I never had the chance to see the Twin Towers in person. They must have been an incredible sight.
I was talking about 9/11 with one of my co-worker’s on campus the other day. She told me she was 8-months-old when it happened. When I told her I had just turned 20 that July, she proceeded to give me the huge compliment of being in complete shock that I wasn’t just a few years older than her.
She made my week.
The exchange got me thinking about how differently someone of her age might feel about the events of that day. I would guess the majority of current college students were closer to her age than mine or not yet born at the time of the 9/11 attacks. What today’s 20-year-olds read about in history books, I lived through as an adult.
2001 had already been a really weird year for me. I had just had the casts removed from both of my arms a few days before 9/11. I had injured myself pretty badly in a cliff jumping accident on July 5 that could have killed me. But I was alive, on a day so many others wouldn’t live through.
I woke up to the house phone ringing, it was my brother calling to tell us to turn on the news. An airplane had crashed into the World Trade Center. Still trying to process what I was watching unfold, I witnessed in horror with my parents as the second plane hit the other tower. It was the moment we all knew what was actually happening—America was under attack, and the horrible news kept coming. The Pentagon had been attacked and there was a missing fourth plane, which eventually crashed into a Pennsylvania field.
It doesn’t feel like 20 years ago.
I remember the early days after the events, when planes were still grounded across the country and the terrifying thoughts that the attacks might keep coming. San Francisco was a very real possibility, maybe they would take out the Golden Gate Bridge? It felt like any large city was fair game for a potential attack. We were truly scared of the unknown.
These feelings are hard to describe if you haven’t felt them before. It’s really hard to imagine feeling them in today’s current reality, as the pandemic and political divisiveness have us facing so much uncertainty once again.
If we endured 9/11, I’d like to believe we’ll overcome this too.