We were graduating from training, we look like we are intent on saving the world. But we are not even close to being who we we expected to be eleven years from then.
Expectations. That of a teen mother, who has read too many ladies magazines and envisioned a picture perfect world of happy baby, a responsible man, and sleep, when in reality all she wants to do is eat potato chips and cry, alone again while her child slumbers peacefully.
A young girl in her twenties at a grave, holding a carefully folded flag. While others were around she maintained her composure, til now, alone, holding all that was left, she wept, a meaningful and sustained sound no woman of 20 years should utter. The sound falls from the sky, like the cry of a solitary goose in the wild darkness of a September afternoon, and then is gone.
A couple in their early thirties, the young woman with a deliberate smile and a hairdo that hasn't changed since college. She'll hold that smile on her face for 10 years before she has the strength to walk out the door, bruises hidden under her sleeves.
A man and a woman, leaving a nice restaurant in a big city after dark, as tall shadows appear behind them in the isolated parking lot. Anyone else, certainly the police, are far away. He has nothing to defend against the utter fear in her eyes, because the law in this city doesn't honor the rights he has everywhere else.
Expectations. Of what life owes us, or what life promises. Perhaps it's the age of TV where there is almost always a happy ending, the bad guy gets his due, the good guy gets the girl. Life isn't like that always, though there are moments in there that would put any movie to shame.
And so, from experience, my expectations are someone weathered, as we can't always control what happens around us. Evil does not operate according to logic, and ignoring won't make it go away. But we can exercise our right and duty for free will and decision, in the hard intractable world we find ourselves in. We are not trapped by those fears, hopes and expectations that man calls his heart, but fixed by them, to endure. To stand guard and protect.
I look at the picture from graduation. I look at the TV, shattered buildings and memorials, flags and first responders, those walking symbols of American courage and indomitable commitment. I look at that old picture again, how young I look, and yet I look little different. One thing has not changed, we have a duty, a duty to be alive, to the terrible hurts, the red bitter blood that flows, to the honor we bear in the world's contempt. We endure so others can as well.
Eleven years. 2997 innocent victims.
I was wet behind the ears, living back East, not even unpacked from getting home from training on that sunny day in September. As we grabbed our gear, I could not get the picture out of my mind, that of the Pentagon in flames. For you see, my brother worked there more often than not. I thought about excusing myself from the team. I had no way to know if he was safe, I was beside myself with worry, but I did not. I geared up and headed out to do what was expected of me, what I was trained to do, what I'd taken an oath to do.
My first day "on the job" was not what I had expected. It's been eleven years, but sometimes when I wake in the night, sweat on my skin, the ghost of smoke in my hair, time hasn't moved forward at all.
Eleven Years.
I look at the photos, so many photos, so many years. Years for reckless adventures, for daring launches into the blue, for growing old, yet never truly growing up. Time for finding yourself, finding the wild and ephemeral blush of love, that knows no age, innocent, fumbling and breathless. All too soon to be reduced to small, worn squares of color held in a shoe box, of fading faces and edgeless shapes that will someday inhabit the memory and not the flesh.
But still, though, a life lived. Something the victims of 9-11 were denied. A chance to live life fully, to laugh, cry, and leave their mark. The opportunity to die on their own terms, with dignity and surrounded by those they loved.
When my Mom died, I was filled with anger for her leaving us so quickly, but I was also filled with respect. Respect for her ability to chose her final days; to unplug the plugs and unhook the machines and even though in pain, to be with her family, cohesive, intact.
I put the graduation picture back in the box with some papers. Some were no more than scraps of history. Some had more personal memories, that seared into my soul, to return on late introspective nights. There are memories there and many photos. Of dust and disintegration, shattered lives intertwined with broken wreckage, of unseen footprints in the debris of the living, stepping from the ash on their way home, and the seen footprints of those that respond, tending those taken from us.
As a nation we moved on, but many of us continue to remember. Will Durant argued that, "civilization is not imperishable. It must be relearned by every generation.' For that is the bleakest truth of all, the one truth we must never forget." That is the truth that sustains us. The truth that plays out in an image of a flame haired woman holding her head in her hands, trying to keep it together amidst the images of tangled wreckage of metal and lives, an image of a flag, of an empty spot of ground where once stood thousands of dreams. Quiet truth that brings it back so that we never forget.
