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Old 09-11-2010, 03:43 PM   #1
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Old 09-11-2010, 04:26 PM   #2
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I was awoke by my mom screaming into the phone "We are under attack, turn on your tv". I couldn't see, i couldn't feel and i completely froze in a minute of complete terror and confusion.

Just as I turned the TV on and focused the second tower was struck.

I have never been so afraid. I have never been so saddened by anything i've seen. I have never felt so bad for so many people and their familes. I was glued to the TV for days...

I just remember crying and crying.

I do recall something though that day that was surprising, sincere and out of character. I called information to get a phone number for a friend that had recently moved. The operator (those faceless people that don't really seem real) had asked if i would take a moment of silence with her for the people in New York....we did, it was sweet and meant a lot to me. I'll never forget that.

IMO we were a nation that came together in shock, fear and grief....flags flew everywhere and we mourned.
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Old 09-11-2010, 05:00 PM   #3
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I was in a four-hour chemistry lab that morning, so I didn't know what was happening. At the time, I had a job working for an elderly biology professor who refused to interact with computers directly, so my job involved printing his emails and then typing up emails he had hand-written. So I went to his office after my lab, and the University had sent an email out saying that the decision had been made not to cancel classes after careful consideration. I went to CNNs website, and that's when I learned what had happened. Over the next week, I really wanted some sort of response from my profs. I was in all science and math classes that semester, and none of them even mentioned that it happened. I wanted somebody older and wiser to say something meaningful, and there was nobody around me who had anything to say.

I never went back to the lab that semester. I really screwed that semester up. I watched the news all the time, watched the planes hitting the towers over and over again. Eventually I went to the learning skills center and talked to them about it, and they recommended I stop watching the news. I followed their advice. That was the year I got married. Before 9/11, both my now-ex-husband and I were libertarian in mindset, but within a year, he was a hyper-conservative fox-news-watcher and I had become more liberal than anybody I knew (despite constant exposure to the drone of fox news). The next semester I dropped the biology major for english, both out of necessity (because i screwed up that semester so badly) and because I really needed to be around people who would find words to talk about things that are dark and deep and painful.

I remember that day on the University's tv channel, a young Muslim man from our campus was interviewed. He said he always wears a turban, and when he got out of his morning class, another student spit on him. He was understandably upset about it, but when he found out what had happened, he decided the respectful thing to do was to remove his turban for the rest of that week. I often wonder about him and what he'd say now after nine years of experience and reflection.

Soon after 9/11, there was a memorial on the steps of the UT tower. The whole mall was filled with people. I remember there were already anti-war protesters, though I hadn't even heard any calls to war yet. There was a point in the ceremony where we faced new york and sang, "The Eyes of Texas are upon You" with our little longhorn hand-signals up in the air. I am not really a sports person or a person who has ever sung this song in a group like that - and I wouldn't have participated under most circumstances. But in that instant, it felt very moving and very right. I had never considered New York as having much to do with me, my own life or my identity. In those moments, I felt more connected to New York and to the rest of the country than I ever did before.
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Old 09-11-2010, 11:56 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nat View Post
I was in a four-hour chemistry lab that morning, so I didn't know what was happening. At the time, I had a job working for an elderly biology professor who refused to interact with computers directly, so my job involved printing his emails and then typing up emails he had hand-written. So I went to his office after my lab, and the University had sent an email out saying that the decision had been made not to cancel classes after careful consideration. I went to CNNs website, and that's when I learned what had happened. Over the next week, I really wanted some sort of response from my profs. I was in all science and math classes that semester, and none of them even mentioned that it happened. I wanted somebody older and wiser to say something meaningful, and there was nobody around me who had anything to say.

I never went back to the lab that semester. I really screwed that semester up. I watched the news all the time, watched the planes hitting the towers over and over again. Eventually I went to the learning skills center and talked to them about it, and they recommended I stop watching the news. I followed their advice. That was the year I got married. Before 9/11, both my now-ex-husband and I were libertarian in mindset, but within a year, he was a hyper-conservative fox-news-watcher and I had become more liberal than anybody I knew (despite constant exposure to the drone of fox news). The next semester I dropped the biology major for english, both out of necessity (because i screwed up that semester so badly) and because I really needed to be around people who would find words to talk about things that are dark and deep and painful.

