Bangel wrote:
I know this is a really dumb statement to make, but I just wish none of it had to happen. I don't want to look back on my childhood and see this destruction. I don't want to look back on my childhood and remember waiting hours for airplane security. I don't want to look back and see the same CNN video clips over and over again with people screaming and crying and not knowing if people they loved are okay.
Sadly love, its not that simple.
My mom endured JFK being shot.
My great grandmother kept newspapers from when the titanic sunk.
My great uncle gave his life aboard the USS Arizona.
My mother also witnessed Challenger. I was 2 years old...but still infront of the tv when it happened. I dont really have a coheirent memory of it, but it is tramatizing none the less.
I did, however, watch columbia become lost in the sky. I grew up loving NASA. I wanted to me the 1st woman in space...(no one told me for a long time that someone else beat me to it lol).
My generation has been through alot, both positive and negitive, and 2 wars (yes, the gulf war was still a war...).
Distruction is part of humanity. As horrible as it is. Violence has existed for longer than we even know.
Whats important is remembering those who lost their lives as victims and those who lost theirs trying to save others. my neighbor at the time was deployed to NYC. He is a firefighter. I am glad he came back ok, but so many others never made it back to their families.
What was interesting to me today was to see how many people didnt realize it was Sept 11th. I work at the mall and life seemed just like every other day. Maybe its a good example of how life progresses through disaster and time marches forward. But we cant forget those people's lives...Sept 11th, December 7th, whenever.
ok, thats the end of my speech. Sorry. I'm a bit long winded tonight.