“I can close my eyes and picture all the houses. How I would walk to your front door. All the little details, like how the sidewalk corner lifted up a bit, so I would need to step over it,” he shared. “Lahaina is a close community. Pretty much everybody knew everybody. It (the emotion) comes in waves, and you try not to think about the customers who passed away or everybody who is still missing.”
The official death toll is at 97, with many still missing. Approximately 2,200 structures were destroyed in Lahaina. Sifting through the myriad forms of devastation will take years, if not lifetimes.
Francis and Patterson are keeping themselves busy (and distracted) with work, daily tasks and routines.
Mail continues to pile up at the post office. Lines are long. The smell of smoke still hangs in the air.
Francis and his fellow carriers are delivering mail to customers who still have addresses. Patterson, who works as a compliance auditor for a helicopter tour operator, needed to apply for a post office box. While waiting in line, she was uplifted by “the Aloha spirit.”
“A man who had lost everything was there with coolers, handing out drinks and snacks to people standing in line at the post office,” she said. “That’s ‘the Aloha spirit’ – even if you need help, too, you help someone else. You see it in all the little things, all the little ways people are helping. Everybody is doing whatever they can. Even if it feels small, it matters to somebody.”
Patterson points to other examples of the community spirit: an eye doctor offering free replacements for glasses, a small shipping and mailing service providing free mailboxes and notary services.
Help has poured into Maui from all of the Hawaiian Islands and from the mainland.
Patterson urges people to “be really intentional” about how they support Maui. Giving money directly to affected families and individuals is “most impactful,” she believes, and she invites interested givers to visit Help Maui Rise, a vetted list of over 1,000 GoFundMe sites for direct giving. Among the crowdfunding pages is one supporting 17 Maui firefighters and their families who lost their homes.
Patterson and Francis are also partial to supporting the Maui Food Bank and the Maui Humane Society. They say both organizations are performing heroic and tireless work.
Both alumni have adopted cats from the Maui Humane Society.
Patterson’s cats – Oliver, Dahlia and Ube – are adjusting to their smaller accommodations in the hotel. New scratching posts and toys have arrived – gifts from friends on the mainland.