As New Zealand prepares to mark the first anniversary of the February 22, 2011 Christchurch earthquake, nzherald.co.nz asked local bloggers to describe how their lives have been affected in the year since. We sought a range of voices to paint a broad picture of how life really is in the shattered city.
Mike Dickison wrote a series of blogs after the very first quake in September 2010. His articles, peppered with generous humour and practical advice, reflected the surreal nature of life after the shock. "Now to see what reality has in store," he wrote at the time. More than a year later, Mike shares his reality with us.
Read Mike's blog, Statistically Improbable Phrases, and follow him on Twitter: @adzebill.
"Have you signed the Pledge?", people kept asking me in the months after February.
The Pledge was a register of people who were committed to staying in Christchurch; copies were made available for signing in public places, and the whole thing was to be bound and presented to the mayor. Curiously, all the people badgering me seemed not to be in a position to leave: trapped by dependents, job, unresolved insurance, or an unsellable house.
One should only pledge to stay if one is free to go; I was, and didn't pledge, because I don't like loyalty oaths. This was before the June 13 quakes. And the December 23. And the thousands in between. You don't hear much about the Pledge any more.
After the first quake shock had worn off, there was a unexpected elation in the air. People were itching to reclaim the rubble and turn destruction into a fresh start. The Gap Filler project screened outdoor movies in an empty lot, and made a book exchange out of an old fridge; Greening The Rubble built parks where there used to be buildings. The urge to help-to do something -filled community meetings and swamped the City Council with suggestions for the rebuild, giving rise to that utopian document the Central City Plan, which painted a picture of tree-lined cycleways, green markets, and inner-city apartments.