9/11

JeremiahStone
JeremiahStone Posts: 682 Member
edited October 2 in Chit-Chat
Ten years ago.. What are your thoughts? How did it affect you?
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Replies

  • Ashleysh22
    Ashleysh22 Posts: 204 Member
    wow what a powerful topic. I feel as though our country was united for only a short while. It is sad to see that 10 years later, our country is once again so incredibly divided that both major parties in the white house are acting like children.
  • sc1572
    sc1572 Posts: 2,309 Member
    Can't believe it...I was in fourth grade and remember it like it was yesterday, and now I'm a sophomore in college. That day was indescribable.
  • ericalynn104
    ericalynn104 Posts: 382 Member
    Well honestly, my memory of that day has started to fade. I was in the 5th grade and I didn't really understand what was going on. But now that I'm older I have a new outlook. My boyfriend of 6 years is in the Marine Corps, and I stand here everyday watching him fight for our country. Freedom truly isn't free. Every time I see an American flag waving, I am reminded of his and MANY other men and women's sacrifices.

    "I'm proud to be an American where at least I know I'm free. And I won't forget the men who died who gave that right to me. And I'll gladly stand up next you and defend her still today, 'cause there ain't no doubt I love this land. God bless the USA!"
  • BondBomb
    BondBomb Posts: 1,781 Member
    I remember a few days later sitting in traffic and I was crying. I looked over and there was another lady in the car next to me balling her eyes out. It's been 10 years and thinking about how many people lost their loved ones still makes me cry like it just happened. How do you even survive a loss like that? How does humanity survive a loss like that?
  • kevinlynch3
    kevinlynch3 Posts: 287 Member
    I was in the Air Force at Scott AFB Illinois and watched the second plane hit live on screens at USTRANSCOM.

    I'm from Ireland, now a US citizen (was in process during 9/11) and I cried.

    That's when I realized that while I was born Irish, I was as American or more than most here. It had a profound impact on my future.
  • ritaadkins2002
    ritaadkins2002 Posts: 371 Member
    my thought that day was.....thinking about the loss and the family that was left behind....:frown:
  • JENIFER_AZ
    JENIFER_AZ Posts: 235 Member
    I was 6 months pregnant with our first child. I was horrified and so extremely sad.
  • candb
    candb Posts: 238
    I was in my 20's when it happened and I remember being so scared. I was convinced that more attacks were coming and it was going to come across the country. I remember watching the images over and over and being devastated for the families. I can't believe it' was 10 years ago. I just saw images of the towers coming down again and the people jumping out to their deaths and couldn't help but tear up again.
  • I remember that day like it was just a few days ago. At first I didn't understand what was going on, when the first plane hit i thought it was just a freak accident and then i heard about the others. That's the day that everything CLOSED! I remember going to starbucks and they were closed due to what happened in NYC, that's when I knew we were in trouble. And I remember going to work and getting sick to my stomach watching the news replay over and over again the planes crashing into the WTC.

    I wanna say THANK YOU to all the miltary people that are serving our country!
  • Enforcer25
    Enforcer25 Posts: 350 Member
    I was at home with my son and my wife was at work. I heard on the radio that a plane hit the tower and I turned on the tv, then my wife called to tell me what happened, I was shocked. I also remember going outside and looking at out flag hanging up and just staring at it. My wife saved a few newspapers from that day to show our kids.
  • brittanyjeanxo
    brittanyjeanxo Posts: 1,831 Member
    I was in 4th grade. I remember all the teachers crying and calling people. Then they turned on the news and it showed one of the planes crashing into the towers. I remember all the boys saying, "Cool!" because they didn't know what was going on, just that there was a lot of fire. I remember the look of absolute pain in my teacher's eyes, and I started bawling because I knew it was something awful. My mom came and got us from school early that day. My memory from then on of that year is pretty foggy. I do know that for a little while, we were the UNITED States of America. Everyone grieved together, cried together, and mourned together. Now we only stand united in remembrance of that day.
  • kevinlynch3
    kevinlynch3 Posts: 287 Member
    I do know that for a little while, we were the UNITED States of America. Everyone grieved together, cried together, and mourned together. Now we only stand united in remembrance of that day.

