Where were you 11 yrs ago today 9-11

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  • oregonzoo
    oregonzoo Posts: 4,251 Member
    I'd just gotten to work. Everybody was in the break room watching TV. And at the time the second plane hadn't crashed yet. So we thought it was some bizarre accident.

    Then the second plane.

    And my heart fell. I'll never ever forget the horror of that day.
  • yowza101
    yowza101 Posts: 196 Member
    I was unemployed at that time and working out at home. My girlfriend called me and told me to turn on the tv. I thought I was watching a movie and she said that's what actually happening. When I turned on the tv that's when I saw the second plane hit the tower. I was stunned and just started to cry.

    A friend of mine was suppose to be on the one that hit the Pentagon. However the business in DC where he was interviewing called him the day before and told him they had to reschedule his interview for the following week.
  • I was in 10th grade in math class, we were on a break and one of the students came running back into the room saying that a plane had hit the Pentagon, we argued with him saying that that was restricted air space and you can't just fly over it. A few minutes later we were all in another classroom watching the TV showing the footage of not only the pentagon but the Twin Towers. We did have normal classes that day and no one got sent home, I remember the feeling of shock and confusion that all of us walked around with that day.
    I'll never forget.
  • MrsBlobs
    MrsBlobs Posts: 310 Member
    I was blissfully unaware doing my rounds to see my patients. I finished up and went to my childminder to collect my son - she opened the door in floods of tears and showed me what was on the telly.

    I live in the UK but it was still surreal, shocking and heartbreaking. In remembrance :heart:
  • grumpster72
    grumpster72 Posts: 43 Member
    I was at work and I couldn't believe what was happening. I work in IT at an Ivy League University and didn't know what to do or if we were next. When everything was occurring, it was so hard to believe what was going on that it felt like a dream (really a nightmare). It wasn't until later in the day that everything sort of sank in.
  • cnsmith2
    cnsmith2 Posts: 539 Member
    I was at work, and someone had said that a plane had hit one of the towers, but made it sound like it was just a small plane...an accident. I was glued to the web for any information I could find. My hubby's sister worked at the WTC. Panic ensued mostly until we were able to find out she was okay. It was a time when I was dumbstruck and full of pain and grief.

    It was a quiet day, one of disbelief. It didn't seem real at the time, but the video footage was right there in front of us.
  • tyrantduck
    tyrantduck Posts: 387 Member
    I had just started my freshman year of high school. Once we got word of what was going on, all we did the rest of the day was keep our eyes glued to every TV in every class. It was heartbreaking knowing that this tragedy was happening only 100 or so miles to the south of where I sat.

    11 years later, I'm proud to say I work in the NYS Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Services-Fire Prevention and Control. I work with firefighters who went down to NYC that day to help with the aftermath and recovery efforts. I'm so thankful that I'm able to share 5 days out of every week with heroes. We have dogs in the office that are now retired that walked through the rubble to help find people who were trapped or dead.

    9/11 hits me so hard every year. We have photos and posters everywhere. on the wall directly in front of my desk is a poster of the iconic photo of three firefighters erecting the flag at ground zero. there's another poster in one of our branch offices which bears the names and photos of all the FDNY personnel who died. the names of the 343 firefighters who lost their lives that day are engraved on a granite wall in the capitol plaza two blocks from my office, which I help maintain and I also help get the names of other fallen firefighters onto that wall.

    For weeks before and after this day, my mind is stuck on nothing but the events of that day and those poor people in the buildings and on the planes. Our museum has a huge collection of items recovered from the site, including an FDNY fire truck that was damaged and still has remnants of soot and dust from the collapse on it, not to mention one of the steel beams of the buildings.

    I'm so glad I can be around these people who put their lives on the line every day to save others.
  • MissMormie
    MissMormie Posts: 359 Member
    I wish everyone could remember just how much the world changed for Americans on that day, and stop *****ing about the "inconviences" that we now live with because of this tragic event. There are over 5000 people who would LOVE to be dealing with these inconviences every day rather than what happened to them on that day, and countless more family members who miss them.

    One wrong doesn't make good another wrong.

    Explain this to me for example, every airplane passenger stopping over in America whether they are staying there or not, needs to get an Esta form. Which basically is 'give me your name and passport number and pay a large amount of money'. The theory of course is that this will help find unwanted subjects. But really, names and passport numbers are already available at the airplane company, so no reason to use this Esta. Also, the people this is intended to catch will have no problem getting fake id's which will allow them to go through this process without any problems.

