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Friday, September 9, 2011

Your 9/11 Stories

We want to hear your Sept. 11 memories. Where were you that day, how were you impacted, and what are your thoughts ten years on?

We welcome comments from all of our listeners. Post below. Please stay on topic and be civil. Comments may be moderated by us, but you are solely responsible for the content of your comments.

  • Laurie

    I am a midwife, and I was working the night shift at Cambridge Hospital.  I had attended several births and was finishing up charting when the unit secretary called out to watch what was happening on a TV nearby.  I can’t really remember what I was thinking when I first saw the planes, the flames, then the towers fall.  But before I went home, I stopped by the rooms of the families welcoming their new babies, one of whom was Muslim.  I offered my congratulations again, suggested they NOT turn on their TVs and gently shut the door behind me.  Those babies born on 9/11/01 are now 10 year-olds, and I wonder about them and ponder the world they were born into, more than others of the hundreds of babies I have assisted into the world in my 28 years of attending births. I went home, called my partner at work (I don’t think we had cell phones yet).  I couldn’t go to sleep, stayed up to watch the coverage on television, cried, held my 2 1/2 yo son and longed to hold my older son, then 8 yo. and to tell them all I loved them before anything else bad might happen.

  • Marie

    When the attack started, I was in high school and on my way to morning marching band practice.  For almost two hours, we practiced our show, completely unaware of what was happening.  By the time we finished, the attack was over.   It still staggers me to think about how much the world changed in the space of a few hours.

  • Roz Cummins

    This is a little bit long – it includes some events that happened just prior to 9/11 that I think really show the contrast of life before and after the events of that day.

    My Shirley Temple Bender – By Roz Cummins


    “Hey, boys, do you want Shirley Temples?” my friend Elizabeth asks her son William, who is dining, on this late August evening, with his best friend and neighbor Johnny. They are seven and about to enter third grade.

    “What’s a Shirley Temple?” Johnny asks.

    “It’s a cocktail,” William replies, shrugging slightly in a this-is-no-big-deal-we-drink-cocktails-every-night seven-year-old’s version of studied nonchalance. Johnny nods as if now everything makes sense. “Can I have one too?” I hear myself ask. It’s been a while since I’ve had a Shirley Temple.

    This is one of the last of the summer evenings of bare feet and no homework and going to bed when you feel like it. The boys seem blissfully unaware of their impending doom, but Elizabeth and I have the grown-up habit of spoiling the present with preoccupying thoughts about the future and the beginning of school and work and autumn and the rest of our lives. Maybe that’s why she offered them a treat. She is the coolest mom around.

    She indulges me as well. “On the rocks?” she asks me archly. “Straight up,” I reply, “and make it a double.”  Elizabeth and I are famous among our friends for our nearly tee-totaling ways so it’s fun to use grown-up drink-talk, since we never do. “I don’t know,” she says with mock concern, “don’t forget – it’s a cocktail! Oh, but you’re staying the night, right? So you don’t have to drive. Well okay then, a double Shirley Temple for the lady at the kitchen table.” She even puts two cherries in my drink.

    I bring the glass to my lips and enjoy the bubbles and fizz and the ginger smell. The golden liquid is marbled with crimson spirals of unfurling grenadine. The childhood pleasure of drinking Shirley Temples and the glamour of taking part in the grown-ups’ cocktail hour rituals does a fleeting memory dance across my mind. My friend Sally, the consummate New Yorker, always whispers “Shirley Temples at the Rainbow Room” in my ear whenever we air-kiss good-bye, suggesting that it’s a jaunt, a secret friend-tryst, that we must plan to go on sometime soon, sometime when we’re both back home in New York. It is, however, always somewhere off in the future. It is never on our immediate list of things to do.

    I drink Elizabeth’s Shirley Temple and it’s delicious – refreshing, flavorful, quite fantastic, really. “You make a mean Shirley Temple, barkeep.” I tell her.

    “Thanks,” she says. “It’s all about the grenadine. You can’t skimp on it. It’s the basic building block of a successful Shirley Temple.”