    Nicely stated. Our current situation in terms of politics would do well to remember this!
  • I can remeber the day like it was yesterday. I was in the 7th grade and I happened to be in the main office because I got into trouble for something. the radio happend to be on when the planes hit the towers. I remeber the look on the secertaries faces and even though I didnt know what was going on, I knew it was bad really bad. My mom picked up from school early and she had been crying your eyes.
  • Dustinryan24
    Dustinryan24 Posts: 233 Member
    i was in 9th grade.. my teacher turned on the tv, and we watched everything.. 2nd hour we had a substitute teacher that never said a word to us, and cried the entire hour.. i remember the rest of the week was really weird..
  • I was nine. My mum was in New York on holiday (we are Kiwis). Got the biggest scare to turn on the tv before school to see the news cast and know mum was staying nearby. Thankfully she rang before I had to go to school to let us know she was ok. School was weird that week - mostly we did fun activities and any kids feeling traumatized were taken out of class and got to talk to the counsellor and watch movies.
  • mommared53
    mommared53 Posts: 9,543 Member
    My alarm clock is set to radio to wake me up in the mornings. That morning when the radio came on the first thing I heard was the announcer talking about the planes hitting the twin towers and my first thought was that it wasn't an accident. It was so hard to force myself to get up and go to work that morning. I walked around in a state of shock for about two or three weeks after it happened and I didn't even know anyone who worked in those buildings. Even thinking about it now makes me cry. :cry:
  • Leslie2273
    Leslie2273 Posts: 152 Member
    I recently made friends with a firefighter who lost friends and family who were also firefighters on 9/11 and while I'm usually not a person who is at a loss for words I didn't know what to say. What do you say to someone who lost several loved ones on such a horrific day?

    That was such a terrible day. I remember being at work watching what was streaming on the interent until my boss sent us home because he was so upset by the news.
  • Iamfit4life
    Iamfit4life Posts: 3,095 Member
    I remember I was just getting to work as they were talking about it.

    And....the first plane crashed. We all thought "boy that's weird" and then the second.. and then the Pentagon. It was the scariest feeling I can remember.
    My father worked as an air traffic controller at a base where they had flight schools. There were foreigners throwing "bomb parties" no freaking joke..

    But something came out of 9-11 for a while. People were nicer to one another, the world was less petty for a while. We were all united by this fear and this resolve.

    I had nightmares for a year about terrorist every single night, I made myself so nervous I had hives, I was convinced those were smallpox.

    Suffice it to say, I was a disaster.

    I still have no clue whatsoever how to even talk about this with my children one day. Because it still makes me so sad. It still seems so unreal to me.
  • I was a freshman in college, sitting in English class when the professor walked into the class room and told us when the first plane hit the WTC, that his son worked there and class was cancelled. I didn't realize the kind of horror that happened until i seen the 2nd plane hit the second tower. I remember walking aorund for days, just crying thinking about how many people died that day and feeling grateful that me and my family were safe. I still get tears in my eyes thinking about that day. Wow.. 10 years already.. a day I, like many, will NEVER forget. God bless our troops!
  • FearAnLoathing
    FearAnLoathing Posts: 4,852 Member
    The main thing I remeber that will always stand out to me ,is the muslim family that lived next door having there house vandalized,cars trashed,children attacked,to the point they moved.It brought out alot of goodness but just as much ugliness in people.That is what I will remeber most
  • california_peach
    california_peach Posts: 1,809 Member
    I remember waking up to the radio alarm clock, it was some sports thing my husband likes to listen to. I was drifting back off when they mentioned a plane hitting on the Twin Towers. My husband and I were suddenly awake. At first we thought we had misheard them and it was probably *just* the anniversary of the first attack because the sport talk had continued. When they came back on to talk more about the Tower and there was no more sports talk we knew it was time to turn on the TV. I went to work that day and some of the women in the accounting department were watching the news coverage on some weird non-network channel which was showing very graphic footage of people leaping from the Towers. I will never forget that one of these women was laughing at the people falling. Everyone else was horrified, but she seemed to honestly find it funny that people would do that. She never stopped laughing at them even when her co-workers got mad at her. She steadfastedly believed it was funny. It was horrible and I gotta say when she was laid off four months later NO ONE cared. I'll never stop wondering what happened to that women and I'll never stop wondering if the horror of what she found amusing ever dawned on her.
  • jenny95662
    jenny95662 Posts: 997 Member
    I do know that for a little while, we were the UNITED States of America. Everyone grieved together, cried together, and mourned together. Now we only stand united in remembrance of that day.

