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The Falling Man

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The entire article is a fascinating read. It's also a trip back to the day, nine years ago, when it happened.
 
I remember seeing that man on the front page of the paper the day after the attack. I was eight at the time, and I couldn't see all of the significance of it at the time. Looking back on it, I can see World had become a very different place that Tuesday.
 

oh my goodness, you're still a baby. indeed, our world changed.
 
I was in grad school at the time, so I could at least have a taste of the significance. I remember walking around in a kind of daze. Everyone else was, too.
 
I was at work. They sent us home. I remember driving to pick up my kids from school, and I was listening to the reports on the radio, and crying. At a stoplight, I looked at people in the cars beside me, and they were crying, too.

I remember trying to explain it to my daughter. She was 8. Thankfully, my son was only 4, so he barely remembers it.

That year was so weird...National Guard guys in our airport with assault weapons...my company instituted protocols to screen our mail for anthrax. We had new travel protocols: No more than 2-3 people from the same unit could fly on the same flight, we were discouraged from using public transportation.

Several of my co-workers were stranded out of town for several days after 9/11, including my boss. He kept calling us from St. Louis, driving us crazy, because he couldn't get a rental car or a flight. He was so stir-crazy.

I remember traveling to DC in October, 2001, the day we started our offensive in Afghanistan, and people on the flight were crying.

That year, in January, 2002, I got stranded in the Atlanta airport because of a snowstorm. People were so nice to each other. It was almost like everyone was thinking, "Well, this sucks, but it could be so much worse, couldn't it?"

I got a life insurance policy and did my will that year since I have to fly all the time. I wanted to make sure my kids were protected.

In some ways, that day changed me, and I have never really been quite the same since.
 
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I was in grad school at the time, so I could at least have a taste of the significance. I remember walking around in a kind of daze. Everyone else was, too.

I remember that day almost perfectly, a mild, sunny Tuesday, not a cloud in the sky. Our teacher told us about it at the end of the day. Everyone was real shocked. One girl's dad worked in Lower Manhattan; fortunately he was fine. I went home and remember seeing the same footage playing over and over again. I just walked around my house in circles, also in a daze, for what must've been two hours. I remember vaguely hearing about a US warship getting bombed the year before, but I didn't really understand. 9-11 was what got me to pay at least some attention to the news
 
I was at school. They announced it over the loudspeaker and nobody really knew what it was all about or why they were telling us and sending us home. Nobody seemed to care. My mom showed up at school and I had no idea why. She told me my dad was okay and I was like "wtf are you talking about". My dad was on a plane heading to New York or something and my mom thought I'd be worried that he was on one of the planes or something I guess. Then I went home and was mad that my mom didn't let me leave the house to go skateboard because the cops would be in crisis mode and she didn't want me to get arrested or something. I tried watching TV but it was on all the channels. That day was pretty boring.
 
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This probably reads pretty close to how my daughter would describe 9/11.
 
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