When we saw the story on MSNBC about how Swedish wrestler Ara Abrahamian reacted to winning the bronze medal in Greco-Roman wrestling, we were shocked by his display of sportsmanship (or lack thereof). Hell, if we ever won anything as prestigious as winning an Olympic medal, it would definitely make it on our top five list of things we'd save if our house was going up in smoke. What would you save?
[ Photo by Valery Hache/AFP/Getty Images ]
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Comments (48)
I'd save myself and whomever else was in the house.
I would not risk my life to save one single thing. Nothing. Not even my eyeglasses, which I NEED.
NOTHING.
computer hard-drive, audrey kawasaki prints, my husband, the dogs, and myself.
Myself, my husband, my two cats, most likely a computer and if there is enough time, try to grab the old photo albums.
open my window throw all the stuff i want and jet out the window and land on the stuff
Wallet with Passport & Credit Cards
Laptop
Cellphone
Signed and numbered Stephen Card prints
Jewelry
Everything else is replaceable and insured.
pup pups x 2
kit cat x 1
everything else? burn baby burn.. it's insured
Passport/Documents (otherwise may be in limbo)
Journals
Sketchbooks from Italy
Mac
Eeyore
laptop, carkeys, glasses,
whatever I can cram into my purse.
my fat cat
boyfriend although i'm sure he could manage on his own.
Family, pets and a credit card
I agree that I would just get my ass out with my dog (who is a person, not a thing) and husband, but for the sake of playing the game...
1. Wedding photos (on cd)
2. Personal papers like ss card, birth cert, etc., which are already bundled
3. Glasses (which are always next to me)
4. Quilt that my dead great-grandmother made for my wedding. She died almost ten years before I got married. Actually this would be the first thing I would grab.
5. Can't think of anything else...
Cat
Purse
Glasses
I think the Olympian was making a point about the officiating. I actually had to grab and go when the garage behind an apt. I was staying in was set on fire by a guy who got into a pissing match with the apt. owner that day. The owner had lumber stored in it and it was HOT when it was on fire around 12:15 AM. I was woken up by a piece of lumber falling and almost didn't get up to investigate, but once I saw the fire, I called 911 on my cell, back when the call went to NYC and I was in Sacramento, about 3 blocks from the fire dept.
What I grabbed were shorts to put under the T-shirt I was sleeping in, my cell and shoes from my walk that evening. I left my clothes that I had taken out of the car, my brief case with my laptop and my purse. As I ran down the stairs, I called the landlord who lived about 3 houses away. A minute later, he was crossing the street, asking why didn't I call him, right after I talked with him. He had been drinking wine that evening, before I went on the walk, after I had gotten the keys for my first night in the apt.
The point of all this, is if it happens when you are asleep, you won't be thinking clearly. Luckily, my two kiddies were at Grandma and Grandpaw's house in So Cal. My clothes got drycleaned and my briefcase was rescued by the firefighters. The apt. never caught fire, thankfully, just the detached garage.
I would save my pets...stuff can always be replaced.
Aside from the people who I live with (and yes, I mean humans when I say "people". I don't have any pets, nor do I call them people)
I'd grab my:
MacBook Pro
1965 Rogers Powertone Snare Drum (wood shell, perfect condition, rare drum... not really replaceable)
Wallet
Life-long photo album that my grandma made me when I graduated college
and my glasses (I'm a -9.0, kinda need them)
I would try to save my virginity.
Oh wait.. too late.
If things doesnt include me, my girlfriend and pet then.
1) My importnant file folder (which has my important stuff like passport, ss card, credit cards, birth certificate)
2) Imac
3) Wallet
4) Car Keys
5) LCD TV - which can be easily unhooked and carried if there's still time
on the practical side--my passport, wallet, and cellphone (not exciting but it would make life a little easier if I still had them). and on the personal side--my teddy bear (I've had him since I was born and there is no way I am letting him die in a fire).
everything else is basically replaceable (and insured). or, it would be practically impossible to get out of the apartment quickly in an emergency (prints and paintings and things).