I remember that day on the University's tv channel, a young Muslim man from our campus was interviewed. He said he always wears a turban, and when he got out of his morning class, another student spit on him. He was understandably upset about it, but when he found out what had happened, he decided the respectful thing to do was to remove his turban for the rest of that week. I often wonder about him and what he'd say now after nine years of experience and reflection.

Soon after 9/11, there was a memorial on the steps of the UT tower. The whole mall was filled with people. I remember there were already anti-war protesters, though I hadn't even heard any calls to war yet. There was a point in the ceremony where we faced new york and sang, "The Eyes of Texas are upon You" with our little longhorn hand-signals up in the air. I am not really a sports person or a person who has ever sung this song in a group like that - and I wouldn't have participated under most circumstances. But in that instant, it felt very moving and very right. I had never considered New York as having much to do with me, my own life or my identity. In those moments, I felt more connected to New York and to the rest of the country than I ever did before.



I did too and did get a sense of well-being with how people were interacting right after the attack. I wish we could find that place of solidarity and community again and use it to unwind the present negativity. How I remember the FDNY, and other stickers cars had on them all over the country as a way to tell New Yorkers we were here for them.
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Old 09-12-2010, 12:49 AM   #5
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I had returned from Tahiti on the evening of 9/10. I woke up to a phone call the next morning from someone telling me to turn my tv on, and there it was, all over every channel. I don't think I had ever felt so grateful to be home before or since then.

The rest of the day was more overwhelming than I can even describe. I was forced to drive in to work even though this horrible sequence of events were taking place. We had just seen another plane hit the second tower on tv. As I drove across the bay bridge into the city I remember downtown San Francisco being a ghost town. And I'll NEVER forget wondering why our Federal Government FORCED me to go to work that day (I had already taken the morning off). They foolishly made me cross the bay bridge to come to work to an almost empty building in an almost vacant downtown. All I could think was "please don't let an airplane hit downtown SF as well". I just prayed that nothing happen to the bay bridge as well (or anywhere else for that matter). And of course there was this completely overwhelming sense of disbelief, loss, and pain from what had already taken place on this day.

Nope, I will NEVER forget it.

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Old 09-12-2010, 01:19 AM   #6
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I was in Barcelona, visiting the Olympic Village. The news was playing on a TV at the coffee shop, but no one in the place spoke both Catalan and English, so I couldn't know for sure what was going on. I eventually found out.

It was Catalonian Independence day and high tourist season, so the air was festive, and the attack was taken there the way we take in any tragedy that happens outside our borders - watch television for a bit and then move on. I traveled on, meeting many sympathetic travelers from many countries and of many faiths. I spent evenings at my hotel in Paris talking with the Muslim night clerk..his perspective was enlightening, his fear of retaliation very real and very raw.

I didn't return to the US until the media hysteria had been usurped by plans for unfounded wars that would kill even more Americans and tens of thousands of other people and suck billions of dollars out of our economy and lead us to the devastation that we face today. While I understand that the grief is very real for those who lost people on that day and for New Yorkers, and I do respect that grief, for me the loss of tens of thousands of lives in unjust war, the hateful rhetoric being spewed by conservative christians toward Muslims, the ongoing health and financial battles of first responders and victims relatives, the loss of jobs and homes and dreams and lives from the financial ruin brought about by the sucking of billions of dollars out of our economy and in to Friends of Bush accounts in Dubai is also tragic. The few thousand lives lost on that day in those towers are the tip of the iceberg.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:23 AM   #7
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I was in London.
I had just returned to my office from my lunch break and was scanning the news on various websites.

When I saw the news flash up that a passenger jet hit the WTC, I knew it could not be an accident. Of course, it was only a few moments before the horrors of the day unfolded.

I worked for a fringe theatre company in south London, we were an incredibly diverse group of people from all over the world - I remember all of us (about 30 people) crammed in to the tiny box office watching the only television that was able to pick up an external signal. No sound or words, except the broadcast & sobbing. I sat there for hours.

Outside it was a cacophony - helicopters and police and emergency response vehicles flying through; our site was with less than a mile from Parliament & very near to the MI-6 building; roads were closed down. Traffic was more jammed than normal.