    This is obviously just an example. But in general terms, safety is only on of the rights that people have, you cannot throw away the other rights and then say you still live in freedom because you have safety.
  • Just got back from PE and was about to start math class. I was 10. I didn't even know what the twin towers were but I remember watching it on TV and crying my eyes out
  • I sat in this very building, watching in horror as images flashed over the net of those towers falling. I knew my young son, just 6 was watching it on channel one at school. I was saddened for him, and scared for this country. I felt things in this country would never be the same. Remember- out of tragedy greatness rises up. Rise up America! Take back your lives, your neighborhoods, your rights. Respect yourselves, and your bodies. Teach your children that freedom isn't free, and NEVER forget the sacrifices of the last 11 years!
  • I was a kindergarten teacher in NJ. Many of our students in the school had parents or relatives working in the tower. I know two families who lost loved ones and many who escaped by the grace of God. My cousin is an emergency nurse practitioner who waited and waited to treat the wounded. None ever came... That day is etched in my mind forever.
  • klbaierwalter
    klbaierwalter Posts: 308 Member
    I was a freshman in high school and we were sitting in our World Civ class with Mr. Decaroli (RIP) and we watched the planes strike and the towers fall. They wouldn't let us switch classes. We live in an area that still has a lot of weaponry from WWII and factories that manufactured it were still open and they kept us in class and then sent every straight home, for fear of a possible attack where we live.
  • I was on my way to work when the first plane hit. That day, the entire office stayed close to the phone and the television reliving the horrification that was 9/11. My heart cries when I remember the tragic loss to all the families involved. I lost friends and co-workers, I will never forget this monumental time.
  • I was serving in the Air Force stationed at the Air Force Academy in CO. My son (who was 4mos old then) was at the base daycare and I was in the process of posting guards at entrances as our base went in lockdown and we moved into 12 hour shifts and made calls to ensure we had accountability for all military personnel assigned to our squadron.

    I was able to get home (w/ my son) later that night and that's when I was able to breath for a moment and breakdown and cry. I will NEVER forget where I was that day.
  • I was in college and just finished up a morning class on my way to my part time job when I heard about it on the radio. I was so confused as to what was going one. When I arrived at my job everyone was standing around tv's, and my mom who was working there also at the time was in tears as my Dad's friend was on one of the planes. Will never forgot the lives lost that day!
  • Victoria2448
    Victoria2448 Posts: 559 Member
    I was on vacation at my cottage.(In NY) My husband and daughter who was 3 went into Watertown to pick some things up. I stayed back to workout. After my workout, I was rewinding my VHS tape, and the TV was on. I saw the second plane hit. At first I thought it was some movie. I continued to watch and became panicked. I was all alone and my family was near Fort Drum. I was so afraid of what the next target would be. My mind was racing, was my family ok, should we go home..was it safer near Ginna or Niagara Mohawk and Fort Drum...We spent the next week there as we watched the Air Force patrol the lake shore. Very scary...
  • chivalryder
    chivalryder Posts: 4,391 Member
    I was on the bus, on my way to school. Grade 10. That's when I first heard about it. Of course, I didn't believe what had happened. I can't remember what happened that day at school though. All I remember was the bus ride in.
  • CassieReannan
    CassieReannan Posts: 1,479 Member
    Wondering why the cartoons werent on in the morning before I headed off to primary school
  • lesita75
    lesita75 Posts: 379 Member
    I remember that day vividly. It was the day after my birthday and I decided to take the first half of the day off because I had a late night out. I was online when news of the first plane hitting began to spread so I turned the T.V. on for live coverage. As I was watching T.V. I saw the second plane plow into Tower #2. It was in that instant that I decided I needed to shed a few pounds. What does weight have to do with a terror attack you ask? Well I needed to shed those extra pounds because when I saw the second plane hit that tower on live television I knew then that it was no accident and as I sat there appauled and angry I decided I had to do something; for me that something was to re-enlist in the military by means of the Minnesota Army National Guard (134th FSB Red Bulls).
  • minimaggie
    minimaggie Posts: 224 Member
    In the air on my way to teach a class in Miami, Florida. We were grounded in Atlanta, but the airlines would not tell us what was going on. I called my dad when we landed and found out that as I waw walking up the jetway the pentagon was under attack. I then spent the rest of the day trying to secure a rental car to drive home from Georgia to Kentucky. I remember thinking at the time, Holy Crap!!!! That could have been my plane as easy as any other!!!! Pretty eye-opening experiance!!!!
  • MrsHarris6
    MrsHarris6 Posts: 46 Member
    In history class.. in High School... watching this on the news...trying to understand why some classmates were crying- SO confused! I'm from a small town where there are many retirees. I just didn't understand how this event would impact my future and everyone else's future forever.

