Thalia’s house was flooded. He says, “It is better to laugh than not to cry.”
“My house is overflowing!” It was the first thing that screamed next Yesterday when he saw how the carpet in his house was getting wet little by little.
Between shouts of surprise and rudeness in English, the Mexican singer, who lives in New York, was inspecting the rooms of her home that had begun to be affected by the strong storms that were recorded in the area due to Hurricane Ida.
One of the spaces in question was the personal gym, which is where next He began noticing that he had several wires connected to electricity.
Photo: Thalia via Instagram
Faced with the troubling scenario, the “Return to Me” singer chose to laugh at the situation.
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“I swear it makes me laugh, it makes me laugh at the ‘damn’ pain,” he stated before noticing how the water started to rise.
Since the cables were already starting to deal with the water, the Mexican told her English-speaking children to be careful.
The actress was also documenting in her Instagram stories how a flood was progressing in her recording studio with a green screen, where she, despite the risks, tried to lift plugs and cables that were already in contact with water.
Photos: Thalia via Instagram
Thalia cried over and over again, “No, Mom, my house!” However, the singer’s sense of humor remained unchanged, as she stood with a superstitious filter and declared, “Instead of crying, I fly.”
The actress also showed her readiness not to aggravate the problem, because there was nothing to do in the face of the flood that fell in the area where she lives.
What started as a pond soon developed and reached the level of a fissure. “Nothing happens,” the Mexican joked about taking the kayak and referred several times to the movie “Titanic.”
Photo: Thalia via Instagram
Today, Thalia is already safe in another farm-like setting and advertises that it runs all day.
Flooding from the torrential rain remaining from Hurricane Ida killed at least 28 people in and around New York Thursday, including several deaths in basements during a “historic” meteorological event that authorities attributed to climate change.
Record-breaking rain triggered an unprecedented flash flood emergency warning for New York City, turning streets into rivers and shutting down subways, as water gushed out at many stations on the tracks.
With information from Agence France-Presse
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