I will never forget

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This post seems trivial and meaningless as I read over it. I wasn’t in New York on Sept. 11 and I don’t directly know anyone who passed away on that day, but I wanted to share my heart a bit with you today and I’d like you to share your heart with me in the comments. Where were you? Where were your children? Do you think it is possible to ever forget that day in our history after having lived through it? I wasn’t affected directly, but like so many, I was forever changed. 

We had been listening to a cassette tape of Bear In The Big Blue House. It had a song on it that Brady and I listened to each morning on the way to take him to my mother’s house so I could get to class. Ricky worked in Huntsville so he went one way and I headed the other, for my hour and a half commute to Florence, Alabama four days a week. Fortunately, Mama’s was a good halfway point so my two year old didn’t have to sit in the car nearly as long.

As the last strains of our song played, I hit eject to listen to the radio a bit in the last ten minutes or so until we got to Mama’s house. I turned it up when they were talking about the plane and listened intently, taking a minute or two to catch up on the details and figure out why everyone sounded so strained.

My first thought was disbelief. It just had to be one of those War of the World things. I felt anger rolling inside me at what I thought must be a sick joke, but they dj’s continued, so I called Mama. “Can you turn on the tv? They’re saying an airplane flew into the world trade center.” Mama asked “Huh? I haven’t heard anything about that. When? ” As she was turning the channels, I was slightly relieved, thinking if she didn’t know about it then it was most likely a joke. She found it a moment later and sat down to gather all of the details as we both sat silently on the phone together. “Oh Christy, I see it. It’s awful.”

“Are you serious? So it’s really real?” We had a minute or two to discuss what could have possibly caused it, our first thought went to it being some freakish radar glitch that caused the pilots to miscalculate…and then Mama said “Oh God, another one just went in!”

I was at her house a minute or two later with Brady and we both sat down in front of the tv while he toddled over to a familiar bucket of toys in her living room. It wasn’t long before we realized the sinister truth of the plane crashes as other events began to unfold.

I called my professor and said “What am I supposed to do? Do I come to class? Are they closing the university?” It was silly to worry about missing class but I was still in shock. She told me to be wherever I needed to be, so I told her I needed to be with Brady and spent the day at my mother’s house watching the horror unfold, each of us taking breaks to play with Brady, fix his lunch, and spend a few minutes pretending everything was alright for the two year old who had no idea everything wasn’t.

That night I finally drove home with Brady and put him to bed but there was no way I could sleep. Ricky had been watching all day at his work and he and I sat down together, going over the news and wondering what would happen next. Watching the people jump off again and again in replayed footage. The pain of an entire country seemed to hang in the air and we found ourselves unable to sleep, like so many of the rest of the world.

Instead, I spent a few hours writing a letter to my son. I needed him to know what happened, how it felt at that moment, what it was really like. I wanted him to understand in a way that a kid looking back and reading about it in a history book just wouldn’t. I wrote him for over an hour, ending up with a 30+ page letter describing just where he was and what was going through his mother’s mind when the planes hit. I tried to explain the pain, the fear, the tragedy and the loss. I explained what it was like seeing those people jump. I explained what it was like seeing the people doing all they could to rescue others. I described the firefighters, the policeman, the people in the street, how they all turned into heroes that day. I did the best I could to give him an account of what that day in his life was like through the eyes of his mother. How we all held our breath and waited to see where the next attack would take place. How I looked outside and wondered where I could possibly run with my beautiful little baby to keep him safe.

When I’d ran out of words and realized that some emotions just couldn’t be expressed- I sealed that letter, wrote his name on the front, and dated it 9-11-2029, deciding that he needed to be close to the age I was when I wrote it before my words would be able to carry the weight I needed them to. I couldn’t help but hope that by the time he did read it, our world would be so very different from that day that the violence and horror would seem foreign to him outside of my letter.

A few weeks later we took Brady to the Nashville Zoo. As we were walking around we heard a plane fly over and Ricky and I both froze in place and looked at each other while we held our breath and scanned the horizon. I’ll never forget that feeling in the pit of my stomach as I clutched Brady’s tiny hand and said a silent prayer until the sound of the plane engine dissipated. Even now, whenever I hear a plane fly over the house in the quiet hours of evening I hold my breath. I know many of you do the same.

We made a lot of promises ten years ago, one of the key ones being that we would never forget but if you were alive ten years ago. I can’t imagine we could ever possibly forget exactly where we were and what that day was like.

In honor of all who lost their lives on September 11th, God Bless America.

I remember.

34 Comments

  1. My husband & myself are retired so we sleep late. During coffee that morning we assumed a terrible accident had taken place with the first plane going into the first tower. I remember thinking how tragic just that was.
    Not long after my husband loudly announced ” My God in heaven another plane just hit the second tower” and as I scrambled to the t v I knew this was not an accident and something sinister was happening.
    Need less to say we spent the next few hours watching all that devastation that resulted out of that day and for many days to follow.
    I remember having this flood of emotion that 9/11 morning that made me want to call everyone I know and love to make sure they were alright and to tell them how much I loved them. “WE WILL NEVER FORGET”.

  2. I have been thinking about this day ten years ago and how familiar the feeling is and was when it happened 10 years ago. Then it dawned on me that the feeling was the same as when President Kennedy was killed by the hand of another. The shock, numbness, unable to think clearly, and the grieve. The grieve was unbearable at the time, just like 9-11. It is never going to be forgotten————-EVER.

  3. I had no kids at the time, but 2 cats. I needed to take one of them to the vet that morning so I was planning to go into work late. As I was getting ready to go to the vet my sister called and told me to turn on the TV. I watched in disbelief to the events unfolding. I went to the vet appointment and returned in time to see the towers crumble. I stayed on the phone with my sister, crying at the horror. We couldn’t believe our eyes. I work on Redstone Arsenal, so no work that day or for several days afterward as new security measures were put in place. I stayed tuned to the TV the following days. I had no direct connection to anyone living the events first hand so I can only imagine their pain. I watched a 9/11 documentary this morning while my kids slept. God bless those that perished and the survivors too. We will never be the same.

  4. I was at home, sitting on the couch eating my breakfast before getting ready to go to work when the coverage switched from the usual mindless morning banter to the live shot of a single tower billowing with smoke. As the second tower was hit, I was ironing my shirt. I drove into town, listening on the radio as events continued to unfold. I missed the first collapse in my walk into the store. We spent the rest of the work day taking turns watching the coverage. There was a eerie silence to our part of the world that day. There were few cars passing by, even though the skies were a beautiful clear, crisp blue of the type that usually doubles traffic volume simply because people are wanting to be away from home.
    Christy, I too share your apprehension when seeing or hearing low aircraft in unexpected areas. I also agree that anyone who lived through that day without the protective insulation of childhood oblivion will never forget that day; where they were; what they were doing; who they were with; most importantly, how they felt. I WILL NEVER FORGET.

  5. this was a beautiful tribute of your love for your family and life, those who died on that day surely would be touched to know the memory of that day and the lives lost will always be remembered. Like so many others that day, I sat in disbelief and sorrow as people jumped out of those buildings and more people ran as fast as they could away from the collapsing towers, smoke and dust. The way the skies were all empty due to air traffic being grounded for days after was an eerie reminder things would never be the same for our nation. My sons were not with me on that day, nor was my own mother, but i called all of them, and many others, to say ‘i love you and are you safe?’ it is a day that i relive with tears in my eyes for those that perished..and the loved ones that lost them to soon. God Bless you Christy.

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