I was barely on time with waking up that morning eleven years ago. I was always bad at waking up at a realistic time for the things I had to do in the day, hell, I still am. By the time I got myself downstairs, the shit had already hit the fan. The T.V. was on, the house was dead quiet aside from the newscasters. I had never even heard of the World Trade Center, I had heard of New York, the Empire State Building and the Statue of Liberty, but a center for global commerce was far out of my freshly middle-school mind.
It's hard to see something for the first time when it's in a state of destruction. As far as I knew, it could have always been on fire (A silly idea to think, but the first experience of something sticks with me far more than it should). My sister was probably in the same boat as me, I can't be certain because I'd be lying if I said I remembered everything about that morning. It's all a painted blur to me with a few clear strokes stuck in sporadically. The most profound recollection I have from that day was sitting in homeroom, hell, I think it must have been every class that we just sat in silence, watching the television. Some of the kids were crying, they were scared, but they had every right to be.
What I remember most is the aftermath, the slough of finger pointing, the rage, the hate, the misconceptions. This isn't me trying to tell you who's right, who's wrong, or that the towers fell faster than explainable by gravity. This is me trying to understand what this event means to me, how the aftermath has molded me and how the ordeal in its entirety will affect me as I live out my life.
This is where I post my thoughts and works from inside and out of classes. Take it for what its worth, enjoy it, embrace it, feel it.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Old No. 7
One glass, alone on the shelf.
A shaking hand reaches up,
Bringing it down to the
ragged, chipped counter.
Three ice cubes drop, one by one.
Plink, plink, plink.
A Cabinet door creaks open.
Old number seven, resting uneasily,
gripped in a sweaty palm.
The ice, drowned by a generous pour.
The glass brought to quivering lips
in one slow, fluid movement.
The ice, takes in the fresh air.
A steady hand drops the glass.
A shaking hand reaches up,
Bringing it down to the
ragged, chipped counter.
Three ice cubes drop, one by one.
Plink, plink, plink.
A Cabinet door creaks open.
Old number seven, resting uneasily,
gripped in a sweaty palm.
The ice, drowned by a generous pour.
The glass brought to quivering lips
in one slow, fluid movement.
The ice, takes in the fresh air.
A steady hand drops the glass.
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