The
thought has been with me for a while--almost exactly a
year, in fact--to write something about the events of
9/11/01. I've sat down to do it at least a dozen
times, and I even have a partially completed draft of
such sitting at home somewhere in the bowels of poor
Polly Jean. But I've never finished it, much less
posted it here.
Maybe it's because my account of that day is strictly
peripheral--after all, I was in Chicago, where nothing
really happened except the fear and panic and sadness
that the rest of the nation felt. Maybe it's because
there are so many other accounts that covered it
better, most especially Sarah
Bunting's tale of actually seeing the WTC come down in
person. Or maybe I'm just too lazy to sit down and
peck out what would surely be my longest essay to
date.
And perhaps, some day, I will post that essay
here, and you'll get to read about the uneasy feeling
of trying to get out a crowded downtown with Red
Secretary under an alarmingly clear blue sky;
about the epic meeting between RS and my mom; about
the fear of hearing planes overhead when none were
supposed to flying anymore (turned out to be F-16s
patrolling Chicago's airspace); about getting home and
watching the footage of the attacks over and over
again. But not this week, when everybody is doing some
piece on 9/11. As if we could forget what happened. As
if we ever will.
Wednesday, September 11, 2002
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