Where Were You on September 11, 2001

NEW YORK – SEPTEMBER 11, 2001: (FILE PHOTO) A fiery blasts rocks the south tower of the World Trade Center as the hijacked United Airlines Flight 175 from Boston crashes into the building September 11, 2001 in New York City. Almost two years after the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, the New York Port Authority is releasing transcripts on August 28, 2003 of emergency calls made from inside the twin towers. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

That’s a day that is burned in my memory for all time.  I was no where closed to ground zero in New York. In fact I was 1, 775 miles away in Colorado.  But the sights and sounds broadcast on the television of the planes crashing into the twin towers, the Pentagon, and a Pennsylvania field, were still life changing. Launching America into a new consciousness, the threat of global terrorism was front and center.

I had just started a new job, I was getting ready for work when I stopped to check my email before shutting the computer down at approximately 8:00 a.m. , MDT. A friend’s email popped up with urgent on it then an IM. The message said “Turn on your television before you head to work.  It’s awful, we’ve been attacked.”

I tagged him back “What? I gotta go.” But upon his insistence, I headed down stairs flipped on the television. To my horror I saw the video of the fiery blasts that rocked the World Trade Center after being hit by two planes. I’m not sure how long I stood there watching the events as they unfolded that morning. That particular scene was burned into my memory.  For the first time in history, the FAA grounded all flights over or bound for United States air space.  It was an eerie sound… or no sound I guess.  Where I live air traffic from local airports and the numerous air force bases jets are an everyday occurrence. But the dead silence was unnerving.

Anyway, I finally tore myself from the television, got in my SUV and drove to work. There I found my boss and a few co-workers glued to the computer screens and MSNBC where World Trade Center’s North Tower collapse 102 minutes after being struck by Flight 11 was being aired. Continuous news coverage and updates at ground zero.  Not much work got done that morning. I think we were all shell shocked.  How could this happen? Within a couple of hours, the business owner called and told us all to go home.

Coverage continued all day and at 8:30 p.m., President Bush addressed the nation, calling the attacks “evil, despicable acts of terror” and declaring that American, it’s friends and allies would “stand together to win the war against terrorism.”

From that day forward, there was a new normal.  It couldn’t happen to the United States, but it had.  We’d been attacked on our on soil… so many American lives lost on that one day, through the actions of a few. A day millions will never forget.

So where were you the morning of 9/11/2001?

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Posted in My Say What Blog and tagged , , , , by with 6 comments.

Comments

  • Thanks for highlighting the horror of that morning, Tena. It’s right and proper that we remember not only where we were but the sacrifice that so many families and the Nation endured.
    Lest we forget.

  • Anna Taylor Sweringen says:

    It was a bright sunny day. I was on my way home from voting for some off year candidates and happened to look up Coney Island Avenue toward Prospect Park. I could see the smoke and thought it was a fire in downtown Brooklyn. My phone was ringing when I got in. The staff from my church were asking me how to work the big screen tv in the youth room because the Empire State building had been hit. I turned on my tv and watched when the second plane hit thinking it was a replay. I told them it was the WTC not the Empire State. That’s when I realized what the real source of the smoke I’d seen was. A tragic day. Since then I’ve received hope learning about the good work being done by foundations some of the families who lost loved ones that day as their response to the tragedy. If they can suffer that kind of loss and still want to make the world a better place then I want to stand with them.

  • Barbara Bettis says:

    It was a horror of a day, for sure. I was getting ready for work too when I happened to click over to a channel that had early coverage. I called my colleague at college where I taught journalism and media studies and he, some broadcast work. I tracked unfolding events via radio as I drove in and then got my department TV going. Ironically, that morning at home I was watching a network that had just announced an upcoming interview with a guy who happened to be connected with that network and was promoing his new book. I was disgusted with the show for self-promotion like that, so I changed to another network to immediately see a plane flying into a tower. Wasn’t long till all networks were covering it. This one of those things that will always be a reference point for people old enough to remember it. Thank you for sharing your story.

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