9/11 tribute

Joined
11 February 2000
Messages
7,112
Location
Half Moon Bay, CA, USA
What will you do today to remember 9/11? For me, the events that day literally changed my life. I found myself re-examining where I was, whom I was with, and why. Things changed for me dramatically since then.

Today I will direct the choir and band in Carmen Dragon's arrangement of "America the Beautiful", the quintesential arrangement of that music, at a commemoration at the school.
 
I remember I was playing golf and the father of my golffriend picked us up. It was a cold day and it was starting to rain.

He said there was a plane crash in WTC towers - first I was like "must have been small planes and some accident in the air". But then I remember the driver to switch trough every radiochannel and all they was talking about was this situation so I understood it was something REALLY bad. So I went home, every channel was covering this on TV.

It was so strange, like the world was at war.

I think on 911 2001 we all were americans... It was a tragedy and I feel sorrow for those who lost their lives or relatives/friends on that day.

Thoughts out to everyone who was affected by this happening. Words can't justify what a big tragedy and loss that day was...


Regards Adeel (a muslim born and raised in Norway, my parents are from Pakistan)
 
My wife is a native New Yorker and while we were getting ready for work that day, we both found ourselves holding eachother sobbing in tears. Tears for the tragedy, tears for the death we knew had already occured and we assumed would continue, tears for her city, and tears for the shattering of our collective innocence.

In many ways, my family was lucky that day. We had some near misses and when you consider how many family and friends we have working in Manhattan and in and near the WTC, we only lost one friend. It sounds terrible to say that... "we only lost one friend" but it's true. It could have been much worse for our family and friends and for that we are grateful.

My wife and I began the day with a short prayer remembering those that are now gone and thanking God for the blessings that we have. We included the brave men and women in uniform (police, fire, Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, Coast Guard, etc.) who protect us each and every day.

I am on a mission today to be extra grateful for all the blessings that my life does have. I have my problems, as do every one of us and our families, but I have the gift of life, love and family... and among many lessons that 9/11 taught me... it certainly reminded me of the importance of those easy to forget blessings.

God Bless the United States of America and all her people... no matter race, color, religion or creed.

9/11/01 - The Asis family has not forgotten.
 
My wife and I were getting ready for work and she turned the little TV in our bedroom on, I couldn't believe what I saw, then the second plane hit while I was watching!...it was so incredible, and sad:frown:

Peace to the familys of the victoms and may they rest in peace.
 
I was at work running to the TV in disbelief and growing angrier by the second.I thought it was an act of war not just terrorism.I lost many friends and aquantainances that day,I grew up on Staten Island :mad: :frown:
 
I was sleeping late as I usually do. My brother-in-law called me to let me know what was going on. Anything to do with planes and flying I am nuts about, so that's why he called.
I was just stunned as I watched the first tower burn. I quickly checked to see if anyone I knew was flying that day. My wife and I were watching the TV when my wife says "hey look at that plane flying really low", and then boom. That's when I knew we were under attack. I shouted out loud "ground the planes now." I called an investor I work with in NYC and asked if he knew what was going on. He just started in with business as usual. He is close to the WTC and I told him to look out his window. HE then said the towers are on fire, and then went back to business as usual. I no longer work for this guy BTW. What an uncaring A-hole!
 
It was my birthday, so I was late to wake. Kids and wife came in the bedroom and I woke from their talking. The TV happened to be on in the bedroom and tuned to CNN. I asked my wife what was going on, as I explained that I had just had a dream that a plane had hit the WTC. I guess I had subconsciously heard and processed what CNN must have been saying before I woke. Opened a gift from the kids and a few minutes later sat there and watched the second plane hit.
 
It's my birthday as well. I stayed home sick (I really was), got up around noon, sat down at my PC, hopped on IRC and started gabbing. People started yammering at me going 'can you believe it???'. I had no idea what they were talking about, they were telling me go turn on the TV. I heard the reporters talking about how the towers had collapsed and cutting to video of the towers standing and on fire. I was really confused because they didn't look like they had collapsed to me. Then they cut to the footage of the towers actually collapsing. Messed up stuff.
 
ken,

i'm sure the tribute today was an excellent reminder of many things for everyone who attended... good for you and the school.

i was up watching cnbc / cnn when they broke with the story. given that it involved a large, commercial aircraft, i assumed it was an intentional act from the start. i was stunned by the 2nd plane, the pentagon and the flight downed in PA.

my take was that with these acts, life as an american as i had known it (and anticipated the future for my family) had changed forever. to some degree, it meant to me that we'd see a horrible clash between our values / civil liberties and our need for increased scrutiny to minimize the risk of similar attacks in the future.

while 9/11 was terrible, i fear there is more to come and the next time around, it'll be worse.


