sitting on her shoulder that day. IT could have been so much worse. We might have been organizing a funeral instead of a new car. Yes the car is a right-off. There is hardly a panel that is undamaged, and apparently as soon as there is a crease in the roof line they right it off, or so I am told. We are waiting for the official reply from the insurance company. The people in the other car were fortunately okay. Only some minor cuts from a broken window to the rear seat passenger, and some mental trauma from a very close brush with a major accident. Their car was much newer, and had about $10,000 - $15,000 damage. I am not sure whether it will be a right-off or not.
So here is a summary. Amy is okay and has no lasting injuries, a few days later she had very minor bruising. She was blessed, God looked after her. The car is a wreck. The other people area okay. Anita will get a new car.
Six days after Amy crashed Anita and I celebrated our 22nd wedding anniversary on the same day that Melbourne had its hottest day ever, and Victoria had its worst ever peace time disaster. The fires that swept the state have left hardly anyone untouched. If we don’t know directly someone who has been affected, I am sure we will know of people who have been affected. The media coverage has been so vast that it is hard for it to be otherwise. As for our little corner of the world, we were certainly smoke affected on Saturday, and we were under an alert from the CFA for a direct threat from ember attack. Evidence that they weren’t joking or over cautious was the fact that we had a fire about half a kilometre away as the crow flies. We were separated by the freeway and the railway line, but given the conditions of the day I am grateful that it was controlled quickly. As it was fires over the state had been spotting up to 20 kilometres ahead of the main fire front. We certainly had some large fires within 20 k. There was another fire about 3 kilometres away that required one of the Elvis helicopters to water bomb it. It was threatening homes right up to the fence lines, and could have been another disaster. We were in direct threat from that fire with the wind direction, and only realised later on how serious it really was.

The days after the fires that caused so much death and destruction were a bit sombre, and information was only coming to us from ABC Radio and the internet, as the Mt Tassie TV towers were damaged in the fires. The irony in that for me was that the only channel we could get was channel 10, which had been the channel with the worst signal prior to that. It took about 5 days for a decent signal to be restored to the others channels, and as I write this, we still have a channel or two that is down. But in the scheme of things that doesn’t matter, especially as I think of the people that have lost their lives and others who lost their houses and all their worldly possessions.
So I give thanks that we have our daughter and we have our lives, and we have each other. We are the fortunate ones.
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