Los Angeles Times

The gift of another day

My sister and I narrowly escaped the 2004 tsunami. Now I try to live my life to the fullest around the world.

- By Marcia Hackett You may submit an essay of 700 or fewer words to travel@latimes.com using “Departure Points” in the subject line.

I started shaking when I first heard about the tsunami that struck Indonesia in December. The reason? On Dec. 26, 2004, my sister Penny and I were washed ashore by the tsunami that started with a 9.1-magnitude earthquake off Indonesia’s Sumatra and generated a wave that spread across the Indian Ocean.

We were vacationin­g with a group of teachers on the southern tip of Sri Lanka. On that beautiful Sunday morning, Penny and I were headed to the beach. There was not a cloud in the sky; gentle waves lapped the shore where a few early-bird tourists sunned themselves.

We hiked parallel to the shore on top of a 12-foot-tall breakwater made of large black boulders. They were slippery, and we had to look down to watch our footing.

Just after 10 a.m., a giant wave slammed down on us, carrying us about 10 feet in the air and depositing us into the brush along the beach. It knocked the wind out of both of us.

When she could catch her breath, Penny yelled, “Marcia, we’ve got to get out of here!” She had experience­d rogue waves in the U.S. Virgin Islands and thought this was one.

Shaking and soaked, we stood up and trudged through the wet sand, seaweed and debris, trying to go back the way we had come. The dry riverbed we had crossed that morning had become a raging torrent, carrying picnic tables, lawn chairs, umbrellas and all sorts of trash. We considered fording it, but two hotel staffers franticall­y waved us back knowing we would have drowned in an instant.

I was still wearing my sneakers and had my fanny pack, but Penny had on only her bikini and wasn’t wearing shoes. Now we tried to fight our way through the jungle to get back to the hotel, but the brush was too dense and thorns scraped and scratched our legs and arms until they bled. We saw no path through it.

About 20 minutes later, the two men who had waved us back suddenly came crashing through the brush. They took us by the arm, and the four of us held hands as they led us along the raging river and put us in an open-bed truck that took us back to the hotel.

Still shaking with fright, Penny and I headed back to our cabin, hoping to clean up and grab breakfast. When we saw how much water was on the hotel grounds, we wondered why the gardeners had overwatere­d. Our little cabin had been f looded and furniture toppled. We still didn’t understand the magnitude of what had happened.

Soon we heard the first news about the tsunami. The hotel manager called for an immediate evacuation. We quickly packed our things and headed for the several hotel vans that would take us inland.

We traveled all day, going north through the center of the country. We were horrified by the devastatio­n, but the scope still eluded us. The hotel driver took only our travel group in his van, seeking and finally finding a hotel with space for the 12 of us.

We stayed there for two days, glued to the tiny television in the lobby. Little of the commentary was in English so we didn’t know the extent of the disaster until we arrived in Colombo and our next hotel. Things became clearer there. Penny and I both trembled from the shock.

We had come so close to a sudden death. Why had we been so fortunate to survive? At our original hotel we had been upgraded to a fancier one several miles south. We learned later that about 200 of the guests who had been staying where we would have been were swept away.

The unfathomab­le tragedy killed more than 225,000 people, and it changed everything, including my view on life. I am grateful for each day and try to live my life to the fullest, a perspectiv­e that was reinforced 18 months later when Penny, my kid sister, the only person who could truly understand what happened to us, died unexpected­ly.

I miss Penny every day. But I go on because this second chance is a gift. What happened to me — to us — hasn’t diminished my desire to see the world. In fact, come sit down beside me and let me tell you about my recent trip to Israel.

 ?? Jimin Lai AFP / Getty Images ?? BOATS dot a road in Sri Lanka after the devastatin­g tsunami of December 2004 that killed thousands.
Jimin Lai AFP / Getty Images BOATS dot a road in Sri Lanka after the devastatin­g tsunami of December 2004 that killed thousands.

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