One year ago today.
Tens of thousands of people started their day. Said goodbye. Set off, never intending to be heroes, mourners, murder victims, survivors, widowed or orphaned. To be martyrs to democracy, victims of an extremist cause that they may not have even heard of, let alone understood.
They kissed their spouses, hugged their children, shared coffee with a roommate or a co-worker. They didn't know they were hated. Despised with such white hot emotion, that somewhere, someone thought they deserved to die. And those people who hated them were going to show it. Today.
One year ago today, cell phones started ringing. "Did you hear?" "Crash..." "Explosion..." "Plane..."
"World Trade Center".
Tens of thousands of people with friends and family working in the World Trade Center... one thing they all now have in common is that one moment. That sickening and overwhelming tidal wave of realization. Blood rushes from one's head, time stands still. You try to drink in every detail, every rumor, every new piece of information. But you still can't get your arms around it.
The rationalization. "He's fine. She's fine. Just like in 1993. They'll evacuate, it will be a cluster, it will be frightening. But they'll live to tell about it."
A horrible accident. Second plane, and it's like someone has thrown a bucket of ice water on you. This is no accident. The pentagon? Must be a rumor. This can't be happening.
Then the fear spreads from concern of family and friends in the WTC, to concern for our country. How many more planes? What is coming after the planes? Where will the bombs hit? Will they be nuclear? Oh God. Will they be nuclear.
Everything stops, and all TV sets are turned on. Years of being numbed to graphic, violent images in the media are wiped clean as the flaming buildings are branded into the raw flesh of our collective psyche. And tens of thousands of people are rushing to their cell phones for reassurance, for hope. Some get answers and get to say goodbye. Others get the eerie uncertainty of not being connected. Leaves hope, leaves dread.
Meanwhile, others have loved ones in peril on a fourth plane. Then the rumors start... four planes, six planes, the control towers can't get an answer from 10, 11 planes... the stories spread as fast as one can dial a phone, or listen to a news anchor.
But in reality it is just one plane. One plane left, one flying bomb. But thanks to the cell phones, this time the passengers are warned. This is not a hijacking, this can only end in death of everyone on board, and countless others on the ground. "Let's roll." Thus, those passengers save us all not only from mourning more victims, but from the indelible mark of yet another plane being swallowed by yet another building that anyone in the country can name in an instant.
The whole nation watches in disbelief as the South tower collapses without warning. Dan Rather is speechless for a moment, then is overwhelmed by his inability to describe the events. The English language hasn't made up such words yet. The image speaks for itself. And everyone watching immediately wishes they could hit "rewind" and undo it.
Tens of thousands of people, holding out hope for the rescue of their loved ones, sit transfixed to that TV image of the familiar tower suddenly gone, waiting for the dust to clear.
There are no words to describe the amount of disbelief when the remains are visible and you realize there is NOTHING THERE. There is nothing left. How can it be gone in seconds? How the FUCK can there be nothing left? The mind cannot grasp the enormity of the structure, the kinetics of the force that brought about its destruction. And the souls inside. Were they aware they had only seconds to live? What about the ones that almost made it out? The mind can be tormented thinking of the thousands of personal variables. Trying to put ourselves in their place. What were they seeing, smelling? Thinking, feeling? Did they know? Were they resigned, or did they fight? Did they die hoping?
For tens of thousands of people, the nightmare started that morning. One year ago today, cell phones started ringing. "Did you hear?" "Crash..." "Explosion..." "Plane...". The nightmare started, and never stopped. It's been a year, and it hasn't stopped.
They scoured the city with posters and pictures. They called friends of friends who knew someone who has a cousin that worked on the 46th floor, on the 91st floor... "Did you see a woman in a black dress?" "Did you see a man with gold framed glasses?" "She was eight months pregnant... did you see her? Did she get out?"
As tens of thousands of people frantically searched for any miniscule reason to hope, the rest of the nation watched as rescuers and construction workers risked their lives going through the rubble in search of survivors. Maybe some of us remembered the San Francisco earthquake, and the miraculous finds beneath the wreckage. In a mirror of the realization that dawned on us all earlier that morning, we as a nation began to realize the force of the collapse left no hope. No hope.
Only the hardest of hearts could remain unchanged after what happened a year ago today. There are those who say we have
no right to grieve over the events of that day, over what was lost, unless we knew somebody who perished in the attacks.
We grieve, but we have the luxury of forgetting, of putting it out of our minds. But tens of thousands of people live with that overwhelming grief every moment. It's the last thing they think about when they go to sleep, and the first thing they think about when they wake up.
It's those people that make me wonder what I should do today. Should I watch the tributes on TV? Yes, it's painful, but isn't enduring that pain the least I can do? It's a faded watercolor compared to the neon vibrancy of the ever-present loss felt by the families of the victims. How callous would I be to turn my back on those images, on remembering?
Should I wear the flag pin I want to wear? Should I pretend like it's any other day? What do you want me to do?
For all the thousands of people still feeling the loss like a year hasn't passed, I say this: I wish with all my heart that I could take away just a fraction of your pain. I wish I could give you the peace of mind you had one minute before those cell phones started ringing. One year ago today.