    “Well, I’ll certainly keep that in mind,” I say and then I empty my glass.

    *

    Later, after William has been in bed for a while and Elizabeth and I are sitting around the kitchen table talking, he suddenly cries out “I’m not cozy!” He sounds sort of panicky, as if he is even more horrified by the notion that he has only just now made this discovery than by the lack of coziness itself.


            *

    The next day I head back to Cambridge, leaving behind hills and valleys and boys about to begin school, and the friend who will make me a Shirley Temple and put two cherries in my glass. I’m headed back to a pile of unfinished articles that are in the research stage. Right now I’m working on a piece about Turkey red damask.

    *

    When September begins a few days later, the pace of life suddenly quickens. Harvard Square fills with returning students. From my office I can hear young women squealing with excitement when they first catch sight of one another after a summer apart.

    I spend most of my time researching the history of red dye. I go to libraries and museums and I track down accounts of dyeing secrets being smuggled out of Turkey and Venice and into different kingdoms in Europe, each country hoping to establish its own red-dye industry and capture a bigger share of the market. Eventually a German chemist revolutionizes the dyeing process by developing artificial dyes that produce uniform results rather than the unreliable red made from madder root, and suddenly knowledge of the old materials and techniques becomes worthless. Just like that. No more espionage, no more spying, no more international intrigue.

    The editors want me to write captions for some of the beautiful examples of Turkey red damask that they’ve found and they send me photos to look over. In addition to blankets and tablecloths, they have suggestions for what to do with scraps of Turkey red, such as making a tea cozy or a Christmas stocking out of the remnants of a flea market find.

    *

    It’s a beautiful Tuesday morning – almost strangely so. The air is sweet and cool and the sky – an intense blue – seems to be taunting those heading to work or school. As I approach my car I discover that it has a flat tire and I’m secretly grateful for a reason to linger on my porch rather than scurry indoors to sit at a computer. I still have work to do, though, so I get out my cell phone and begin my round of work calls after placing a call for help with Triple A. First I call one of the editors in New York about the Turkey red article. I get his voice mail and leave a message: “We have to talk about the tea cozies. Call me!” After hanging up I think of something else I have to add and then am unable to get through. I get nothing but busy signals, which seems odd. Eventually I get a message that all the lines to New York City are tied up.

    I call the friend with whom I am supposed to have lunch. “I don’t think I can make it today,” I tell her, “my car has a flat tire and there’s going to be a few hours wait to get it fixed.” “Well, that’s not a problem because it’s pretty crazy around here,” she replies.

    This is how our conversations always begin, so I say, “What’s happening?” expecting her to tell me that a colleague has gone berserk or that a server is down but instead she tells me that a plane has flown into the World Trade Center. And then another. And then the Pentagon.

    I feel myself sink to my knees. I grab the iron railing as I sit down on the stone stairs to the porch. “You didn’t know? You haven’t heard?” she asks me. “No,” I say, barely able to get the word out. “Well, I hope everyone in your family is okay. I’ve got to go. We’re closing for the rest of the day. Let’s talk later.”

    I know instantly that someone I know will have been killed. I think of friends and family members working in or around the towers and I start to keen. I feel like an animal, like a wolf or a coyote. A yelp starts deep inside my chest and makes its way through my throat to the surface and I gulp for air. I feel like I’m trying to swallow a slippery liquid. I can’t catch my breath. Finally I am able to inhale and I stand up and go inside.

    I start my round of phone calls to friends. It takes many attempts to get through, but the friends that I am able to reach tell me that they and their husbands are safe, have walked away from it, have made it all the way uptown or to New Jersey.

    “It’s amazing,” one friend tells me, “I thought that there would be lines everywhere, people lining up to take money out of the bank or buy food, but the only lines I’ve seen have been people lining up to give blood.” I burst into tears when she tells me this.

