ya weather is ever changing but here so far in north texas our lake levels are record setting highs, the damns are going over their spill ways highways are being flooded.... we may need to build an ark soon
When I was a kid circa 1980-ish I noticed one year that for what seemed like weeks there were these high dense clouds overhead moving fast and no rain. (I am and was in the Western part of Oregon.) I actually predicted that there would be floods in the MidWest and indeed there were. As I recall they were some of the heaviest floods the Mississippi river had seen. This year again is one of the most dry I've seen and by far the most dry that I remember, but I've certainly seen many clouds pass right by (and water vapor is present even when there are no clouds.)
I notice also that fairly ancient texts (e.g., the Christian bible) spend a good bit of time on various weather catastrophes. This leads me to believe that while some of the accounts are just a bit inflated (e.g., the Noah's ark flood) the authors got their ideas from fairly significant weather events that they or their recent counterparts had experienced.
To someone who's house got washed away it may seem like some big and unusual deal, but the time frames that individual humans see first-hand is just a sliver, and people's memories are not all that great anyway. From what I see the current flooding is not atypical, at least in certain locales. http://www.chron.com/news/houston-weather/article/How-the-recent-floods-compare-to-Houston-s-other-6290238.php#photo-4774706
Anyway, best of luck with things. I hope you are situated such that you can find more entertainment value than grief. I personally love storms and floods and such, but I've not experienced very many or very significant ones. If you've got any friends who are active in helping out and are prone to mood shift, keep an eye on them after everything settles down. I know of several incidents where such people became suicidal once all the excitement and action died down.