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Where were you and what were you doing on 9-11Follow

#1 Aug 02 2004 at 9:38 AM Rating: Good
People say they never will never forget what they were doing or where they were when Kennedy got shot. I think it probly goes the same for 9-11.

Share your stories.

Me...I was at work, shearing coils of steel, listening to the radio. The whole plant was quiet. No one was working...just standing around listening for word to come. I remember saying to someone that when the plane crashed in the field...I bet it was heading toward the white house. I also remember saying to someone "this is gonna be bad"

Where were you?
#2 Aug 02 2004 at 9:41 AM Rating: Default
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I was at work for about 40 hours straight. Posting here on occasion.
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#3 Aug 02 2004 at 9:47 AM Rating: Good
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Weird... I just posted about it on my lj not long ago...

I will just copy what I wrote...

[30 Jul 2004|03:38pm]
[ mood | thoughtful ]

while at work I keep reading the 585 pages long report of the 9/11 commission....
I already read around 105 pages and it brought the day it happened vividly back into my mind.

I remembered being in the horse stables with the twins, listening to the radio.... getting the impression WW III just started.
Tossing the babys into the Suburban, racing home and just coming back in time to see the towers collapse on TV.

Remembering how little Chad pointed at the dust cloud and said "`iiiig!" (big) .

Remembering how we decorated the frontyard with little cocktail pick flags the next day while the twins were napping.
When Chad woke up he saw them and started running towards them to pull them out.
I grabbed him and said "There a people with big bubus. Do you want them to be sad?"
He said "nooooooo!"
And I said "Then we don´t touch the flags, ok?"
He didn´t touched them.

15 minutes later his brother Garrett woke up. Saw the flags and started running.
I went after him, but Chad was faster. He got to Garrett, pulled and tugged on his T-Shirt and yelled

"NoNo Gaga (Garrett) ! Bubu! Nono `ad!!"

Both never touched the flags again until we pulled them back out a week later.

Mind.... the twins were 1 year and 11 months back then.


Remembering... that I planned to fly home that day. With a stop over in NYC. But couldn´t change my flight due to Au Pair regulations.

#4 Aug 02 2004 at 10:07 AM Rating: Good
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I saw the images of the first crash while getting ready for work. Assumed it was a typical story about a small aircraft hitting a building and didn't pay attention. It wasn't until I was actually almost to work that they started saying "terrorist attack" on the radio.

Spent the day at work, posting on the old Alla uBB forums in a thread called "Holy Crow!" A lot of people at their jobs couldn't get info over the internet because CNN/MSNBC/etc.com were all clogged and crashing. So those of us with radios kept updating the thread for those without.

I don't really have a sense of the "moment", I think because the attacks and the news happened over the course of the morning as opposed to seeing JFK get shot in an instant. Even seeing the Challenger explosion left me with more of a "where I was" impression (7th grade, school library watching the launch on a television brought in for the occassion) though it obviously had less significant effect on my life or the nation.
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#5 Aug 02 2004 at 10:30 AM Rating: Default
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Thinking back I was probably way to busy to be posting, but I may have posted the next day.

I was also hung over because my birthday is 9/10.
____________________________
Disclaimer:

To make a long story short, I don't take any responsibility for anything I post here. It's not news, it's not truth, it's not serious. It's parody. It's satire. It's bitter. It's angsty. Your mother's a *****. You like to jack off dogs. That's right, you heard me. You like to grab that dog by the bone and rub it like a ski pole. Your dad? Gay. Your priest? Straight. **** off and let me post. It's not true, it's all in good fun. Now go away.

#6 Aug 02 2004 at 10:51 AM Rating: Decent
I was in 8th grade, my dad drove me to school and we heard something about it on the radio but didnt pay any attention to it, then in first hour was gym class and I didnt dress out so I was sittin next to the coach on the benches when our vice principle came up and told him that the two towers in new york had been hit by planes. Then the rest of the day we all just watched the news in every class because we all had T.V.'s in each room.

Got out of doing school work the whole day....
#7 Aug 02 2004 at 11:24 AM Rating: Decent
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I was on my way to work, heard it on the radio, then got a phone call from my mother saying that that nobody could get in touch with my uncle (Commodities Exchange), and that my cousins' husband had called her to say he loved her and goodbye, he worked at Cantor Fitzgerald and the floor was filling with smoke.