But, I remember the *complete silence* on the tube home that night. The silence of 1000s of people is - immensely poignant & a lot unsettling & exactly how it should have been.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:36 AM   #8
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I was at work. As he was leaving for Court one of my attorneys casually mentioned the first plane hitting. I called my Mom who filled me in on the rest of the story. We may have been on the phone when the second plane hit. (I don't remember and it isn't important now.) Mom was scared for my cousin - last we heard his office was in WTC. She was afraid to call her brother to check so I did. Was told he was OK - the bank he works for moved their offices over to Park Avenue a few years before. Originally located in one of the towers at the time of the bombing, whichever one was above the garage where the bomb went off, they relocated because of the bombing.

I remember what went through my mind after I got off the phone with my Mom - I thought about Waco, Columbine and Oklahoma City and thinking that, once again, the world would never be the same.

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Old 09-11-2010, 05:06 PM   #9
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On the sofa talking to my therapist..as we watched each other's eyes and the TV ..silently...mere words suddenly lost...the experience never forgotten. Watching so many many heroes...I will never forget all the love and unity. Through the smoke came the couple standing there, holding hands..waving and smiling at the camera..before they jumped down together...I will never forget that.
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Old 09-11-2010, 05:14 PM   #10
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I just want to thank everyone for sharing your stories and memories.
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Old 09-11-2010, 05:25 PM   #11
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I awoke at about 9 am pdt, my ex told me about it, I watched in horror until I had to go to work. At work they still had the flag at full staff. I put our flag at half staff before entering the building. We had a huge big screen tv in the break room, everyone was in it, 150 people in the room and not a word was spoken. The conveyor belts had been turned off, the drivers told that they would get their loads tomorrow and our distribution center manager was in NYC, she had had a meeting that day scheduled in tower 1, she did not make the meeting. She was desperately trying to get out of NY, and ended up renting a car and driving back to CA.
That day, nothing came in or went out except tears and hugs.
Bless the men and women who died that day, and their families, we shall never forget.
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Old 09-11-2010, 05:46 PM   #12
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I live a mile from Barksdale Air force Base,I was geting off work at the casino
the road that goes to the base is the main road to my place it took me for ever to go two miles to my house.The police stoped cars and checked ppls drivers licences..my raido was busted so I still had no idea what was going on.When I finaly got home I turned the tv on I was shocked at what happened...just then the second plane hit the other tower...I couldnt move,talk or anything else.My pup climbd in my lap and just sat there with a sad look on her face..The base was on full alert..scary it was to think maybe it could happen hear too..
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Old 09-11-2010, 06:57 PM   #13
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At work when one of my Project Managers yelled down the hall that they heard on the radio that the "Towers just fell"... from that, everyone swarmed into his little office to listen... in shock and disbelief. As the radio cut out with static, I honestly didn't believe what I was hearing... I was in an Orson Welles fog as if I was listening to his 1938 The War Of The Worlds.

At lunch, I rushed home to watch the news...Watching the planes hit and then the aftermath shook me out of that Orson Welles fog. While sitting there, my old boss from the camera shop called and told me that one of our dear friends were among the missing at the Pentagon. I was in so much shock that I didn't cry or grieve for some time. To add, my sorrow, shock and "flight" response to the news about the plane in Shanksville (not far from where my son was living and from an old family homestead).

I still have a lot of unresolved feelings, grief and PTSD from that day. It's still hard to talk about or express. It still makes my chest tight.

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Old 09-11-2010, 08:40 PM   #14
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June insisted on watching the end of Bicentennial Man (terrible Robin Williams movie) when we got up that morning, otherwise, I would have been watching CNN at the time the second plane hit. She was in the shower when I switched to CNN, and I remember being really confused about what I was seeing, and the commentators still weren't sure, either. And later, after watching the towers fall, we left the house believing that ten thousand people or more had just lost their lives on national televison. It seemed wrong to be going to work, but we didn't know what else to do...

A co-worker left the office sobbing that afternoon when he found out his cousin had been on the first plane...

A couple of days later, June said we needed to get a flag, and I understood the sentiment behind it, but I also knew that jingoism was just around the corner. She knew it, too -- we didn't get a flag. We both feared the backlash against Muslims in this country, and sure enough, the hate crimes began before the week was over.