    I turn on the TV and see the footage of one plane and then the next hitting the towers, and then the towers themselves falling down. I am riveted to the screen, barely breathing because I am so tense. There is still a fourth plane missing, they say. All other planes that have been in the air have been instructed to land. There is just that one still-missing plane.

    I walk to a friend’s house. Her face is red from crying. We sit on the couch, side by side, staring at the TV. Eventually we turn it off and I walk home. I know my body is moving as I make my way down the sidewalk, but I can’t feel anything. I make my way home on autopilot and remember nothing about the trip.

    As evening falls I resume my TV vigil. I feel as though I cannot leave the couch and I cannot stop watching TV. I have no appetite but eventually I am thirsty. There is nothing to drink in the house except for the ginger ale, grenadine, and Maraschino cherries I recently bought, inspired by Elizabeth’s Shirley Temple. All night I sit in the blue light of the television drinking glass after glass of sweetness and innocence until they are all gone.

    *

    This essay is dedicated to the friends who weren’t fortunate enough to make it to safety, to their families, friends, and loved ones, and to everyone who worked on the pile.

  • http://www.paquachuck.com Mary Elizabeth Pasquariello

    On September 11th my 9 year old son, Elias and I had just begun a one year home-schooling adventure together.  He was a fourth grader and on the morning of the 11th, we were working first at the dining room table and then out in the yard; no television, no radio.  Believe it or not, we did not know what was going on until almost 2:00 pm.  Of course, once we got the call, we spent the rest of the afternoon and evening glued to the television.

    The events of that day then shaped the nature of Eli’s entire home-school curriculum.  Every time he asked “why”, we had another idea to research.  We studied hate crimes and non-violent protests, Islam and Christianity, the Cradle of Civilization, the Tigris and Euphrates River system, and the history of the popular American Peace Sign.    

    Shortly after the attack,  Laura Bush had made an appeal to our country’s school children.  She asked them each to send one dollar to an Iraqi Children’s Fund at the White House.  Eli sent two dollars of his own money and enclosed a photograph of himself standing by a patriotic banner we designed, created and hung on a tree at the end of our driveway.  As an alternative to the American Flag, this banner was bright red with big white stars and a bold blue Peace Sign.  With the photo, Elias attached a personal note to President Bush introducing himself, telling him about his home-schooling experiences and asking him to please, please not respond to what happened on 9/11 with a war.   

    Now Elias is almost 20 years of age and the war continues.
    To this day I wonder what even happened to Eli’s two dollars, his picture and his sincere letter.  

    Elias John Sideris has grown to be an inspired artist and is currently studying black-smithing and sword-smithing at Hampshire College, Berkeley California and in Europe.  I’ve attached some pictures.

    Mary Pasquariello
    2056 Main Road
    Westport Point, MA  02791
    (603) 491 5073 

  • Mary Pasquariello

    Elias John now.

  • Rev. Suzanne Woolston Bossert

    Of all things, I was nursing my first baby. Our brother-law called to say turn on the TV, right after the first plane hit. The juxtaposition between the death and hate I was watching and the life and innocent hope I was holding in my arms was extreme.

    I had just started a hospital chaplaincy the day before, too. And my fellow interns? A Muslim imam, a Catholic Jesuit, a reformed Jewish woman, and another mainline Protestant seminarian like myself. Together we traversed the broken landscape of the days following 9-11. You can bet many of the patients in this Boston hospital asked us where God was in this. I remember thinking, “squarely in the horror of the contrast between death and life, as I had been with my baby the moment it happens….

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=527500033 Lisa Richards

    I had a minor hernia surgery scheduled which turned into major surgery (the surgeon said my abdominal wall looked like Swiss cheese), so a colleague filled in for me on a trip to Manhattan, staying at the Marriott World Trade Center, as I had for 60 times previously that year. I was chatting with him on Instant Message when he suddenly went silent.  When the first plane hit, he saw hands and feet and body parts coming out of the sky through the window in the hotel room. He finished dressing and ran, leaving all his possessions, including the computer running the demo that we had spent weeks to get working. It was hours before he could find a way to let his family and friends know he was okay. 

