The definition of home has always been a matter of perspective that is defined differently from culture to culture and from age to age. The meaning of “home” is certainly not easy to pinpoint but it seems to encompass a broad sphere of emotional experience, sensory perception, memory and feelings of nostalgia. Home, is connected with our basic survival and indicates for us a sense of routine, a place to sleep, cook food for ourselves and our family, washing, cleaning… the base of almost everything we do!
Our hearts turn to the 33 men in Chili who have been trapped in the prison of a 54o square “room” since August 5th- for them- and their relatives- home is now taking on a deeper more cherished meaning. We at Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty hold you in our thoughts and prayers as the rescue efforts continue and as engineers and workers are hopeful that they will be able to start bringing you out as early as Wednesday!
For the last 66 some odd days the men, aged 19-63 have trapped 2,230 feet underground have been forced to make the trapped mine their home until they can be rescued. Here is a little about what they do while they are waiting and what life is like for them.
1. Everything they’re sent is less than 3.2 inches wide
The miners’ lifelines are three narrow boreholes extending down from the surface to their chamber. All rations and supplies — 5 liters of water a day each; 2,000 calories worth of food, including nutrition shakes, bread, fruit, and ham; toiletries; lightweight, fungus-resistant clothing; batteries; medicine, etc. — are lowered in 3.19-inch-wide tubes called “doves.” The packages are sent 24 hours a day.
2. The miners have a personal trainer
Starting this week, a personal trainer is leading the men through a one-hour daily workout, via a closed-circuit video feed. This is important to keep them in good spirits, says Chilean health minister Jaime Mañalich, but also because when the miners are rescued, they’ll need 35-inch waists, or smaller, to make it out the 2,300-foot hole being dug for them. Most Americans would need the exercise: The average U.S. man has a 39.7-inch waist.
3. They will still have to work
Another reason the miners have to stay in shape: When their escape route’s pilot hole breaks through, they’ll need to start working to clear away up to 4,000 tons of rock and rubble, in constantly rotating shifts.
4. They have an iPod
The iPod is hooked up to speakers, to encourage communal listening. But since they don’t have electricity, they send it up to be recharged. They also have TV and movies piped down to them on fiber optic cable and projected onto an improvised screen. (Watch the miners cheer on their national soccer team)
5. Gambling is encouraged
Early on in their ordeal, the miners created a makeshift casino out of a table and dirty red cloth. The games include dominoes and poker. From a video they made, it looks like the miners are “whiling away the afternoon in some darkened gambling dive,” says David Jones in Britain’s Daily Mail.
6. They’re staying in close touch with their families
The miners’ family members, some of them living in their own improvised camps near the rescue site, got to see their loved ones 24 days after the collapse, in a 45-minute video the miners recorded on a tiny video camera sent through the borehole. The video included a tour of the shelter and personal messages to family members. Later, a phone system was set up so the miners could speak directly to their relations above.
7. The miners are getting pep talks from the Alive survivors
Four Uruguayan ex-rugby players who made it through 10 weeks in the snowy Andes following a 1972 plane crash — a saga recounted in the film Alive (1993) — traveled to the mine in early September to encourage the miners and their families. “They are much luckier than we were because they didn’t have to make the terrible decision to eat their friends,” noted crash survivor Jose Luis Inciarte, 62.
8. Even underground, day is bright and night is dark
On the advice of NASA doctors and engineers, the miners have created a lighted “day” area and a perpetually dark “night” area, using the two spots to create some semblance of a regular day. A schedule is important for mental well-being amid all the uncertainty, NASA experts say, and vitamin D supplements will help alleviate the sun deprivation.
9. They’re allowed to smoke
Last week, Chilean authorities decided that the chamber’s air ventilation system could handle lighted cigarettes, so they started sending down two packs of smokes a day. Previously, the miners had been using nicotine patches to cope with their addictions.
Source: www.abcnews.go.com