<sigh>
hal
 
my view consisted of a very dark F5 tornado/v-shaped cloud tens of thousands of feet into the air, with a sheared-off top, blowing southeast. huge. seen from the west, 56 miles away on a ridge, along the appalachian trail, near the delaware water gap.

this tribute from peggy noonan: I Just Called to Say I Love You
The sounds of 9/11, beyond the metallic roar.


Friday, September 8, 2006 12:01 a.m.

Everyone remembers the pictures, but I think more and more about the sounds. I always ask people what they heard that day in New York. We've all seen the film and videotape, but the sound equipment of television crews didn't always catch what people have described as the deep metallic roar.

The other night on TV there was a documentary on the Ironworkers of New York's Local 40, whose members ran to the site when the towers fell. They pitched in on rescue, then stayed for eight months to deconstruct a skyscraper some of them had helped build 35 years before. An ironworker named Jim Gaffney said, "My partner kept telling me the buildings are coming down and I'm saying 'no way.' Then we heard that noise that I will never forget. It was like a creaking and then the next thing you felt the ground rumbling."

Rudy Giuliani said it was like an earthquake. The actor Jim Caviezel saw the second plane hit the towers on television and what he heard shook him: "A weird, guttural discordant sound," he called it, a sound exactly like lightning. He knew because earlier that year he'd been hit. My son, then a teenager in a high school across the river from the towers, heard the first plane go in at 8:45 a.m. It sounded, he said, like a heavy truck going hard over a big street grate.

I think too about the sounds that came from within the buildings and within the planes--the phone calls and messages left on answering machines, all the last things said to whoever was home and picked up the phone. They awe me, those messages.

Something terrible had happened. Life was reduced to its essentials. Time was short. People said what counted, what mattered. It has been noted that there is no record of anyone calling to say, "I never liked you," or, "You hurt my feelings." No one negotiated past grievances or said, "Vote for Smith." Amazingly --or not--there is no record of anyone damning the terrorists or saying "I hate them."

No one said anything unneeded, extraneous or small. Crisis is a great editor. When you read the transcripts that have been released over the years it's all so clear.

Flight 93 flight attendant Ceecee Lyles, 33 years old, in an answering-machine message to her husband: "Please tell my children that I love them very much. I'm sorry, baby. I wish I could see your face again."

Thirty-one-year-old Melissa Harrington, a California-based trade consultant at a meeting in the towers, called her father to say she loved him. Minutes later she left a message on the answering machine as her new husband slept in their San Francisco home. "Sean, it's me, she said. "I just wanted to let you know I love you."

Capt. Walter Hynes of the New York Fire Department's Ladder 13 dialed home that morning as his rig left the firehouse at 85th Street and Lexington Avenue. He was on his way downtown, he said in his message, and things were bad. "I don't know if we'll make it out. I want to tell you that I love you and I love the kids."

Firemen don't become firemen because they're pessimists. Imagine being a guy who feels in his gut he's going to his death, and he calls on the way to say goodbye and make things clear. His widow later told the Associated Press she'd played his message hundreds of times and made copies for their kids. "He was thinking about us in those final moments."

Elizabeth Rivas saw it that way too. When her husband left for the World Trade Center that morning, she went to a laundromat, where she heard the news. She couldn't reach him by cell and rushed home. He'd called at 9:02 and reached her daughter. The child reported, "He say, mommy, he say he love you no matter what happens, he loves you." He never called again. Mrs. Rivas later said, "He tried to call me. He called me."

There was the amazing acceptance. I spoke this week with a medical doctor who told me she'd seen many people die, and many "with grace and acceptance." The people on the planes didn't have time to accept, to reflect, to think through; and yet so many showed the kind of grace you see in a hospice.

Peter Hanson, a passenger on United Airlines Flight 175 called his father. "I think they intend to go to Chicago or someplace and fly into a building," he said. "Don't worry, Dad--if it happens, it will be very fast." On the same flight, Brian Sweeney called his wife, got the answering machine, and told her they'd been hijacked. "Hopefully I'll talk to you again, but if not, have a good life. I know I'll see you again some day."

There was Tom Burnett's famous call from United Flight 93. "We're all going to die, but three of us are going to do something," he told his wife, Deena. "I love you, honey."

