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dx “When Music Became Refuge: Alan Jackson Quietly Starts Again After the Flood”
Alan Jackson Helps 72-Year-Old Kerrville Man Rebuild His Home — “I Used to Hear Him on the Radio… Now He’s Helping Me Stand Again”

Amid the devastation of the historic Texas flood, one story quietly rose above the rest — not with fanfare, but with heart.
Harold, 72, of Kerrville, had all but given up. The flood took everything: his home, his wedding photos, his Bible, his memories. “I thought maybe I was too old to start over,” he said softly.
And then… someone knocked.
“I’m from the Still Standing Fund — founded by Alan Jackson. Do you need help, sir?”
Harold paused. Alan Jackson? The same voice he and his late wife used to dance to in the kitchen — now sending help to his front porch?
No Headlines, Just Hammers
There were no reporters. No banners. Just tools, timber, and young volunteers quietly rebuilding walls — and hope.
Harold watched as they carried in supplies and worked through the heat. Every nail, every board, reminded him of that old song: “Remember When.”
And now, he’ll remember something else:
“I used to call him my favorite singer,” Harold said. “But now… I call Alan Jackson a friend.”
The Spirit Behind the Still Standing Fund
This wasn’t a one-time gesture. Since its creation, Alan Jackson’s Still Standing Fund has quietly delivered long-term relief to flood victims across Texas.
No celebrity spotlight. No big campaigns. Just steady support — through local churches, schools, and honest, face-to-face care.
Jackson’s mission?
“We’re not just helping people through the storm. We’re staying when the cameras are gone.”