    From now on, he said, I’ll be pursuing XML opportunities in Wyoming, not NYC.

  • Smiclops

         The smoke spills across my fingers and out the open window of my 1984, faded blue Saab 900.  The spliff my friend Peter has rolled (amature at best)  during first period is in fact mostly tobacco, a thin line of hash provides the backbone not only to the rolie but to our morning. A fine morning, more than fine; you couldn’t call a day like this anything other than perfect, in September only a few weeks into our senior year of high school on the seacoast of NH.

     “I love this song!” my friend Peter exclaimes. He reaches over and turns up Mr. Brown. Old school Marley. I’m too young to find this clique’ and I’m too cool to care if it is anyway. I still feel this way. Hell, a good tune is a good tune. 

     Peter is a good friend whom I met during my sophmore year in high school. He has more acne than anyone I know, but he’s still a great guy and right now the best company you could have on a morning like this; a friend with weed is a friend indeed. This idea and the blaring sound of Bob’s voice accompanied by the Wailers wash over me in beautiful ignorance.

     “How much time do we have?” I ask this because 40 min go by pretty quickly outside the classroom.

     “About enough to finish that and head back”, Peter nods to the spliff in my hand.

     “Sweet, ” I manage to breath out, and hand it to him over the stick shift.

     The burn cruise is basicly my social vehicle during this time of my life. I didn’t know too many people who had their own place, and those who did wouldn’t be awake at an hour like this…unless they hadn’t slept yet of course. The burn criuse is where the rolling party becomes a reality, this is how us high school kids do.  This is where decisions are made, where people come to relax, where I meet friends of friends, where people eat and, sometimes, sleep.  So, of course it would be here that I find myself the day everything changed…chalk it up to the laws of probability. Of course if I wasn’t here Iwas at

     “F*cking School. Why is it that we have to be in that hell hole on a day like this. School shouldn’t start until after Halloween.”  

     “Right you are m’man” Peter pulls on the spliff, blows out his hit accross it’s surface while holding it at an angle to compensate for the canoe action happening there. Like I said, amature at best.  

     Mr. Brown gives way to the rest of the greatest hits, as we meander our way back to school. I may have said that school should start after Halloween, but this is my Senior year and I have all my electives this year. Going to a private school my freshman year has made it so I have no gym, and no science for my last two semesters…which is ok by me because English was more to my taste. So, I really didn’t mind school, I also had, like, half the day off due to my few requiered courses. I even already had an acceptence letter or two from some colleges. What I needed to make it back to school for (pleasently stoned but not too stoned) was Honors Lit. 100 Years of Solitude  discussion here I come!  

     The parking lot is full of cars, but few of the owners are to be found out here during first period. I think Peter and I might be some of the only Seniors with this period off…at least the only ones who enjoy cannabis before 9 am with a hot cup of Dunkin, black.  Basic, pure tranquility and satisfaction could sum this day up, and it had barely even started.

    We step out, stretch, and loaf off across the back field towards the yellow brick building with aqua marine trim. The old alma mater. The bell rings as we reach the entrance walkway in back, and the long drawn out shuffle and scrape of hundreds of feet, jackets and chairs greet us with comfortable familiarity.

     “Till lunch?” Peter looks at me.

    “Not unless you’re done for the day at 12:30 like me,” I grin.

     “Oh yeah, I forgot, your an asshole”, Peter laughs in frustration. I clap him on the back as we head in the building. 

     “You know it!” 

    “Hey! You guys this is intense right?!” an aquaintence of ours yells to us over the oddly quiet crowd. 

    “Like camping!” I laugh and walk off from his bewildered face up the stairs to my classroom.

    It was empty, the classroom, except for Mr. Kelly. 

    “We’re watching it in Ferg’s room.”

    “What?” 

    “You didn’t hear? We’re under attack!”

    After I saw the second plane hit, all I could think about was finding that kid who looked scared and asked me if this was intense. I wanted to apologize. I didn’t know. It was some time before Bob made it back into the playlist.  
       

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