Marcia Woloshun knew a blizzard was forecast – so the 48-year-old bought some extra food last week. But she figured it was unlikely she would miss one of her weekend nursing shifts. 

After all, it often snowed in Running Springs. Her little town clings to the spine of the San Bernardino Mountains, a place they call the Rim of the World, 90 miles east and 6,000 feet above the palm trees of Los Angeles. But it rarely snowed enough to sock anyone in.

That was more than a week ago – and she hasn’t been able to escape since. 

Instead of going to work at her hospital, Woloshun spent the week on backbreaking efforts to shovel out her car, only to see it buried anew by snow and icy drifts. At one point, she lost power and crawled into a tent she’d erected inside her own living room, sharing warmth with her two cats. 

By Friday, the 48-year-old was still among those largely trapped by the back-to-back storms that dumped, in some spots, as much as 10 feet of snow.

She said it came in three big waves, from late last week to earlier this week. Power went out. Roofs collapsed. And even in mountain communities that were used to a little isolation, people started to run out of the things that were a simple matter of life and death: food. Medicine. 

The snow has stopped, and after California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared an emergency in 13 counties, the National Guard deployed to aid recovery. But so far, residents say the state is still struggling to clear roads and bring aid. Backbreak turned to frustration as neighbors realized they had only one another to lean on. 

For Woloshun, the rare blizzard continues to eat up her paid leave and fuel high anxiety as she weathers it alone. 

Her power is on. Her cell phone works. But she can’t get out. 

“This morning I woke up and I realized they hadn’t plowed,” Woloshun told USA TODAY on Friday afternoon. “I feel like I’m never going to get out here.”

About seven miles away, near the longtime resort of Lake Arrowhead, Paola Fowler, 37, her husband and three kids, along with friends, rented a home for a little getaway. The mountain forest is just two hours and a world away from their suburban home in Santa Clarita.