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  • 9/11

    Please take the time to remember today, not only that of lives lost but the millions of Americans that this has affected in some way. When you think about how cluttered our daily lives become, how we forget have patience, understanding and most of all to not take anyone or anything for granted this article puts in all in perspective ..

    I Just Called to Say I Love You
    The sounds of 9/11, beyond the metallic roar.

    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."
    I Just Called to Say I Love You
    The sounds of 9/11, beyond the metallic roar.


    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.

    by,

    Peggy Noonan
    Don't worry - I'll smack her if it comes to that. You do not sell guitars to buy shoes. You skimp on food to buy shoes! ~Mrs Tekky 06-03-08~

  • #2
    in honor and memory of lives lost and sacrificed on 9/11

    Guitars... Rhoads RX10D
    Amp... Pioneer
    Effects... Boss ME-20

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    • #3
      I will always remember that day. For those who don't live in the area, it was such a beautiful late summer/early fall day. Crisp, clear, sunny, perfectly blue skies. And such a horrible day.

      May we never forget.

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      • #4
        On this day.. I go to work.. and I think to myself.. "do illegal aliens care about 9/11 as much as legal residents?"

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        • #5
          Thanks for Posting That MayDay, my brother in law Brian Kinney was on flight 175. it was an incredibly F'ed up day. I remember the whole family gathered at my in laws waiting to get a phone call saying he was ok, but never did, it took a while to sink in.
          It certainly help put my life in order of what is REALLY important and what doesn't mean squat when you get right down to it.

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          • #6
            At about this time I was on the phone frantically trying to reach my brother who worked at WTC 5, but was often up at the Top of the World for breakfast meetings.

            At 9:17, I remember the exact minute, he called me from a landline. He had an early morning meeting uptown, and that saved his life.

            The irony is that a little while after I got off the phone, my roommate was frantically trying to locate her Dad who worked at the Pentagon as a copywriter. He was OK too.

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            • #7
              Today, I am off work. My weekend is Monday and Tuesday, so it just worked out that way. I haven't been a correction officer long enough to have Saturday and Sunday off.

              On Tuesday, September 11th, 2001 however, I had a different job. I was a forklift tech and happened to be at a customer in Port Jersey, in Jersey City. United Sweatermills. Directly across the Hudson from the World Trade Center.

              All the workers went running out to the parking lot. I thought they were running for the "roach coach". An english speaking supervisor told me what happened, and in disbelief, I ran out too.

              The parking lot has an unrestricted view of lower Manhattan, being on the waterfront in Jersey. I saw the unbelievable sight of 2 majestic buildings with smoke billowing from high up. My mind was racing. It couldn't be an "accident". Not both planes and both towers.

              I immediately thought of my mother, who was now alone at home everyday since my father was killed in 1999. I knew she'd be at the kitchen table with the news on drinking her tea, like she did everyday.

              I tried to call on my cell repeatedly and after about 1/2 hour I finally got through to her. She was crying. We both were.

              After the buildings fell, and after talking to my boss, we decided everyone should get home to their families.

              I went to my mother's house to comfort her. She was a very emotional person and hearing her voice on the phone had killed me earlier. I did not want her to go through all this by herself.

              My thoughts today are with both my mother and father who are together for eternity.

              My heart and thoughts and prayers go out to ALL the victims, families, and heroes who were so brave that day and in the months afterwards during the deconstruction and cleanup.

              I will always appreciate and hold in highest regard, our troops who gallantly fought and continue to fight and live in hell to keep us safe on the homefront.

              I will never forget.

              Semper Fi.
              Scott
              Be without fear in the face of your enemies. Be brave and upright, that God may love thee. Speak the truth always, even if it leads to your death. Safeguard the helpless and do no wrong.

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              • #8
                Thanks for posting that, Kev.

                RIP to all those who perished that day.
                I feel my soul go cold... only the dead are smiling.

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                • #9
                  IIRC Jcfer Monte was in the trade center that day
                  Don't worry - I'll smack her if it comes to that. You do not sell guitars to buy shoes. You skimp on food to buy shoes! ~Mrs Tekky 06-03-08~

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                  • #10
                    Thanks for posting that Kev, what a terrible day. We will never forget.

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                    • #11
                      thanks kev. sad day indeed.

                      my mom is flying overseas today - i have to say that is most unsettling
                      I want REAL change. I want dead bodies littering the capitol.

                      - Newc

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                      • #12
                        I remember and always will remember 9/11.
                        I noticed a bunch of flags flying half staff on my way to work this morning, very touching.

                        My parents are always flying this week every year. They have a time share in Long Boat Key, FL. In 2001, they were supposed to fly out on the 12th.

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                        • #13


                          We will never forget .... I still have a hard time believing it really happened.

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                          • #14
                            I too remmeber that horrible day in September...5 years ago today.

                            I was in my office at VMGRT-253...a training squadron for Marine Officers and flight personnel for the C-130 cargo transport planes...I was the unit Career Planner. In the same "building", basically 2 big, double hangars, was our sister unit, VMGR-252 (a actual flying squadron).

                            My buddy, who was the Career Planner for that unit, called me up to say that a plane had hit the WTC. Immediately, among the tasks I was doing etc. I thought maybe grandpa was flying a Cessna and had a heart attack or just a horrible, freak accident occured. I hung up the phone, and went back to my tasks pondering "what happened".

                            A while later, he called again..and I'll never forget what he said "Bro, a 2nd plane just hit...wr're under attack"....I think I dropped the phone, or spilled my coffee...maybe both...the memories are kinda surreal.

                            I remember walking like a zombie to our ready room to watch CNN..hoping it wasn't true, that maybe it was a horrible joke....but as I walked into the ready room..I seen the horror, the devastation, the confusion as the events unfolded....I remember standing next to my boss, the Squadron XO Maj P....he simply said "well, we're officially at war with somebody".

                            Cherry Point was immediately locked down...no incoming/outgoing except for emergency/government vehicles....and the orders were already coming in from MEF and others for planning.

                            I remember the next day, coming into work...all of our C-130s were GONE..except the ones that were downed due to maintenance.

                            It hasn't let up since....it's especially poignant here at Camp Lejeune where a majority of the ground forces are...there are weekly memorials it seems....and the Wounded Warrior home is here...basically a nursing home for Marines and Sailors maimed by the war. It's heartbreaking.

                            To all those affected...and to my brothers and sisters in arms....be at peace

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                            • #15
                              I was teaching at a hospital here in Southeastern Connecticut, near the submarine base. It was a surreal thing. My full time gig is a paramedic, and I was teaching where I work. After the first plane hit some of my coworkers who were working their part time jobs in New Haven (hour north of NYC), were calling in saying they were heading to the City for help. We soon cancelled class. The one thing that really sticks with me was watching the 5 subs that were in port at the sub base racing to get out to sea and safety and possible defense of the area - there's two big bridges that I-95 uses to cross the river. Then we 'got activated' in the Conn. State EMS plan. Trying to get ahold of my wife, who was in Boston at the time was interesting...cell service here wasn't that great either....

                              I spent most of the day tracking down the whereabouts of some friends that I have on the job at the FDNY, two made it, one didn't. I consider myself extremely fortunate and honored to have spent time on the 'pile'....in November of 2001..

                              Bill

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