Written September 17, 2001.
If this
be war, we may already have lost.
Regardless
of what response our country makes to the terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington on Sept. 11, or how
successful, the terrorists' goal may have already been
achieved.
It changed me. I'm different, unable to concentrate
on most anything without seeing a plane hitting a building,
without thinking of what it might have been like to
be at the top of the World Trade Center or in a Los
Angeles-bound plane on that Tuesday morning.
Was
that their objective, to wake us up, to change how safe
we feel in our comfortable lives, prosperous by almost
every other country's standards even as we whine that
we don't have the kind of car we'd like or a fourth
bedroom to spread out into?
Or
was it simply publicity they sought, like the hackers
who spam media Web sites hoping to see their work displayed
on the evening news, or local delinquents who paint
slurs on the town water tower and wait to gleefully
read about it in the newspaper?
Maybe
they just want to be admired for their audacity, their
cunning, their precision. Maybe they just wanted to
kill as many Americans as they could.
Whatever.
It worked. We're scared. And mad. And horrified.
Like
most everyone else in the U.S., I guess, I'm feeling
somewhat more fragile, less sure of what my day will
bring than before that morning. I go through the day
wondering if something, not a plane from the sky, but
perhaps a car crossing the center line or a freak gas
leak or ... just something, might instantly change my
life in ways I can hardly imagine.
In the days following the crashes, I found myself at
odds with my own feelings about it all. Some of them
I'm not proud of, but they were genuine and I'll stick
by them. I felt for everyone who died, for all their
families, for everyone who saw the carnage firsthand.
My God, I live hundreds of miles away, in a safe little
hamlet, and only saw this stuff on TV, but I still feel
as if I'm in shock; as if some part of me has been taken
away, something that helped me concentrate and function
as a normal human being. Five days after the hijackings,
I drove my family through Hartford to a friend's home,
and I was as nervous as I ever recall being on the road,
as if I was waiting for the earth to open up and swallow
us whole.
Yet
... my first reaction when I saw the second tower hit
by the plane was: Cool! It was like seeing the special
effects in the first Star Wars or in Terminator 2 for
the first time.
I
couldn't help it. It was the first thing I saw when
I walked into the room after my wife called me to come
see what was happening. Even after the realization that
I was watching real people dying, I couldn't help but
admire the planning, the execution, the balls it took
to hijack two planes and crash them into twin skyscrapers.
My reaction to hearing there were four planes hijacked,
and that three of them hit major targets was, "Wow,
pretty good average." When the towers fell, I thought
that must have surpassed even the wildest hopes of the
people who planned the deed. I could picture them sitting
in a room somewhere across the ocean, leaping out of
their chairs, cheering and hugging as if their team
had just won the Super Bowl. I wish I could say that
thought sickened me, but it didn't. It fascinated me:
There are people in the world who care more about their
success, more about some abstract cause, than about
thousands of lives. More on that below.
Of
course I was saddened, sickened by the loss of life.
For days, not an hour went by that I didn't picture
in my mind a scene of what it was like for the victims
and near victims.
But
my reaction to the nation's reaction was curious. Cancel
baseball? The Emmys? All network TV for days? Clearly,
I thought, the damage is done. Theyıre not going to
strike a baseball stadium, too. At least, certainly
not in St. Petersburg, where my unfortunate Red Sox
were to play. This was the insult added to injury. "Thousands
dead and dying in New York and Washington? That's a
shame. No baseball to ward it off with? No football?
Now I'm mad!"
It's true. I was longing for something, anything to
distract me from the barrage of news coverage, the all
day, all night media squawking. I wanted some relief,
some entertainment.
But
then, this was entertainment, all the same. Gripping.
Visually exciting. Life-and-death -- it unfolded before
our eyes, full of mystery. How many were dead? How many
survived? Who dunnit? How? Were there fights on the
planes? Any others not successful?
This
was the ultimate reality programming, and every network
had it.
Unfortunately,
along with it came the inevitable overload of TV newscasters
struggling for a career boost, something different,
something poignant and memorable to say -- when really
the pictures said it all.
