the news
What a strange morning to wake up to here in London, more than 3000 miles from where I was on just such a perfect blue-sky day nine years and seven months ago.
I can understand the jubilation of those people whose loved ones died that day, or whose jobs involved digging out the rubble or protecting all of us New Yorkers from future harm, those with loved ones in the brave armed forces. They must feel a real sense of justified revenge, a life taken in return for so much that was taken from them.
I myself would have predicted I’d be jubilant today. The wishes of that man meant the destruction of my neighborhood, the loss of my little daughter’s school, the removal of the sense of safety and a happy future that seemed to belong to most Americans on September 10, 2001.
But I am not jubilant. I feel instead a wish to turn my eyes and ears away from the news.
On the day, and for some months afterward, I had some sense of our government and particularly our President as a father figure: there to protect us, and if that failed, to hunt down the one who had harmed us and exact justice. The way you go home after someone’s bullied you at school, and your father picks up the phone, or walks down the street, holding your hand if you’re brave enough to go with him, and he confronts the bully and even his parents, and an apology is offered, punishment is promised, a lesson learned.
As the months and then years went by, I was as scared as anyone — more so. I love New York City with all my heart, and to see the gaping wound in our precious neighborhood caused a daily, hourly stab of pain that took a great deal of time to lessen. I was made of The Wrong Stuff, imagining that the terrorists had targeted me and my family, would follow us wherever we went. I spent far too much time worrying about whether I’d rather be blown up on a bridge or in a tunnel while making my way to New Jersey. Every day at school pickup I breathed a sigh of relief that another day of separation from my child was over and I could take her home and be the protector myself.
No father could help me with the bully. I was on my own.
And we all did confront the bully. We continued to go to work, to take our children to school, to go down the subway steps under the streets of New York, to start up new businesses and look to the future. We rebuilt our lives and came out on the other side having looked the worst in the eye and said, “You cannot ruin my life. I am still here.”
Now the bully is dead. A different father from the one we expected has exacted revenge, I suppose. But we have come so far, to recover on our own, that I am not prepared to go back to who I was nearly ten years ago and feel satisfaction at the death of a person I’ve worked so hard to thwart. It took me a long time to rejoice in a perfect blue-sky day again, and that is exactly what I am going to do, today, holding all my fellow New Yorkers in my heart.
I’m sure this is just a fraction of what you have to say about that day that seemed so long ago, and now seems like yesterday, but I’m glad you shared these thoughts this morning. I find it difficult to rejoice in the loss of any human life, regardless of the circumstances, but I can rejoice with our country in the feeling of some sort of justice for the horrible acts committed.
You know, Karen, every once in awhile I think of just writing down our experiences, once and for all, getting it out. I have taken a couple of writing courses where the subject came up, but even all these years later I get very upset when I start to dredge it all up. I think you put how I’m feeling better than I did. I do rejoice in our country’s triumphing finally, but it seems a very puny recompense for what we suffered, so many people so much more than we did. There isn’t any proper payback. Thank you for your words, Karen. Think I’ll go get a cat to hug.