I'd save any available greco-roman wrestlers.
like most people just the other family members and hopefully the animals- definately the people first!
My cat would save me by pawing or yelling at me and I would in turn make sure she was out the door with me.
I live in a highrize building.
Also my wallet and car keys if I could get to them. It's a good idea to make sure they are always in the same place so you know where they are.
1) my cats
2) my mother's suicide note and copies of the photos i buried her with and/or the trunk full of her stuff
3) my macbook
4) passport
5) purse
ultimately, though, my kittens come first.
@danken- love your response. i'll keep that in mind in case my place burns down.
If I could save five things...
1. My grandmother's rosary.
2. My mother's black pearls.
3. My puppy.
4. My watch (I have an odd attachment to it)
5. My cell phone (which has enough info to fix almost any problem)
Wow...I sound traditional there.
My jewelry, my grandmother's rolling pin, as many books as I could carry, my grandfather's high school diploma, and a stack of family photos to carry on top of the books.
MacBook Pro
Hard drives with 60,000 images saved
Cell phone
wallet
Photo box (if I can)
The rest is insured and can be replaced.
Related to this... how many of you have prepared emergency files such as recommended after Katrina should an evacuation be required? Basically birth certs, insurance policies, passports and a planned meet up location should such a thing happen.
Five things? No brainer: I have five cats.
When I was in school, my apartment building actually caught on fire. (I lived on the tenth floor.)
So I grabbed the most valuable thing I owned--my portfolio--and then headed over to grab my elderly neighbor.
Today, I'd grab my MAC, important docs, and my Cuban movie poster collection. And since my fiance is muscular 6' 2" and I'm not, he's on his own!
jeez, k t g, such a killjoy.
For the sake of the game, my cat (she can't fit under the bed and I have a small apartment and a carrier ready - ever try picking up a traumatized cat?), and my husband's ashes - although that seems pointless now that I think of it....I mean, they can't meet with much harm now can they....anyway, for the sake of reality....
K T G brings up a good point. I have a friend who was in a terrible fire. One of her cats jumped out a 3 story window (yes, survived) and I won't mention what happened to the others. There was NO time, just seconds. Devastating.
Maybe we could meet in the middle: Have emergency kits by the bed (I do, I live in earthquake country), put on some shoes, pick up the bag/kit and get the hell out of there.
OK, perhaps a leftover wrestler and a pint of Rum Raisin for the road.....oh wait, there's that pair of heels and that red silk blouse.....nay, just me and the traumatized cat.
For the sake of hypothetical questions being fun:
1: portfolio with our important documents (birth certs, marriage license, insurance documents, copies of diplomas, passports, and documents with sentimental value)
2: My bible and my grandmother's bible
3: the small box with all of our pictures in it (save the framed ones around the apt
4:computer
5:purse (containing wallet, cell phone, keys, etc.)
Get your facts right! Before judging him you should also write about how he lost the semifinals. The protest was against the corrupt judges in FILA and not because he was mad about "just" winning bronze. But most American media - didn't choose to cover this very important part about the story.
I guess it sounds more scandalous if you don't tell the story behind his protest. (which most american media is all about).
boo.
Tara Parker Pope wrote an excellent piece in the NY Times a couple of weeks ago about a book called "The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster strikes, and Why." The book describes how one of the main ways that denial manifests is the tendency to "stick around and gather things" rather than get out:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/05/health/05well.html?ref=health
Irene Nemirovsky illustrated this point beautifully in her book Suite Francaise, in her description of families attempting to flee Paris before the Germans arrived, only to get bogged down by trying to pack the heirloom linens they couldn't bear to leave behind.
I regularly email my writing projects off my laptop, and keep photocopies of handwritten journal entries & notes offsite, precisely so I'm not tempted to pause to grab the computer & notebooks in the event that there's no time.
So, this is an interesting conversation starter that inadvertantly promotes a maladaptive coping strategy.
To KTG and others who've been through fires: sorry you had to go through something so frightening and stressful. You brought up a good point, even though it's not fun to think about.
My handbag which contains wallet, passport,driving licence cards etc, car keys and husband. Thanks for asking it has made me think about.
