I remember this.
Sometimes I feel like I'm the only one who does. It was only the next year when Oklahoma City happened, and people... forgot. They forgot more after 9/11.
My dad barely talked on the way home from school. I didn't know what was going on, but I knew something was wrong. We drove around a lot (we were already on Staten Island at this time) and found a cheap gift shop, where I bought the ugliest panda/cat figurine. Still have it.
Apparently, my mom was going to meet up with him for lunch at the WTC. But they didn't. And afterwards they put up those god-awful ugly concrete planters everywhere. Like that'd disguise the fact that they were a wall to keep cars away. Didn't do any good, did it?
My dad barely talked on the way home from school. I didn't know what was going on, but I knew something was wrong. We drove around a lot (we were already on Staten Island at this time) and found a cheap gift shop, where I bought the ugliest panda/cat figurine. Still have it.
Apparently, my mom was going to meet up with him for lunch at the WTC. But they didn't. And afterwards they put up those god-awful ugly concrete planters everywhere. Like that'd disguise the fact that they were a wall to keep cars away. Didn't do any good, did it?
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It was so weird, no one knew what was going on at first, one of the theories was that a transformer underground had exploded -- in fact, my dad, then an engineer at Con Ed, had heard that rumour.
I don't know how long it was before we found out it was a bombing. No internet, really, no cell phones, not a lot, not like now. So news didn't spread as fast.
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So yeah, I didn't panic. I was down on Pine Street, so not as close as your mom, but pretty close.
I still can't believe it is gone. Such a large part of my life. I planned my first wedding from phones there. Lunches, shopping, not just work. A major transportation hub. And then, watching the laser show on the roof with the man who was to be my husband not long after that. It was also the place I last saw my ex husband. (Because we divorced, not that he died on 9/11.) The farmer's market, the flowers I would buy there. The florist where I talked horses with all the time. Oh just stuff.
I know people lost so much more, but that weird chunk of memories, just gone, is just strange. There, then gone.
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So it was all already fading memories by time everything happened.
(Mid to late 90s I lived in London for a while.)
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I would have thought more people would remember after 9/11 - in fact, that was when I first heard about it.
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It was so weird, no one knew what was going on at first, one of the theories was that a transformer underground had exploded -- in fact, my dad, then an engineer at Con Ed, had heard that rumour.
I don't know how long it was before we found out it was a bombing. No internet, really, no cell phones, not a lot, not like now. So news didn't spread as fast.
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So yeah, I didn't panic. I was down on Pine Street, so not as close as your mom, but pretty close.
I still can't believe it is gone. Such a large part of my life. I planned my first wedding from phones there. Lunches, shopping, not just work. A major transportation hub. And then, watching the laser show on the roof with the man who was to be my husband not long after that. It was also the place I last saw my ex husband. (Because we divorced, not that he died on 9/11.) The farmer's market, the flowers I would buy there. The florist where I talked horses with all the time. Oh just stuff.
I know people lost so much more, but that weird chunk of memories, just gone, is just strange. There, then gone.
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So it was all already fading memories by time everything happened.
(Mid to late 90s I lived in London for a while.)
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I would have thought more people would remember after 9/11 - in fact, that was when I first heard about it.