    Nicely stated. Our current situation in terms of politics would do well to remember this!


    very well said...i was in my western cov class in college, when a women walked in and said well world war 3 is starting. We all were like huh? then class was dismissed and everyone in the cafeteria was pulling out tvs and all surrounding them. I went home and watched it all day on the tv. It was such a sad day and i remeber it as if it was yesterday. I had a friend in my class whos father was suppose to be on one of the planes and he woke up late and missed his flight. such a scary day and i will forever remember it all. i still get teary eyed reading about it or just reading this thread
  • sinclare
    sinclare Posts: 369 Member
    I had taken my dad to a Dr's appt and we watched it on tv in the office. He was a WWII vet.

    After then 2nd plane hit, and we realized it was an attack, my dad looked at me and said: "well, I guess I'll have to re-enlist."

    He was 82.
  • Sasssy69
    Sasssy69 Posts: 547 Member
    I was up, getting ready for work, and I walked into the living room to catch what the news was reporting. I stood there for about 5 seconds, and I saw the second plane hit the second tower. The news reporters were shocked because they had initially thought the first plane was an accident, as did I. Chaos erupted.

    Four years previously, I had stood at the top of tower one and gazed at the beauty and awesomeness of it all.

    I'll never forget the sight of that second plane hitting the tower.
  • dmpizza
    dmpizza Posts: 3,321 Member
    24 graduates of my high school were killed and some family members barely escaped. I was burning angry for years. I am calmer now.
  • UrbanRunner81
    UrbanRunner81 Posts: 1,207 Member
    I was a sophomore in college. I remember talking to my b/f at the time and watching the news about the first plane going in. Then saw the 2nd one fly in. I couldn't believe my eyes.
    I ended up going to class and it was all we could talk about. The rest of my classes were then canceled for the day.
    I remember being very worried about my cousin who was in college at NYC near the towers. We couldn't get a hold of her until the next day.
  • ThePhoenixRose
    ThePhoenixRose Posts: 1,978 Member
    I had taken my dad to a Dr's appt and we watched it on tv in the office. He was a WWII vet.

    After then 2nd plane hit, and we realized it was an attack, my dad looked at me and said: "well, I guess I'll have to re-enlist."

    He was 82.

    Of all of these posts, this one made me cry. Bless his heart!

    What I remember of that day is that I woke up and just didn't feel right. I was visiting a friend, and needed to head home to go to class, but instead I tried to go back to sleep since I didn't feel well. I couldn't sleep, so I tooka shower and headed home. On my way home, I had the radio on and they were talking about it saying things like, "The worst tragedy" and "HUGE loss of life" and "NY will never be the same" etc. I listened for about 20 minutes before they finally said what had happened! I didn't have a cell phone so I couldn't call anyone to find out. I drove the entire hour and a half home, terrified more was coming. I live near a nuclear plant, and local news was saying that was a definite target. Everyone got sent home from school, the entire downtown closed. My roommate and I sat in silence for days, glued to the tv.
  • CandyR1018
    CandyR1018 Posts: 101 Member
    I find it interesting to hear the responses of those who were children, now adults, I would say enjoy, but that's not quite the word for something such as this. I worked for a company that had transferred many employees from the new york area, watching them watch their home was the biggest effect on me.

    I also worked near an airport, there was an eerie quiet the rest of that week with no planes flying in and out. It was about a year later when I switched to a position that I did a lot of flying, my first time going through the airport and flying after 9/11 was a huge eye opener that our world had changed. One lady did not want to remove her shoes, I really feared for her safety from the other passengers, everyone got very ugly and angry with her. Security finally took her out of the line and I think it was more for her safety than her lack of compliance.
  • staps065
    staps065 Posts: 837 Member
    Shock, Disbelief and wishing I was there to help! Wondering if anyone I knew was lost when the Towers fell; None were thank God! Just a feeling of helplessness. I grew up visiting the World Trade Center. I can remember leaning against them and looking upward. The buildings swayed in the wind and you could see them move; it was cool! Being on the observation deck was awesome; had a poster of the view in my room growing up!

    Most of all, I felt helpless! But we must carry on!
  • kristlynngirl
    kristlynngirl Posts: 121 Member
    I was sitting in an economics class. A secretary pulled our teacher out into the hallway, and then the teacher bolted back in and put on the TV. We sat there in disbelief. It was right after the 2nd plane hit. The entire class was hugging each other and crying.

    Later that evening, my dad made me go put gas in my car just in case we ran out like the media said we might. When I was on my way home, Lee Greenwood came on the radio and I bawled my eyes out. I sat in my car in my driveway for a long long time before I could compose myself.
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