Great, I still have to go out and occasionally help someone with their flood cleanup. It was amazing, there was so much devastation around here. It kind of shocks you to see such. The air is tainted with the smell of rotting vegetation, the grass is dead and gray, mud squelches on your shoes wherever you go, the roads are torn and tossed around, houses are missing their insides, and trash is piled up in front of houses. It is "the most devastating event since the Civil War." Caused over 2.5 billion dollars in damage. Of course, Nashville received HUGE support and assistance from nearby areas, which lowered the need for news coverage, and also caused many people to not realize how bad it was. I personally saw people break down in tears from the overwhelming damage to their houses. It was amazing and depressing.
I spent two straight weeks cleaning up stuff nearby, and just finished a project on a baseball field. Our house is on a hill and was spared from the flood. Nashville will never be the same. The Titan's stadium was filled with water, the Grand Ole' Opry and the Gaylord Luxury Hotel were all incredibly damaged, and that is where a lot of the monetary loss sits.
Anyway, currently it is about 88 and sunny. Everything is normal, at least for us.