    Now, 11 years later- I work with TSA helping to support their mission to protect our citizens.
  • roknic69
    roknic69 Posts: 14 Member
    I was on holiday in Cuba with my best friend at the time....on the beach after breakfast when I heard some of the hotel staff talking about it. I really couldn't understand what they where saying so I went into the hotel lobby and froze when I saw the image on CNN.

    We where one of the first flights out on the morning of Sept 16th after they lifted the no fly ban.....I'll never forget the silence on that 3 hour flight back home to Canada. Those 3 hours seemed like a lifetime. Just wanted to get home to my family.
  • OkieinMinny
    OkieinMinny Posts: 834 Member
    These stories and how it changed lives are amazing and heartbreaking
    To all of the military people on this thread THAMK YOU so much for all you and your families do!

    I was at work here in MN walked into the kitchen area and saw everyone standing around the TV - we first thought someone had just lost control of a plane and then the second one hit - I called my mom who was watching my then 6 month old - I remember hugging him so tight that day!

    Today he is a 6th grader and at dinner last night we talked about this and where we were and why people do things like this - today at school this is what they will study - so sad this is part of our history.
  • sunnymel126
    sunnymel126 Posts: 359 Member
    I was at work when I got a frantic phone call from my poor mom. She was hysterical over hearing the news and watching that horrific news coverage. I didn't know because I was at work and we had no access to TV or anything. I left work to be with her.

    I guess it's one of those rare times in your life you will never forget where you were.
  • jd5351
    jd5351 Posts: 116 Member
    I was living at my grandma's while going to college. She always slept with the TV on and it was super loud. I'd often have dreams about what was on TV,so when the first plane hit I thought it was a dream.

    I got up and saw that it was real. I ended up staying home from class that day. I had a boyfriend who was in basic training in the Army at the time. He wasn't allowed to call home for a week because they were on total lockdown.
  • Icelandic_Saga
    Icelandic_Saga Posts: 2,926 Member
    I was getting ready for work. My sister called me and had me turn on the news just in time to see the second plane hit. Most intensly scary moment of my life I think.
  • Shayztar
    Shayztar Posts: 415 Member
    This thread is beautiful. To read how everyone's life has and was effected, no matter who you are or where you live. Peace, love and light be with everyone today.

    I was in class at University of Toronto. Someone whispered to me and my friend that a bomb went off at the Pentagon. A few minutes later he told us that it was a plane. We thought he was joking because of how unbelievable it was. When class was over, we saw TVs on all over the University, and then really understood what was happening. They didn't cancel classes. Strange in retrospect... I even had to go to work that night, at one of the big financial institutes. We were all upset to be there, because in Mississauga, the building was spanking new and was nicknamed the twin towers. It is only 1/10 of the size of the real towers, but is a building for an important financial institute near the airport.

    From that year forward, the security and the safety guidelines changed in the building. They weren't called fire drills anymore. They were called "Emergency Building Evacuation" practice. They made us do it 4 times a year for a few years, and they still practice it twice a year.
  • Fox_n_sox
    Fox_n_sox Posts: 283 Member
    11 years ago today, I can still remember where I was. I do not remember if it was a half day at school, or it was a full day that turned into a half day. I was in Mrs. Gillette's 9th grade Geography class when the first tower was hit. 3rd period. We turned the TV on and sat in silence. Watching on the television that our great nation was under attack. I ran to my 4th period, Mr. Pierce, Clay class, and he was sitting on his desk staring up at the TV. we all sat on the huge tables in there and stared at the television's as we were becoming a part of history. I'll never forget that September day, when America was changed forever.
  • mikeschratz
    mikeschratz Posts: 253 Member
    Sitting in training at US Coast Guard Air Station Savannah, couldn't believe what we watched that moring. Had to launch on a Search and Rescue case that night, it was the loneliest night of flying you could possibly imagine, no voices on the radios, no tower or controls telling us what to do.... it was eerie..... when we found the boat we were looking for, we picked the people up and took them into Titusville Airport in Florida. We were grounded for the next four days, they wouldn't let us fly home since we were no longer a Search and Rescue assett..... Pray for all the families that were affected by this tragedy!
  • ErinBeth7
    ErinBeth7 Posts: 1,625 Member
    I was sitting in English class, it was first period, I was in 8th grade. I still remember exactly where I was sitting, what the classroom looked like. The school counselor rushed in and said "America is under attack. This is very serious...." I don't remember the rest, but after that we all went to watch the news. I didn't see anything live, but the gazillion replays were plenty. It was and still is quite sad :cry: I'll never forget some of the live coverage after the planes hit and seeing people jumping from the top floors. That's scary.