CELEBRITY
Chiefs Owner’s Wife, Tavia Hunt, Shares Heartbreaking Update After Texas Flood Leaves Family Devastated – A Relative Was Among the Camp Mystic Campers Who Died in the Tragedy… “She was just 9 years old💔💔” – May Her Soul Rest in Peace

Before Tavia Hunt stood in NFL stadiums, supporting the Kansas City Chiefs as their elegant matriarch, she was a woman of deep conviction, faith, and compassion. Born in Texas, her roots are embedded in humility and service — long before the spotlight found her. So when historic floods ravaged her home state this past week, she responded not as a public figure, but as a grieving Texan—one who felt the pain personally.
Tavia Hunt’s emotional message stirs hearts as Texas flood takes personal toll on Chiefs owner’s family
Days of relentless rain turned deadly, sweeping through central and southern Texas with terrifying force. Rivers overflowed, roads vanished under murky water, and homes were ripped from their foundations. Cities like Martindale, New Braunfels, and San Marcos found themselves overwhelmed by a disaster not seen since the Memorial Day floods of 2015. At least six lives have already been lost, and the toll is expected to rise.
In the midst of the chaos, Tavia Hunt’s voice rose on social media—not with rehearsed statements, but raw, faithful vulnerability. “Hearts are broken,” she began in her emotional post. “If your heart is broken, I assure you God is near. He is gentle with your wounds. And He is still worthy—even when your soul is struggling to believe it. Trust doesn’t mean you’re over the pain; it means you’re handing it to the only One who can hold it with love and restore what was lost. For we do not grieve as those without hope.”
Her words offered comfort where few could. This wasn’t a press release or obligatory sympathy—it was spiritual solidarity from someone who was grieving, too. As she revealed, the tragedy struck far too close. “Our hearts are broken by the devastation from the floods in Wimberley and the tragic loss of so many lives — including a precious little Hunt cousin, along with several friend’s little girls,” she shared.
That loss, tied to Camp Mystic—a Christian summer retreat near the Guadalupe River—was among the worst of the unfolding disaster. Authorities confirmed that 27 girls from the camp remain unaccounted for. With floodwaters rising as high as 29 feet, more than 850 people have already been rescued. But Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice cautioned, “We will not put a number on the other side because we just don’t know.”
For Texans like Tavia, this isn’t just a natural disaster—it’s a spiritual test, one that calls for faith, resilience, and unity. Her heartfelt post reminds us that even in public grief, there is healing in vulnerability. And in moments of devastation, it’s compassion, not celebrity, that makes the difference.