Port in a/the storm proverb phrase
The relevant phrase "any port in a storm" is said when you mean that you will accept any help from wherever or whoever if you are in a difficult situation.
A place that provides shelter or protection for you or a person who offers you help when you experience difficulties, trouble, or danger.
During the blizzard, the church served as a port in a storm for the homeless.
We are hoping to find a port in a storm for the night because our car broke up.
She treated her father as a port in storm. Whenever she is broke, she turns to him.
The first known use of this proverb is in the English author John Cleland's bawdy novel Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, 1749.
Eyes with dark rings around them
I get eyes like two burnt holes in a blanket after sleepless 2 nights