We are all alone wandering the world, one interaction at a time. We are born into this mystery of existence for a finite time and enter a new plane of being alone. During the moment between the first and final breath, we will make decisions, take risks and question. We will each fall and pick up the pieces to live another day.
Each moment, a new encounter; a new perspective.
Have you touched a soul so deeply that the connection changed them forever? Have you ever saved a life? Have you ever guided someone that lacked directly; giving them hope with an outstretched hand; finding promise in the darkest hour?
The greatest wealth in life is the grand gesture; the selfish act of kindness led by a pure reaction of energy fueled by love.
A decade later, we no longer talk of the destruction of September 11 but the individual stories of courage and triumph that will live on and serve as a benchmark for true heroism.
So many of us go undiscovered
So many unfulfilled
So many longing to be needed; to be yearned for.
The sign of love is not the Tiffany necklace but the way he looks in your eyes when he puts it around the soft circle of your neck. Do you know how to safe a life?
Can you deal with the responsibility of seeking out a lonely heart and giving it protection, nurturing and love?
The ability to save is only achieved when:
You have the strength to believe you can
You accept that an act of heroism is simple and true
You no longer look in the mirror and see yourself
You see the act of kindness as a mutual bond and the energy shared is a power greater than the energy of one
You believe in something much greater than yourself
The music never stops playing. It is a heartbeat, a songbird, a thank you from someone less fortunate who was blessed with your kindness.
You find light in a field of darkness
This is a responsibility more important and difficult than any job. This is one where the greatest reward is lifting someone to a better place.
As we move closer to the tenth anniversary of a day we will never forget in our lifetimes and our children’s, we often take time during an anniversary to add additional reflection on the importance of this tragedy. It was a day that changed our lives and how we view life today.
As an native of the Northeast, the events of that day took on a much more personal meaning, but whether you were in New York or China, it affected each of us in a very personal way. During the period after that, musicians, artists, poets and writers, let their guard down to open up to us and share their personal feelings about the events of that day.
As a tribute to September 11, 2001 and a thank you for all those that let us in their lives, here is a playlist and select videos to help us get through this anniversary together.
It was sometime after seven when my phone rang. I was groggy and half awake but somehow felt the need to answer my phone. Kim was the on the other end frantically telling me to turn my television on. Without hesitation or knowledge of why, I did. She then began to tell me the cryptic pieces of information surrounding a plane going into the World Trade Center. It was moments later when I witnessed the second plane make a permanent impression in my mind. I soon hung up and continued to stare at the screen as my eyes got lost far beyond the scenes I was seeing on the television screen.
I sat silently and still on the floor, watching, absorbing, and reflecting as the news trying to make sense of this madness. Memories of my days on Wall Street came back quickly and I could remember my footsteps from the PATH train to Broad Street. Now that path is covered in rubble and smoke and the familiar sounds of taxis are now filled with screams.
After several hours, without knowing what to do or who to call, I played nine holes of golf. Upon completion, as I walked the final path to the clubhouse, my phone rang. I don’t know why, but had a feeling the news was not good. I had no reason to believe that the call from my parents home phone was good or bad news, but I knew. Maybe it was the day playing in the back of my mind or perhaps the knowledge that my parents rarely ever called me during the day. With a brief hesitation, I answered to hear my father on the other end confirming my notion. I received the news that my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Mid afternoon on September 11 as the world reacted, lived and digested what would become the most memorable day of our lives, I stood alone hearing the word you never want to hear in relation to a family member, friend or yourself.
Much of the next several hours were a bit of a blur. Sometime in between the hours of 8:00 PM and 10:00 PM I leaned on a rock just outside my apartment and looked up at the sky. My first thought was of the deafening silence filling the sky with only the view of stars shining. No planes, no helicopters, no sound resonating. Of course this being in the middle of a remote part of Oklahoma would not have shocked anyone but living seven miles from an international airport meant something else. How can complete silence send shivers down one’s spine? I don’t know, but the empty sound was the spark that drove me into a period of weakness and sorrow. I shed a tear as an entire day of devastation ran circles in my mind. Over and over I remember the calls, the videos, the commentary and through all that, it was the silence that sent me over the edge.
That was September 11, 2001.
One year and six days later, we lost her.
A decade has passed, ten years older and more mature. The world as you and I know it changed that day, not in a temporary mode but a permanent way of life. It awakened us to the notion that we are all vulnerable. How often to we go to a movie and watch a blockbuster about an apocalyptic event and sit in awe at the wonder of Hollywood magic? Yet, to witness the unimaginable happen before our eyes wondering and praying that our friends and loved ones were not part of this madness is something not many of us would pay the price of admission for. I grew up in New Jersey, raised by two home bread New York parents. Spent some time on Wall Street living the American dream. Never in the midst of the madness known as New York City could I imagine an event so catastrophic ever happening in my backyard.
If asked what emotions went through my system that day, I would have to say shock, fear, heartbreak, concern, confusion and hope. I am sure you are thinking why “hope” in that list of negative emotions. Well, without hope, we have nothing. Everyday we live with the risk of tragedy whether it affects one person or thousands, yet each day we wake up to a new sunrise with the hope of a day filled with happiness and love.
September 11 was tragic for me in so many ways, mostly personal. I needed to feel hope that as a family we would be by my mother’s side supporting her, comforting her and knowing together we could beat this disease. As we come closer to the 10th anniversary of the day that changed our lives forever, I will be thinking about my mother and the struggles she had to endure so that we could have the blessing of having her in our lives.
My greatest tragedy of that day was not the events over lower Manhattan. It was that I was not there to hug and hold my mother when she received the news of the unwelcome visitor in her body. I’m sorry Mom.
Over the course of our lives, we will each experience tragedy, some with extreme levels of anguish and some with deeply personal ties that penetrate deep into our hearts.
This is a story of losing a friend in the World Trade Center tragedy and a group of college friends whose lives each took their own direction with maturity, marriage and adolescent change. As they come together to reflect on her life and their own, they will each walk away with a lesson on life and the meaning of friendship and love.
One person, was the most affected by the loss of this friend. A man who not only lost a friendship in the rubble but lost his spiritual soul mate. This is a story about a group of young professionals who once shared a roof and a bond of friendship in a college dorm and now must once again come together to face one of the most difficult times of their lives and most of the most personal realities: mortality.
Let yourself go as you read this coming of age drama about friendship, love, death and heartbreak set to the backdrop of one of the most most devastating events in United States history.
As you reflect on your own transformation from youth to adulthood, remember all the people that influenced you, shaped your well being and gave you love that has stayed deep in the trenches of your heart.
Writer / Blogger / Social Media and Talent Acquisition Consultant / Life Geek / Photographer
Human Resources, Talent Acquisition, Global Social Media and Marketing Solutions including: organizational development, team building, change management, compensation structural development and implementation, social media and talent community development, growth and advancement, training, rewards and recognition, recruitment, attrition control, affirmative action administration, labor relations and M&A.
Trainer
So You Think You Can Interview - ProNet August, 2010 Personal Branding and Social Media Resources - ProNet June, 2010 Personal Branding and Social Media Resources - Lee Hecht Harrison July, 2010 Personal Branding and Social Media Tooling - Lenova Women in Leadership September, 2010 Your Life Bag - ProNet October, 2010, The Effects of Social Media in the Workplace - Carolinas Payroll Conference November 2012
Published Author
Sonni's Abyss (June 2008)
A Beautiful World (February 2011)
This Time Around (Scheduled for February 2013 Publication)