My uncle made it over to the West Side highway and got on a random boat ferrying people to New Jersey but wasn't able to get in contact with any of the family until after 5pm (we had experienced the same thing in 1993 when the bomb went off in the parking garage). He lost 4 of his employees that day.

I was at work about 20 miles away and we all went on the roof and smoked cigarettes (even the people who didn't smoke) and made frantic phone calls while listening to the radio and trying to make phone calls.


btw, I was in the lunchroom of my elementary school when the challenger blew up in 1986.

edit: The plume of smoke rising from the towers was clearly identifiable from 20 miles away.

Edited, Mon Aug 2 12:47:10 2004 by Bigkillian
#8 Aug 02 2004 at 12:15 PM Rating: Decent
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I was sleeping - I just started working a late shift and went to sleep around 6am Mountain - my bf woke me up about half an hour later as he just heard the news on the radio. I couldn't believe it. We listented to the radio for awhile, gleaming what we could off the net since we didn't have a TV and eventually went to a fast food place up the street that had a radio.

At the time I was doing tech support for AOL - ach, I know, AOL sucks - it really does - and we were getting so many calls from people in NYC and Washington complaining that the net service was down - it was stressful - I remember some guy there got a caller who was very upset that he couldn't get online in Baltimore and play some game, so he told the rep that it must have been AOL software in one of the planes that made it go down. Oy vey. We kept having to explain to people in NYC that the reason why their DSL wasn't working was because the main servers were right across the street from the WTC.

I went to school in NYC for a little while - I met my bf there and seeing the towers, man, that was the sign that I had arrived, that I was in New York. I haven't been back there since, and I can't imagine what it would be like, flying in and just seeing the skyline without them there.
#9 Aug 02 2004 at 12:31 PM Rating: Decent
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At the time, I still lived with my parents. I was in my room getting dressed for work when my mom rushed in and told me to trn to NBC, or ABC, or whatever. It was on every major channel, like it mattered which one I chose. Anyways, at this time only one building had been hit. My first thoughts are something like "I know this is going to be something huge", but I didn't yet know what it was all about.

So I head off to work. At that time, I worked at Circuit City. We spent the whole morning in the video section watching it on TV. Everyone was arguing over what it was about, who did it, how could this have happened.....At some point, my boss made us get to work. I remember helping customers and having thoughts like "Are we going to war? Will there be a draft? Is the whole nation in danger?" I think everyone felt a bit vulnerable at that moment. I felt like we could be attacked any second and there was nothing that we could do about that.

Immediately following those feeling of fear and insecurity, I began to feel very angry, because I began to think about the deaths that had just happened. I know many of you here don't believe in God, but imagine that you did. The thought that so many people had just entered eternity at that moment, either to eternal paradise or eternal damnation, was pretty overwhelming. I mean, when the plane crashed, you literally saw hundreds of people die instantaneously. Crazy......


Hosswarrior, I noticed that you said that you were shearing coils of steel. Might I ask where you live and what company you work for? Just out of curiosity.


Edited, Mon Aug 2 13:33:46 2004 by Deathfromtheskies
#10 Aug 02 2004 at 12:47 PM Rating: Decent
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I woke up to see Tower 1 burning. At that point, they were thinking it was an accident. I took a shower, got out, and saw that Tower 2 had been hit. Then the tower collapsed. I went into work.

I spent the next 8 hours on air relatively straight (I was in radio at the time), only going to the network for occassional commentary. A problem surfaced after getting to work with the national network. Apparently, unbeknownst to me, gays, lesbians, and liberals were the reason why the country was under attack (according to the fine hosts of U.S. Radio Network --- which we used to fill up night time). So instead of having hateful speech that was ignoring what was going on, I talked with local police officals, community members, congresspeople, ect. and monitored CNN and Fox news while reporting on the events. It was argueably the toughest day of my work life (the other was when Sen. Paul Wellstone's plan crashed --- but I was only on for about 4 hours straight that day). When I left, I had literally no voice left.

After that we decided to drop that network and get CNN. My boss may have been a right winger, but even he was disgusted by the commentary on that network.

