R.J.
Right here, and right now, one thing: YOU ROCK! You're fantastic, better than fantastic, you're brilliant! :) :) :)
And you've already got the number one thing that will turn this event from something that could be tragic and breaking, to a fun adventure that will be bonding. You've got attitude. Shake that walk, smile at your enemy, laugh with the people you love, improvise, adapt, & o.v.e.r.c.o.m.e. ATTITUDE. And that attitude is going to accomplish EXACTLY what you're asking of us. Woman, you rock.
Okay, my gushing aside, here's some brainstorming & ideas:
- Once you know what your insurance payout is going to be, allot a specific amount to each of your kids (even the 10 year old, who'll need more help), to redo their rooms. Include in the budget money for the bed & etc. TELL each of your children what that amount is, and that they need to research, price, & plan it all out. (Don't let them forget things like curtains/sheets/carpet/alarm clock/paint/etc. Have them put together a portfolio, with a coversheet of items & prices so you can easily go down the list and check it off. They get to totally design their own rooms. As long as they stay in budget, & get all of the things you say they need (no, honey, you may not have a tent for a bed) they get a once in a lifetime chance. One or all may be hideous (to your or my standards)...but it will be THEIRS.
- Have each person pick out their "favorite" piece of wreckage. This could be a piece of charred wood, a melted phone, fused glass, whatever...and get them in shadowboxes. Again, let them know ahead of time, so they can think about it. You could mount all 6 of them somewhere in your new house (if you do this it might be especially cool to have everyone sign their name to their mat), or let each one keep theirs to go in their room. Up to you.
- Have a wake for your house. Make it a big party. Nothing assuages & takes the edge off of grief so much as recognition of it. A wake is my personal favorite, because you're crying & laughing & letting go all at the same time. It gives a happy moment to look back on when you're feeling sad, that's in the "present"...aka...after tragedy.
- I have some friends who their son and daughter filmed the demo of their house after it collapsed an earthquake and then flooded from the watermains. Then they both did the overdubbing separately. The son did starwars like sound effects, WWII planes diving and bombing, all with Mariah Carrey overlay, and spliced together with footage and stills of their house before the quake...that had everyone in tears. The daughter did a series of Monty Python like sketches that had us all in stitches ((one where one of the characters was trying to sell the house to another. The seller was describing the house as it used to be, & the buyer was like "Whaddoyou mean new roof? I see a big gaping hole open to the sky." ..."Oh no no, you see there, those red tiles there"..."You mean the ones in a big pile on the ground that a dog is peeing on?"..."No, no! There, above the atrium." ..."Not only does a tree sticking through one wall NOT count as an atrium....")). I don't know if this would be something any of yours would be interested in doing, but it was a really interesting process to watch them going through & complete. Especially as they both went in such totally opposite directions with it.
- Buy a door. A standard sized, interior door, complete with knob. (If you change your mind on the hardware later, you can always replace it.) Keep it in your hotel room. And start marking off the height of your kids. It typically takes a year or so to rebuild. You'll want somewhere to record it. It can even be the last thing you put in the new house after you've finished building.
- Betting pools. Gawd, we know estimates are, shall we say...a pain in the keister? For every stage of construction, including demo...give your kids what the "estimate" is for the timeframe and have them bet what the day will ACTUALLY be. The winner gets a sundae.
- Down comforters & pillows from IKEA now. Magic blankies for everyone. They're inexpensive (if money is no object, you could go elsewhere...but i've found theirs to be fantastic...and they range from 20-100 bucks), you can buy "temporary" plain white duvets for them (if they're redesigning their rooms, they'll probably want to pick out "cool" duvets later)...andd you'll all have something warm and snuggly NOW that you then also get to take into the new house, and match with whatever the decor is going to be. Blank canvass as it were.
That's all I can think of at the moment. If anything else comes to mind, I'll toss it up.
Hang in there, good luck, & KEEP that attitude of yours.
:) :) :)
R