Ah, the pictures. How many TV shots of little John John
Kennedy saluting did we suffer after his plane went
down? That many, times a thousand, is how often we've
now seen that second plane crash into the World Trade
Center. With no actual news to show for hours on end,
the networks played their trump card: "We've got riveting
video, pal, and you're gonna watch it every fucking
time we show it! You can't turn away! Go ahead and try!
It's too exciting! It's too gruesome! It's too compelling!"
They were right. At least, in my case. I watched, every
time, over and over. I hungered to see it again, from
a different angle. Dammit, why didn't they have a better
angle? How many TV stations and networks are in New
York? How many tourists with video cameras? Where was
a good close-up of the plane hitting the tower? ABC
Sports would have had it. CBS, too. Fox Sports would
have had it with a little clock in the corner and a
running death count. But the news? No. For hours and
hours, the same three-second clip ran on every station.
It
just seemed unreal, a made-for-TV event. My wife commented
that everyone she saw on TV at the scene seemed so calm,
considering what they'd been through, what they'd witnessed.
Of course, this is the sanitized, TV version of life
we get: The sounds must be muffled, lest they interfere
with the words of wisdom offered by the correspondents,
or worse, the interjected questions of the anchors;
the smells are missing, as is most of the visual impact
of the wreckage, the hundreds and hundreds of bodies,
which are not suitable fare for civilized viewers.
Instead, we get people talking, incessantly, about what
it means from a political standpoint. Will it be a turning
point in the Bush presidency? Will he be up to the challenge?
Will the Democrats stand by the Republican administration?
As if that's what anyone in the real world cares about.
For me, as tangled as my feelings were, the thing that
remained most was the image of thousands of people flocking
to hospitals and city streets, armed with photos, literally
begging anyone who passed by to look and see if they
recognized a husband, a daughter, a fiancee who remained
missing in the rubble.
Theirs
are the faces of terrorism to be remembered. Theirs
is the pain we should carry forth with us as the images
of planes and fires fade. They will not forget. For
them, life will not quickly - if ever - go on.
For
the rest of us, in a few months, we'll be living our
lives again, taking our kids to school, schlepping off
to work, going to McDonald's and Dunkin' Donuts and
Safeway (that is, if our country isn't at war with Iran,
Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan or some other country suspected
of harboring those responsible).
Despite
how I feel, how those I talk to say they feel, we will
move on, and far sooner than we should. This was a life-altering
event, and not just for those personally connected to
it. But that doesn't mean much to most people in our
anesthetized culture. My guess is we'll collectively
funnel our feelings into patriotism as long as it helps
the cause, then quickly retreat into what feels comfortable
- looking out for ourselves; striving to get ahead.
Were
I not hampered, as I wrote above, by the lack of concentration
this whole thing has left me with, I could probably
make a connection here. It might have to do with believing
the whole reason for this insane action on the part
of people very different from us might have to do with
the very things I just noted.
We
will go back to our "normal" lives, just as soon as
we can manage it. We'll be seeking what so many in the
past weeks have said was being attacked on Sept. 11:
our way of life.
I think there was certainly more to choosing the World
Trade Center as a target than the spectacle it would
provide; more than disrupting lower Manhattan or even
the financial markets. I think they were chosen because,
to an outsider (and many insiders), the people in those
buildings represented our way of life: they worked with
money, more money than anyone in most foreign nations
will ever see; they wore expensive suits and ate expensive
meals and lived expensive, unduly comfortable lives,
by the standards of ninety-nine percent of the world.
They
were what many Americans might think of as representative
of the best our country has to offer, and what others
might see as our worst. They were symbolic of our nation's
hunger for and gravitational orbit around material things.
In our anger and pain, I think the point, if indeed
that was it, will likely be lost.
And
when the fighting subsides and the pain and numbness
has retreated to a fuzzy memory and video clips, most
Americans will be right back on that quest, trying our
damnedest to tuck the whole thing quietly away and return
to "normal." Sadly, I'll probably be one of them.
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