I feel anger. I feel frustration and loss. I feel a rush of emotions, but mainly a numbing feeling.
The anniversary of 9/11 comes up every year and I always try to take stock of what I’m feeling. I can never quite put my finger on the boiling pot of emotions that rage inside of my heart. I know there will be pieces written today, both by national news figures and fellow bloggers, on the twenty-third anniversary. I want to magically turn back time and prevent it from happening. I want to wipe it from existence and bring back everyone who perished. Of course, I can’t, but it doesn’t stop me from wishing that I could.

When I stop and think about 9/11, the thing that comes to mind first is how bright and sunny the day was. The weather was perfect and we were going to celebrate a birthday party that night. As I left the house, I made plans to sneak out at lunch. I wanted to pick out an extra special gift for the birthday girl. I never did get to the store. It took a back seat.
But I didn’t know then what was about to happen. Instead, I drove into work with my windows down and was excited about a beautiful fall day. I was late getting into work that day, but it was such a nice day that I didn’t mind.
I was at work only for a short while, when we heard about the first plane, crashing into the North Tower. Before we saw the images on TV or the Internet, we all wondered how that could even happen. We thought maybe the broadcasters had misspoken. My boss had just managed to find a TV and set it up in our work area when we saw that a second plane had crashed into the South Tower. News would continue the rest of the morning: two more crashes into a field in Somerset County and the Pentagon, and then, of course, the two tower collapses.

At the time, I worked at a financial services firm. We had so many questions that day about friends and coworkers in New York. On top of that, I had concerns about family working in the towers. And others in Manhattan. Were they alive? Were they lost?
With that in mind, I feel like I should write something today about the day, but nothing new really comes. I try to open up a vein and write, as they say, but nothing comes. The best I can do is pray to God and offer my prayers to the victims and their families. I pray that they have found peace.
I wish I could write more, but maybe that will have to be enough.
. . . . .
“Those we love never truly leave us. There are things that death cannot touch.” —Jack Thorne
“What we have once enjoyed we can never lose; all that we deeply love becomes a part of us.” —Helen Keller
“Never. We never lose our loved ones. They accompany us; they don’t disappear from our lives. We are merely in different rooms.” —Paulo Coelho
“Grief is the price we pay for love.” —Queen Elizabeth II
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I don’t think that any of us who lived through that day will ever forget where we were, what we were down, the various emotions we were going through…
I try, as much as I can, to focus on 9/12. On that day (and the days and weeks after), we saw our fellow humans, regardless of race, religion, skin color and all of the many things that divide us, be unimportant as we gathered as one whole nation to do what each of us could to repair what we could in ways we could.
To be honest, as much as I would NEVER wish something like that to ever touch our soil again, I sure would like to see us rally and band together as we did in that aftermath.
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Yes, love when we band together. Too often we’re at odds and see our differences. I actually think we’re more alike than we think.
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❤️❤️❤️
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Thank you!!!😎😎😎
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I can understand this sentiment, Brian. We always watched the local news while getting ready for school, so I saw the first tower fall while eating breakfast. My teacher set up a TV and watched the day unfold at school. All these years later, the day still feels so surreal.
I think you’re right that prayers for the victims and their families will have to be enough, and I think it is.
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Surreal is a good word. Feels like so long ago, but yesterday all at the same time.
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Beautifully written. I shared my story of being in New York on that day…the world is such a beautiful place and people have become so filled with anger and hatred toward others…a sad state.
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Loved your post John. And yes, I agree the world is a beautiful place. We forget that sometimes. There is good, we just need to look for it. I’m reminded of travel pieces by you and others. I always think the places are so different from what I know. But then the restaurant owner or waiter sounds just like the restaurant that my wife and I like to go to. It’s people who care and want to share their gift. It really is a small world!
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Thanks for the nice note and yes, it’s so sad that so many share grievances instead of fun!
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9/11—the day that will be forever burned in the hearts, minds, and memories all every human beings alive on that day old enough to remember. Who doesn’t remember where they were and the moment they first heard the news?
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It’s one of those days. We all remember where we were.
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Wonderfully written, Brian. I was in a doctor’s office waiting and saw the replay on the TV. I felt shocked and very angry. To this day, I believe that our government mishandled this terribly. We should have retaliated with extreme force that would put an end to the rain of terror these evil people commit.
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Yea, it’s one of those events, we all remember where we were when we heard the news.
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Indeed, the shock and anger set in right away for me, Brian.
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You said enough and well said Brian. Oftentimes, there are no words, just an emptiness and spiritual distraught. Great sentiments my friend. 🙏🏼 Thank you! 😥😞😩
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Emptiness and distraught. Good words to describe the feeling.
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Keep on keepin’ on Brian! We have to keep our momentum pumped up because there is so much that keeps us speechless…more often than not. We just gotta keep doing the best we can, even when we can’t find the words to define that. 😍💖🥰
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So true.
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I remember a few days after the attack when stores reopened and the Country tried to find some kind of normalcy. I was a retail manager in a mall store. A women visiting form Northern Ireland came in and voiced her sympathy for what we were going through. I still remember her. She lived in Northern Ireland. This was a part of her everyday existence, not ours. I should have been consoling her. Everything changed that day.
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Wow, what a memory. Yes, lots of things changed!
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⭐️
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A tragic, sad day indeed, Brian with beautiful sentiments and quotes. I share your feelings❣️
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Thank you Cindy. I’m glad my post made sense!
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A very sad day.
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So true.🙏🏼🙏🏼
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❤️🇺🇸🙏 I understand
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🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼😎😎
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❤️
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Thanks Beth!!!
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Dang, I hit enter before I finished my thought. Anyway, I remember that first hour of news that day was so dull. I’d give anything to live in that kind of boredom again.
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Yes, wouldn’t that be great! I’m with you.
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❤️❤️❤️
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It is surreal to think that day was 23 years ago and the babies born that day are now adults. I will never forget that morning as well being glued to the tv all day and not going to class. A moment that changed the world.
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It’s been a lifetime ago but also feels like a second ago. Crazy!
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💕
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🥲🥲
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After all this time, my heart still breaks over the innocents killed. As does yours.
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Yes, still very sad.
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It was a heart breaking day that changed our country forever. My husband lost coworkers that day he used to speak to daily on the phone.
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Yes, it was so sad. The New York Times ran obituaries of the people who died. I remember reading the running list months later, it spread out that long, and it was just so sad.
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Wow. I didn’t know about the obituaries. That’s really sad.
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I want to say it was the times. It was so sad to read, but must-reading, because they were written so well. You felt each person’s story.
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It’s always a tough day. I wrote something big on the 10th anniversary but probably haven’t mentioned it since. Twenty-three years later and the wounds still feel fresh, you know?
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Exactly Mark. Twenty-three but still feels like last week.
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❤️
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You’ve captured that moment that is etched into our hearts so well. Thank you, Brian!
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🙏🏼🙏🏼😎😎😎😎
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