Tag Archives: earthquake tips

Earthquakes and Practical Shoes

25 Aug

DC Earthquake. Photo from fugitive247/Pinterest

Around 2pm yesterday afternoon, I was just finishing up my routine teeth cleaning at the dentist when the ground started shaking. I stared at the receptionist. She stared at me. We both froze. And then she yelled, “It’s an earthquake! I’m from California!!” and bolted towards the door frame.

Insert nervous laughter.

Then minor panic.

Then relief.

I survived the DCearthquake. Photo from Jamie Sohn/Pinetrest

Once the earthquake passed, I walked back across the street to my office building to find my coworkers filling the sidewalks and side streets. It almost looked like a block party.

With trusty smart phones in hand, we read about the ‘quake on Facebook and debated correct earthquake safety tips (crawl under a desk? stand in a door frame? run outside?).

Then my eyes gazed down to our feet (always a fashionista, even in times of crisis) and I realized that all the women were still wearing their heels. I couldn’t help but think: earthquake safety tips should include advice about changing your footwear before evacuating! A girl needs to be prepared!

So let this blog post be a lesson to us all. The next time you have to evacuate a building (fire drill, power outage, terrorist scare, earthquake), grab flats, flip flops, or sneakers. It’s the practical shoe choice when descending 10 stories out of your office. You would never be caught up a creek without a paddle — nor should you find yourself in the midst of a natural disaster in stilettos.

Take it from by best friend. Her building in DC closed down as a safety precaution after the earthquake. With crazy Metro delays, she decided to make the hour and a half walk home. In heels.

She told me: “I was wearing my damn work heels.  At first it was fine. Then I thought I stepped on glass but it turned out to be a blister on my heel, which is awesomely painful today.”

Luckily, a blister will heal, but had the earthquake been bigger or something worse than an earthquake, proper footwear would have been a crucial part to any evacuation plan.

So I ask you, readers: do you know where the closest flip flops are? (filing cabinets make great storage bins!).

Practical shoes never looked so good.

Style Me Thrifty's shoe drawer at work