Townsville Bulletin

Lifetime ’just all gone’

- JACOB MILEY

A ROSSLEA grandmothe­r lost almost two decades’ worth of memories after her uninsured home was flooded.

Debbie Sullivan sandbagged and held out for as long as she could, but eventually left for the Ignatius Park College Evacuation Centre. What she returned to was mud covering the possession­s she acquired over 19 years.

“I just cried,” she said. “I just didn’t stop crying. It was overwhelmi­ng. I just cried thinking about everything I’ve lost. All my children’s and my grandchild­ren’s things are all here.

“I had a playroom set up for them. I had my sewing room. I had everything here for them that I built up over years of life and it’s just all gone.”

Ms Sullivan cancelled her insurance cover more than a year ago while her husband Peter, who has leukaemia, was out of work.

She described yesterday as “one of her hardest days”as she began filtering through all of her possession­s.

“This is really hard. It’s really hard to go through all the stuff that you’re just going to throw,” she said.

“I’ve got cupboards in my bedroom that my father made and he’s been gone for 18 years. I don’t even want to think about if I can’t save that. I have a rocking horse that he made me, and that’s OK. You just got to get on and rebuild it – you can’t dwell on it.”

On Tuesday her son and others started clearing the mud that was spread throughout the house.

“They took everything out of here. They did two loads to the dump. This (house) was covered in mud and they just got in here and cleaned and hosed,” she said. “It was unreal what they did in a few hours. It would have taken me weeks to do by myself.”

 ?? Picture: EVAN MORGAN ?? PRICELESS LOSS: Debbie Sullivan surveys her waterlogge­d Rosslea home.
Picture: EVAN MORGAN PRICELESS LOSS: Debbie Sullivan surveys her waterlogge­d Rosslea home.
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