Grady
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#11 Aug 02 2004 at 12:48 PM Rating: Decent
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I was a junior in college and I had just gotten off from my third shift job and I was at home getting ready to leave to go to class. Throughout the day everyone seemed to be in disarray. Its was very difficult to concentrate in any class because one person would end up sbbing and that would lead to an utter cry fest in each class... because most of us had realized what might ensue....a draft, many deaths, families broken. Life as we all knew it was about to change in a way we hadnt been accustomed to as our parents had to deal with the same with the Vietnam war. It was very surreal and a very bleak time for me...as well as many of you that weer old enough to have it effect your everyday lives, as a ominance of death and destruction had filled our countrys veiw.
#12 Aug 02 2004 at 12:55 PM Rating: Default
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Quote:
I was a junior in college and I had just gotten off from my third shift job and I was at home getting ready to leave to go to class. Throughout the day everyone seemed to be in disarray. Its was very difficult to concentrate in any class because one person would end up sbbing and that would lead to an utter cry fest in each class... because most of us had realized what might ensue....a draft, many deaths, families broken. Life as we all knew it was about to change in a way we hadnt been accustomed to as our parents had to deal with the same with the Vietnam war. It was very surreal and a very bleak time for me...as well as many of you that weer old enough to have it effect your everyday lives, as a ominance of death and destruction had filled our countrys veiw.


Have you ever known someone who tried to speak eloquently and intelligently, only to have their sugar-coated drivel sound like a glorified fart?

Just curious........
#13 Aug 02 2004 at 1:13 PM Rating: Decent
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Wow, someones got some issues...

anyways, why dont we keep on subject and just try and discuss our experiences and try and relate them in a dignafied manor... This event effected us all and to see how it effected others who have the same interest as you can be very theraputic.
#14 Aug 02 2004 at 1:21 PM Rating: Default
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Quote:
Wow, someones got some issues...

anyways, why dont we keep on subject and just try and discuss our experiences and try and relate them in a dignafied manor... This event effected us all and to see how it effected others who have the same interest as you can be very theraputic.


Wow, someone's got some issues....with grammar, spelling, and punctuation. Seriously people, I know Mrs. Pinkerton didn't teach you last year where the periods and commas go, and I know your rank in the junior high spelling bee was, shall we say, less than desirable. But please try to at least run a spell check or something before you post. It's not that hard, trust me.

You, my friend, are the dingleberry in the butt crack of society.

Edited, Mon Aug 2 14:22:16 2004 by Deathfromtheskies
#15 Aug 02 2004 at 1:23 PM Rating: Good
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i was in math class, we were learning about 2 step equations. I was in 7th grade. My teacher told me what happened.
#16 Aug 02 2004 at 1:42 PM Rating: Decent
Quote:
Hosswarrior, I noticed that you said that you were shearing coils of steel. Might I ask where you live and what company you work for? Just out of curiosity.


Steel company in Kansas. A company called J&J Drainage.

Thank you for everyone's positive input. ^^
#17 Aug 02 2004 at 1:54 PM Rating: Decent
7:30 am, PST, I was awaking to go about my day at work. I looked at my monitor (I always left the tv running thru my comp while I sleep) and I saw a split window live feed of what I recognized as the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon shaped structure of the Pentagon... both aflame and blazing away.

I rubbed my eyes to see if I was truely awake, and as I could feel the crust brush away from my eye linings, I still could not believe what I was seeing was news worthy. I flipped the channel to find it was indeed fact, not fiction, and was covered by nearly every television network there was.

I went onto work, and while in our breakfast meeting at the near-by deli, we watched the towers collapse and decided it was appropriate to return home rather than begin our day of door to door work. I went home in remorse and chatted with many other awestruck individuals in a general chat room. Some dumb asshat came in claiming to be Bin Laden and claiming responsibility of the attacks and stating US deserved it and yada yada... needless to say, there were many anonymous tips to the FBI on that chatter. Internet Anonymitity only goes sooo far...
#18 Aug 02 2004 at 2:24 PM Rating: Good
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This is not the appropriate subject to even start a flame war on so Ill just leave it at this.

Please be kind and respectfull of all the posters (including myself) in this forum. We are all just trying to relate our own experiences that we each had on this day.

Why do you feel you have to belittle someone about anything this petty on a forum as such?
#19 Aug 02 2004 at 2:50 PM Rating: Decent
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Being English the first plane hit early afternoon our time, i was hosing down the warehouse floor at the time.

It's a pretty big warehouse <supplies the entire naval base so it has to be> and some chef from the building next door shouted accross to the two of us that 'A plane just hit the second tower!'.