These were people saying, essentially, In spite of my imminent death, my thoughts are on you, and on love. I asked a psychiatrist the other day for his thoughts, and he said the people on the planes and in the towers were "accepting the inevitable" and taking care of "unfinished business." "At death's door people pass on a responsibility--'Tell Billy I never stopped loving him and forgave him long ago.' 'Take care of Mom.' 'Pray for me, Father. Pray for me, I haven't been very good.' " They address what needs doing.

This reminded me of that moment when Todd Beamer of United 93 wound up praying on the phone with a woman he'd never met before, a Verizon Airfone supervisor named Lisa Jefferson. She said later that his tone was calm. It seemed as if they were "old friends," she later wrote. They said the Lord's Prayer together. Then he said "Let's roll."

This is what I get from the last messages. People are often stronger than they know, bigger, more gallant than they'd guess. And this: We're all lucky to be here today and able to say what deserves saying, and if you say it a lot, it won't make it common and so unheard, but known and absorbed.

I think the sound of the last messages, of what was said, will live as long in human history, and contain within it as much of human history, as any old metallic roar.

Ms. Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street Journal and author of "John Paul the Great: Remembering a Spiritual Father," (Penguin, 2005), which you can order from the OpinionJournal bookstore. Her column appears Fridays.

Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. reprinted without permission....

i miss the twins
. to you & all lost that day, you too, are not forgotten
image42pp2.jpg
 
I remember I was in the my car listening to the radio on the way to work in Houston on that very faithful day...and EVERYTHING was different since...

Today, I stopped by the WTC site (I live within walking distance), said a quick prayer, watch a bit of the memorial...before I headed to work.
 
I used to work on the 105th floor of the North Tower. I moved down to Florida in 1997. I lost many friends and co-workers on 9/11. I spent the day remembering them and thanking God for my good fortune not being there on that day.
 
As i type this, they are sharing a moment of silence for the first plane striking the tower.

Seems a long time ago and yet it seems like yesterday.
 
I will raise the flag once the sun comes up, and say an extra prayer for those lost that day, as well as for those who have lost their lives since.

Miner
+1

Our flag is displayed on National Holidays and (now) every day in September.
 
I remember waking up to my radio alarm and not understanding what I was listening too. Usually it was music, about ten minutes later my mom came running down and woke us all up and sat us in front of the tv. She knew it was going to be a historical moment. What an incredibly sad sight to see. School was canceled, which was fine because mom wasn't going to send us anyway. Me and my brothers stayed glued to the tv most of the day.

Today I will honor the victims and thank our troops that have responded, in my private little tribute I do every year. I am also looking forward to seeing the 9/11 memorial in a couple weeks.
 
Was just getting into the office and opened up a news website that had the info up in seconds after it happened. Went to the lunchroom to watch the TV and saw the second plane hit. When I first read that a plane had crashed into one of the towers, I thought it must have been a small private plane. Wasn't until the second hit that I really understood what was happening.

Watching the towers collapse on live television was like having my heart ripped out through my stomach. Everything else about that day is a blur.

Even thinking about it today produces the same gut wrenching. Except now it's accompanied with a solemn pride of seeing our nation united.
 
I put up a large flag yesterday. I have made a pledge to myself that 9/11 will always be a personal holiday and that I will not work on 9/11 for the remainder of my life.

Last night I had the tv on, the towers were on fire. my 3 year old walked in the room. She said she didn't like this movie and walked out. This morning I had the tv on in the bedroom, she walked in looked at the tv and said, "this movie is too scary can you turn it off." I thought to myself, I wish I could.:frown:
 
It's my birthday as well.
Wow .. three of us on this site that have today as our birthday. I turned 50 the day the towers fell .. so I never have any problem remembering the day. Ever since, I've never really felt like celebrating .. although really it should be a reminder to live every day fully and tell your loved ones you love them.
 
9/11 happened my senior year of high school.

We spent all day in our classrooms watching the news.

I almost forgot the two coincided till I opened my senior yearbook today and saw a picture of the towers burning. :mad:



It seems like forever and a day ago, but also at the sametime like it just happened (I think cause it will never be forgotten).

I watched most of the 9/11 tribute that was airing on Yahoo/ABC this morning. Then spent the rest of the day working on my dad's van. Hope everyone had a good Sunday.
 
As a NY lifer, I have to say this 90 second commercial yesterday pretty much summed up the day........

<iframe width="560" height="345" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/tnlPX2_b4GA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Last edited:
Back
Top