I'll bet this isn't what he thought would happen to him

You have to wonder about this guy's karma.  That's just harsh.

8 comments:

jabrwok said...

I must be missing something. I doubt *anyone* thinks they're going to die in a sinkhole. Where's the karmic aspect of it?

Texan99 said...

How many of your grandparents do you have to step on thoughtlessly in the street (after they've come back as small insects) before the universe decides it has to make the earth open up a pit that swallows you up in your own bed at night? It's right out of Nightmare on Elm Street.

On the list of "stuff Americans die from" in the actuarial charts, it has to be way out there on the tail. Doesn't it make you think of all those jokes about people standing in line before the Pearly Gates asking each other, "Well, what happened to you?"

E Hines said...

What I think about, since it strikes close to home, is the surviving brother having to listen to his brother in the sink hole calling to him for help while being helpless to give that help no matter how hard he tried. He could only listen to his brother die.

On a karmic scale, it may be the survivor who did something....

Eric Hines

Texan99 said...

True. I hoped he went more quickly than that. What a nightmare for the family in the rest of the house. Truly unimaginable. I'm sorry to hear that strikes close to home.

Anonymous said...

At least the warm and compassionate officials allowed them 30 minutes to gather belongings . How extremely generous.

jabrwok said...

Ah, I'd thought the reference to karma meant there was something in the article that indicated poetic justice was served in his death, rather than speculation as to what he must've done in a previous life to deserve such an end in this one. My bad:-P.

Nasty way to go, and rough on the family. Glad I live in Texas:-)

E Hines said...

Glad I live in Texas

Yeah, we just get tornadoes. [g]

Eric Hines

Grandma Bee said...

Karma, schmarma.

The important thing is to pray for the families, including those on that street whose homes are also condemned. And if we don't know these people personally, think of somebody we do know who has suffered something catastrophic and find out what we can do to help.