Eleven years.
Today there will be only a moment of respect for those souls that were lost. A moment in which I will look skyward, wishing them peace, as the light vanishes with a soft sigh, driving down for only a moment upon the musty smell of slain flowers, there in a vase. Flowers taken from gardens for so many reasons, for love, for loss, for the dead, now dying themselves.
As I look to an uncaring sky, I grieve for the way they left us, as much as the why.
We graduated that day, in the last days of summer 2001. It was not a life I would have expected but it was the only life I could live. On that day we charged out into the world, passionate, excited and only days later, damned forever of all peace. In what seemed to us like minutes, we stood with regret and anguish, the despair out of which the quietly mourning, enduring bones stand up that can bear anything.
Almost anything.
16 comments:
My hat is off to you for this post.
I now need a moment of silence.
Never forget. Never forgive.
What a wonderfully evocative post. Thank you so much for sharing it!
Your words, like our hearts, are full of strength, despair, and quiet resolve. We go on because it's what we do ... it's what we've chosen to do.
Thank you for going on, too.
As the second tower fell I was interviewing for a position in my Fire Department as a Fire Investigator. After the interview I reported to our EOC as I was the operations officer and no one had any idea what was happening. My Chief and I sat and watched the news all day mesmerized by the video we saw. After about 6 hours we went home as there was nothing we could do. I got home about the same time as my wife and we hugged under our flag pole and cried for a bit. My flag has flown 24/7 since that day.
Reading you is the second time I cried about this subject today.
Thank you.
gfa
Well said, Brigid. Well said.
We cannot forget the evil done to us.
Well said.
JP
A moment in time that moved all of us - each in their own way. Thank you for sharing . . . .
Evil lives. But hope, duty, honor, courage and love are greater than it ever will be. Thank You for your well written words. Thank You for Your Service.
Eleven years. Peace, my friend.
BobG - I'm glad you made it home OK, my best from us both.
TammhyMomWithAGun - thank you for taking the time to comment.
Rev Paul - there's more to the day I can never share, but I know you understand what's behind it.
Chip - I'm glad there are men like you taking that burden. Be safe.
armedlaughing - George -big hug. Thanks for the long chat the other day. Hope you are well.
JP - I've not talked of it, one day perhaps, but probably no. But thanks for being the silent listener to things I've never said.
Bill - thanks, and as well, a big hug.
Leslie - I play such a small role compared to others, but I'm glad to have served. Thank you.
Blue - I can still taste and smell it. Eleven years. And the next generation doesn't even think of it.
On 9/11/2001 a grandson was born to us.
He is growing to be a fine young man.
He is our reminder. We will continue on. We will persevere.
Well said as always, Never Forget!
On that day I was called to go to war for what I hope is the last time my son was called to go to war for his first time. We both were changed in our own ways and yet the same.
Never forget , never again.
Great and timely post and well said.
Whenever it comes to my mind nowadays it explodes into my consiousness like an artillery barrage. I still feel a catch of breath when they replay video of the aircraft hitting the towers and I can sence the roar of power when the passengers and crew of Flight 93 unite as Americans can and do then charge and attack the cowards that were in the cockpit. And it was an act of cowardace, a militant bunch of prehumans attacking unarmed non-combatants. The media won't use that word for some reason but they were the most vile and foul of anything living.
Thank you for posting this.
I cannot begin to frame the words of such depths that you reach. I was working in a DFAS office, my son attending a conference at the WTC that morning. We were very lucky, he made it out OK, but my wife and I thought that we had lost our only child until very late that night we got word that he was alive. He won't really talk about that day, but we are there to listen when he needs to talk.
To all who suffered a loss that day, be it friends, loved ones, your are very much in our thoughts and prayers. God bless.
Ex-nuke.
Skip - congratulations!
mjrb - Indeed. May you and your soon both remain safe.
Bob Cloud - thank you Sir. May we all never forget.
james - I am so glad your son was safe, when so many others lost everything. Bless you.
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