Well, assuming I had time to to gather anything...
1) My cell phone
2) my MacBook Pro (or at the least the 2 hard drives I use to back up my computers)
3) The as many of the the books of music I've written I could get to
4) Wallet & Passport
5) Probably one of my guitars
However, if I had this much time to get all of this stuff, I could probably get a lot more as well.
I have file boxes with important papers but I wouldn't think of grabbing them if I'm forced to flee. They're too big. But now that I'm thinking about this I might have to put the true essentials in one place. Grab it and go.
1. my dog
2. the quilts my grandmas and mom have made me
3. my portfolio
4. my phone (but it is always in my pocket, do it doenst really count)
5. and my box of photos and negatives i have taken over the years.
I would probably just instinctively grab my purse which has my passport, drivers license, credit cards and phone already in it. I really doubt that I would be running around my apartment gathering anything else. Even some really important material things like childhood photos, heirlooms, nice watches, computers â these are all just things. It would be sad to lose them but so long as I got out of there with my life, that is what counts.
On a bigger scale, my family has a single meeting place (and a back-up one) if true nationwide disaster strikes and we have to meet up and telecommunications are down. We would all know where to go - no questions. We are pretty scattered around the country so some of us would take longer to get there!
It seems extreme but it is just something that has been passed along for a couple generations and seems to make sense. Anyone else have something like this in place?
i would save my dog & screw everything and anything else. the fact that some of the posters mentioned that a pet wasn't important enough kind of shocks me- my dog isn't like my child- she IS my child. and i'll be damned if i'd leave without her to let her perish in a fire. take that.
first of all- get a fire safe for back up hard drives and passports and other important papers; second, after 9/11 my family agreed to meet at my parents' cabin if need be...
k t g, i'm sorry i sounded insensitive. i understand very well the realities of a fire. i am the daughter of a firefighter, and you'd better believe we were drilled as a family on fire-safety. my mother and i also had to live with the reality that my dad's job consisted of him running INTO fires while everyone else ran out.
actually, once we thought the house WAS on fire. i threw on a bra, grabbed my coat, my dog, and ran out the house. (turns out some debris from a roof-job had gotten lodged in the pilot-light area, exploded, shook the house, and filled the basement with smoke.)
a housefire is just one thing i really hope i never have to deal with, because it's understandable how devastating it would be.
but this IS a hypothetical question, albeit one that's getting a lot of people thinking.
Well let me preface this with the fact that I have lived through a house fire. Now that said I am happy to say that the entire house didn't burn down just the addition where the fire occured. That was thanks to living less then a mile from the fire station and everyone being pretty quick about calling the fire department and shutting off the addition.
Now at that time I was living at home and had a cat. Those that said the pet runs and hides are 100% correct. My cat made it up under the bed hiding before I even knew what was going on. I ran upstairs and pulled her out. As the pet carrier was in the basement I took a large duffle bag and in went the cat.
That said I didn't have any other time after doing that so I my elderly grandfather and I got out of the house and he and the cat were safely put into one of our cars.
http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=news/local&id=6325577
this is a news story about an apartment building that burned down in my area last week. the fire broke out just before 5:00 pm; while most people are still at work. it just goes to show that if a fire breaks out in your home or in your apartment you might not even be there to think about what 5 things to bring. if you have anything that you don't want to get destroyed by fire put it in a fire safe box. but, as many people have already said: it's all just stuff. the important thing is that you survived.
1) My dog
2) My cats (3)
3) Lockbox with important documents (birth cert, ss cards, etc)
This is assuming of course my boyfriend got out on his own accord. I think his "things to save" would involve his computer or hard drive, his car (since it's garage stored)...not sure what else.
Don't count on being there or being able to save anything. Therefore:
1) Buy a firesafe (they are less than $50) and store the important documents you don't carry around with you (like birth certificate and passport) in there.
2) Have a total, daily, offsite backup plan for your digital files.
3) Buy renter's insurance.
hja, very very good advice. i keep looking back here to see what tips pop up! my whole career is on my mac and discs. scary to think what would happen if it burns up.