“Realize deeply that the present moment is all you have.
Make the NOW the primary focus of your life.”
- Eckhart Tolle, The Power of Now
The temperature had warmed to 32 degrees (0C) on that cold
winter’s day in New York City. Below 10
degrees (-12C) the night before, we prepared to layer clothing as much as we
could – we didn’t need as much as we had anticipated.


Ground Zero of the World Trade Center.
“Ground Zero,” a term used to describe a point on the earth’s
surface closest to the detonation of an explosion. On this day, as it turned out, it was both
geographic and soulful – the physical site and our hearts…
In Memoriam…
The memorial fountains – one for each of the destroyed
towers – and subterranean museum sites are framed on three sides by Vesey,
Liberty and Church streets…the West Side Highway ‘closes the box’…
As we approached the first of the two deeply set fountains, an
eerie feeling seeped through my skin…a feeling not so easy to describe, a ‘presence’
really…a ‘knowing’…a disconcerting sensation, communicating the inexpressible
magnitude this place had played in our lives and our history.
It wasn’t the first time an awareness of ‘other presence’
had pressed on my spirit. It happened at Dealy Plaza, in the West End District
of Dallas where a young American President was assassinated….Auschwitz-Birkenau
where the showers of death and work camps of the ‘living dead’ still resonate
in the air…
Here, once again the cloak of discomfort and overwhelming
sense of loss oozed through my clothing, both fabric and living, to unbalance the
chemistry in my mind.
There is no way to equate these events; it was simply the
common denominator of holy sobriety covering my soul I found so unsettling.
Hold your mind…don’t
slip too far into a bottomless pit of thought. I told myself.
The Museum…
We had the time and so purchased tickets for the museum…the
intimate memorial…the place in which threads of the end of the lives of real
people who had breathed and loved and struggled and failed and succeeded –
everyday lives – were woven into an experiential tapestry that will no doubt
echo and reverberate and resound in the coming months and years until my
breath, as theirs, is finished.
Photo after photo of folks with expressions of disbelief and
shock lined the entryway just inside the entrance…a common expression emerging
amongst the faces of every race and creed – hands over mouth or on forehead,
trying to make sense of the paper and debris floating through the air and to
the street below like celebratory confetti…there was no celebration here.
People had simply been going on about their days with the
freedom this country provides.
The event was
unthinkable!
The long escalator into the cavernous main museum lay right
beside a set of stairs used by some who escaped the unfolding apocalypse…that
physically “…escaped the unfolding apocalypse…” – for of little doubt they did
not escape leviathan who buried his fearfully long and poisonous talons deeply
into their minds that fateful day.
series of events…television programs and news casts interrupted,
“In New York City
Today, we are getting reports that an
airplane has just
crashed into one of the Twin Towers.”
“Wait just a minute General,
we have actual footage of
the airplane crashing
into the North Tower!” Cut to video…
“Alice, this is
John,” the unknown voice said. “An
airplane
has just crashed into
the other tower. It’s…it’s…well, it’s
just horrible. We’re
okay in this tower, I’ll call you later, bye.”
Of course, John was not okay and the return call to Alice never
came.
On the walls were quotes from those who had lost loved ones.
The most poignant to me:
“I wished the day
would never end, because that day began
with Alan alive, and
I wanted to stay in the day he had life.”
So much to see…
Animated flight patterns and timelines of the hijackings
appeared on walls mesmerizing those watching…histories and flight patterns of
the dozen or more flights the they took as they studied the habits of flight
attendants and pilots as months of practice runs were taken in preparation…all
of which was chilling.
In the days following the attack and collapse of the towers,
hand made pictures were posted all over the city with variances of these
messages - hoping against hope:
“Has anyone seen this
man (woman)? If so, please contact___”
“William ____, my
father did not come home. If you know
anything about him,
please call ______”
That day while people ran
from those buildings, police and firefighters ran into them, doing everything in their power to help people
escape the every increasing inferno above.
More than four hundred of them died helping others as the buildings
collapsed on top of them.
What can be said,
really?
This place struck reverence into my heart. It is in moments
like this, that one’s vocabulary fails to provide anything meaningful to
express the magnitude of sobriety and feelings.
There are so many things that are still unfolding in my
mind, I am uncertain what to say.
Perhaps I can say this.
Every week, I GET to write whatever I like as I carry on my
life, and put it up for public view. Whatever the reader feels about the things
I say, I am secure that the ‘thought police’ will not knock on my door to take
me away. This, of course, has not
historically nor culturally always been the case.
I am grateful for this, because I understand I only have this
moment to think about things I would like to say… this moment to write these
thoughts…this moment to appreciate that the unexpected future rushing toward me
at light speed, may bring with it...
the unknown…the unthinkab…
- ted
No comments:
Post a Comment