After the fog of the first few days lifted, I knew that our "leaders" finally had carte blanche to do whatever they wanted in the name of revenge, justice, and patriotism. And nine years later, they still do...
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Old 09-11-2010, 07:07 PM   #15
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I was on my way to work pulling up the drive to the entrance gate,,and heard somethin on the radio,,I thought they were bs'n..when I got inside the facility I saw the news,,and was shocked. I guess we never expected we would ever get attacked. I was shocked,,and then I got pissed..

One of my bosses we got the next year was telling how he and his wife were in NYC,,and his wife wanted to stop in a shop,,they were on their way to the Gap store in one of the WTC buildings..that stop in the small shop saved their lived,,that 15-20 minutes..as he told this story he got all choked up. One of the employess at the Fishkill facility had a rental car and was able to get to them some how and get them out of NYC..
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Old 09-11-2010, 07:25 PM   #16
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i was on my way to work when the news dept broke into the radio programming and announced the first plane had hit the first tower....at that point they weren't even speculating on whether it was an accident or a terror attack...by the time i got to my office lot the second plane had struck...

i feel really blessed that i was working at the time in a mortgage brokerage owned by a Lebanese man and working alongside another lebanese woman and a cuban man married to a syrian woman...it was heartbreaking how terrified they were of repercussions against arabs in general...everyone rushed out to get their kids out of school and barricade themselves in their homes
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Old 09-11-2010, 08:23 PM   #17
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I worked for US Airways at the Little Rock airport at the time and was 5 hours into what would end up being a 70-hour shift.

I was in my office closing out a flight when one of my baggage agents came screaming through the back door. His name was Herman. He was big and he was crying like a baby.
I jumped up out of my chair and started yelling for him to tell me what was wrong when the phone rang. It was air traffic control telling me to close the counter, close the gate, close everything. My other line was beeping and it was corporate telling me that "Someone is blowing up New York City" and to shut it all down.

I walked out to the ticket counter and the airport was buzzing with people on their cell phones, people holding laptops. Loud speaker announcements. Every TV tuned in. I saw the second plane hit on the ticket monitor above my head. People were screaming. Sirens were sounding.

I heard a loud crash at the back of the ticket office and ran through the security door to see what it was.

"My MOM is in New York City for a conference." It was Matt, one of my gate agents. I remember how white his lips were, I think he was in shock.

I barked orders for the next 5 hours.

Get these people a blanket.
No, you can't use the phone.
We aren't rebooking anyone.
Close the baggage door.
Call pilot control.
Get me every bag of chips and sandwich you have from the planes and give it to these people.
Find this lady's bag.
Call this gentleman a cab.


We had 140 people standing at our ticket counter wanting to be rebooked, wanting to cancel flights, wanting to know what we knew.
The printer was shitting out messages at a furious pace.

"Flight 112, Cancelled."
"Flight 73, Cancelled."
"Flight 3306, Cancelled."
"All flights cancelled until further notice."
"Airport closed"
"Reservation center closed"

I stood at the ticket counter until 10am the next day helping people. 25 hours solid with only 3 short bathroom breaks. When my body finally revolted, both of my legs cramped up and Herman, who was also still there, had to help me walk back to my office.

I slept for 2 hours and went back to work.

They closed the airport and we all waited, watched tv, and tried to call everyone we knew to see if they were ok. I ended up being on shift for 70 hours before running out for toilet paper, drinks, and deodorant for our people working there.

I slept on a tiny loveseat in my office all that week.

I remember people's faces so clearly. Scared shitless. Shock. Anger. Despair. It was fucking palpable.

Even as I write this, my heart is beating fast so I can't even imagine the level of trauma and fear that those poor people felt. It was all so senseless. So hateful.

Such terrible things we human beings do to one another.
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Old 09-12-2010, 12:21 PM   #18
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I was living in KC MO at the time and turned on the tv. My ex-girlfriend called and said turn on the tv and I said why and she just said turn on the tv then I called my mother who lived in NJ at the time and told her to turn on the tv we were shocked,my mother lived at the time very close to NY so pieces of paper were flying all over the place in our parking lot it was sad to say the least and the clean up effort lasted for a long time...
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