We had no idea what he was talking about, we finished up and walked back to the office upstairs and everone was just sat around staring at nothing and the Warrent Officer was on the phone really serious.

We had to lock down the base to security state Amber which is immenant but not imeadiate threat. It was a very tence time, i did not enjoy the feeling at the time because no one knew what had happen or who had done it.

I managed to get home in time to see the second tower fall, my girlfriend <now my wife> and I just sat and watched, it was to important an event to miss.

I found out later when i finally got through to my mother that my cousin was missing, She got the subway that went under the WTS i believe.

Luckily she was above ground when the first plane hit and got to safety but with the mobile phone network shot to hell she took 12 hours to get in touch with my Aunt.
#20 Aug 02 2004 at 3:00 PM Rating: Excellent
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I was attending college at Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, on campus, bout to head to my morning calc 3 class. I was studying aerospace engineering at the time. I woke up right around the second tower hit.

Being an aerospace campus, we had student pilots flying at all hours. The first thing I noticed was the lack of aircraft anywhere. Wandering into class, everyone was gathered in muted groups, mostly in shock. The pilots were geting some information in over the ATC channels on the ground, so we were a little better informed of the aviation situation than some were at that time, but no one really knew what was going on.

at about 1pm, The entire campus entered a state of lockdown. Turns out the stupid bastards over at Fox news decided to tell everyone one of the hijackers was trained at embry riddle. At first they even got the campus wrong from the one they were going for, blaming it on the prescott AZ campus where I was, later they blamed the Daytona beach campus. of course, as it later turned out it was neither, but we were swamped with media people for around two days, and getting out of the campus was next to impossible.

Shortly thereafter the bottom completely dropped out of the aerospace engineering hireing market, and I switched to Security and intelligence.
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#21 Aug 02 2004 at 3:17 PM Rating: Good
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It was my day off, i planned on sleeping in. Someone woke me up to tell me that a plane had crashed into the world trade center.

I told them to **** off. Everyone left the house, i couldnt fall back asleep so i got up and poured myself a bowl of cheerios then sat down and turned on CNN to see what was up just in time for the second plane to hit.

I spent the rest of the day just watching the news and such.
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#22 Aug 02 2004 at 3:31 PM Rating: Default
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Quote:
Please be kind and respectfull of all the posters (including myself) in this forum. We are all just trying to relate our own experiences that we each had on this day.

Why do you feel you have to belittle someone about anything this petty on a forum as such?




Because it's fun. And because it is fun, allow me to point out your errors in your last post.

"Respectfull" is not a word, "respectful" is.

And that last sentence? Yea, that makes no sense. Try rewording it a little, then it might be coherent.

Seriously, a spell check and maybe some Grammar 101. It's worth it, trust me.
#23 Aug 02 2004 at 3:56 PM Rating: Good
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Was sleeping in my dorm room. My Grandma called me and woke me up to tell me about it. Skipped classes and watched TV all day.

#24 Aug 02 2004 at 4:31 PM Rating: Decent
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I was in school, very hot day. The teacher had the radio on, it said that 2 planes have crashed, then all our electricity shut off, we had a blackout. The blackout happens like twice a week where I lived.(south america, not going to give name of country though)

I moved to the US 2 years after it happened i think.
#25 Aug 02 2004 at 4:32 PM Rating: Default
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woke up before my alarm, with a weird feeling, quiet all around me. went to my moms room and saw the first tower on fire. damn thats a pretty bad accident. what if its a terrorist attack. BOOM. it is. and that was it. i knew, its all f'd up now. work sucks, but that had to be the worst monday ever for the lives of those there and the lives related to those that were there. innocent lives lost, because two guilty forces had started a quiet war long before, and now, we can hear it, aloud. and the screams are deafening, and they cant be ignored. it will affect me, and in the future it will affect my kids if i have any.

i have to quote something from a comedian, from a silly movie, yet it expresses a real feeling and is very true:
"war is hell, and the last thing we want is a fight."
jim carrey, ace ventura: when nature calls
#26 Aug 02 2004 at 4:35 PM Rating: Decent
Woke up to jets flying outside my window and my roomate who was visiting Boston was calling. He said we had been attacked and to NOT go into work in downtown SF. I got drunk at a local bar that opened at 12pm just for that day....we watched the news in the bar.

Met some dude there with pot...went to his house (which was Janis Joplin's old place) and got stoned and played acoustics.

Kind of an odd day.
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