Authorities and national outlets like USA Today had already grimly crowned the catastrophic weather event as the absolute “worst flooding in 20 years.”
Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi stood before a sea of reporters during a tense, somber news conference, his expression heavy with the weight of his sinking city.
“There’s no question that the damage done thus far has been catastrophic,” he stated bluntly, confirming the worst fears of the local residents who were watching the waters rise toward their front doors.
The financial and structural toll is almost impossible to comprehend, especially for a state so heavily reliant on its pristine infrastructure.
According to Hawaii News Now, Governor Josh Green addressed the press on March 20 with a devastating preliminary assessment: he expected the storm damages to soar well over the $1 billion mark.
This wasn’t just a matter of a few flooded basements or muddy driveways.
The torrential waters had mercilessly battered vital lifelines, tearing through airports and crippling a major hospital over on Maui.
The raging floods didn’t spare the places where children learn or the winding roads that connect families across the rugged terrain.
Schools were heavily damaged, highways were washed out, and across the islands, innumerable families stood in the pouring rain, staring at the shattered, structurally compromised remains of the places they once called home.
For the Kalama family, the terrifying ordeal came with a profound sense of survivor’s guilt mixed with immense, overwhelming gratitude.
“We’re safe personally,” Tristyn reassured her panicked fanbase, speaking for herself, Kamohai, and their two young children who were hunkered down inside, safe from the rising, muddy tides.
But she was quick to use her massive platform not just to update her followers, but to issue a desperate, life-saving warning to her neighbors and fellow islanders.
“A lot of things are closed, it’s not safe to be out.
So if you don’t have to be out, I would highly recommend just staying home.”
Winter has always been the notoriously rainy season in the tropical paradise, a fact every local knows and prepares for with sandbags and emergency kits.
But Tristyn, a woman whose entire career is built on understanding the Hawaiian landscape and its housing infrastructure, looked genuinely rattled by the sheer force of nature outside her window.
“This is probably the craziest winter I’ve seen in a really long time,” she admitted, her eyes scanning the relentless deluge.