Where were were you on 9/11?

NYC Skyline pre-9/11

It was a crystal clear beautiful early Autumn day.  The traffic to work that day was good but very backed up heading into the city.  I was working on a Deaf inpatient ward in a psychiatric hospital in New Jersey.  Everyone was late that day for some reason and no one showed up to morning rounds.  As I walked through the day room the patients said that a plane had somehow flown into the tower and was on fire.  I remember something like that happening when I lived in LA and watched as the second plane hit.  I knew immediately that this was purposeful.  I wanted to protect my patients, who as inpatients were by definition unstable and had already experienced so much trauma in their lives.  But I also didn’t think that shielding them from news was better.

I started interpreting the news coverage for them because close captioning went down and the regular interpreters hadn’t gotten there yet and when they did, they were a mess, like the rest of the staff.  At the time my sign language was pretty good, but simple and I was able to tell them what was happening, while minimizing the drama.  The patients managed better than staff.  I lost it when the second tower went down and they tried to comfort me.  The hospital went into lock down and I didn’t get home until late that night.  I was supposed to leave the next day for a wedding in Bethesda but it was postponed because the groom couldn’t there since the planes were grounded.  I sat at home watching TV and crying, not liking the change that was brewing, and thinking that perhaps Freud was right and there really is a Death Instinct – a human drive toward destruction.

Those towers were my guideposts and bearings from the time I moved to NY.   I was so excited when I moved to an apartment in July of that year and I could see them from my front door.

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