♦Welcome to another edition of the Open Book Blog Hop!♦
Topic #160
Your house, containing everything you own, catches fire. After saving your loved ones and your pets, you have time to safely make a final dash to save any one item.
What would it be? Why?
Welcome back to another edition of the Open Book Blog Hop! If you’re new to the series, the authors included are grateful for your reads and appreciate, even more so, when you share our writings with your friends. If you’re new to the series, welcome aboard. The authors engage and impress weekly. Be prepared to become a regular reader.
This is one of the top fears a lot of people have. We catch our breaths when we see a story on the news telling the tale. It’s worse when we are so close to the person that it has happened to. And, with all the technology we’ve managed to build around us, why do fires still happen?
This question often bounces around the mind on those sleepless nights, when you’re already worried enough. Or, it comes up in conversations dealing with team building or new friends hanging out, as a way to get to know the inner person. The answer you give says a lot about you. What I like about this question, is that it already assumes the best of you, that you would save your family and pets. Almost everyone would, so we shouldn’t be made to choose, as if that will tell us anything about ourselves, or tell others about us. We all share the desire to preserve our loved ones.
That one item you’d bring with you will reveal your passion and drives and what matters to you most. So you’d probably like me to tell you what that thing is. That’s an easy one, with my kiddo and doggy safe. I’d save my backup drive (or Laptop).
When I was in college, I had allowed a friend to review a few chapters of my book, and they saved the file over top of another one. A giant portion of my book was gone. Unrecoverable. I wept for hours. A lot of hard work had gone into that file, and I couldn’t be sure exactly what would be missing, even after locating what portion of the book. All the words, turns of phrase, could not be recovered, even if I remembered the story perfectly. I was heartbroken.
Today, such a catastrophe would set me back in a huge way. I have books that are in process, and I’d have to repay editors once I rewrote the books. Keep in mind, they’ve been written several years ago. Imagine trying to remember just what was there in that case. In college, it had only been weeks or months. The material was quite fresh.
Aside from the heavy lift, mentally and financially, I’d be set back years in my publications. That would hurt the marketing of my series, and the expectations of readers would go unmet. What a mess losing my work would prove! It’s frightening to think that so much rides on hard drives.
Think of that in the bigger picture, the world of data…Wow! We really need to figure out how to make fires a thing of the past. I’m thinking of all those who lost everything last year in California. Those who lost their homes while they were bringing new lives into the world in my own area. I’m grateful I could help to relieve some of that stress, but those things held dear are gone, irreplaceable. I have a very good inkling of what that feels like.
Saving ourselves that experience is at the top of most of our lists. Let’s go through the links below and see what the other authors have to say about this probing question…
