Posts Tagged ‘911’

ALMOST CARRIE ~ Ten Years Later

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Last week, as I re-watched “Models and Mortals” in preparation for this column, I realized something startling: I am finally as old as Carrie was in Season One.  I am finally 32.

Ten years ago, on September 11th, 2001, I was living in New York for the first time, subletting a place on 137th Street in Harlem.  I was two months out of college and had a shitty job telemarketing for the Roundabout Theatre Company.  I worked nights and there was no need to ever get up early.  My roommate had more traditional employment: he worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 104th floor of One World Trade.

Around 8:55 that Tuesday, the phone woke me up.  It was my roommate telling me he was alright.  I had no idea what he was talking about.  “There is a hole, a giant hole in the side of my building.  Turn on the TV.  I’m coming home.”  He had been due at work at 8:30, but that morning he had overslept.

I turned on the television and within a few minutes, I saw the second plane hit.  My roommate and I spent the next several weeks not moving from the couch.  Work was cancelled indefinitely.  My roommate lost 658 co-workers.

A month later, I got my first official apartment with two girlfriends from college.  One of them temped at some company connected with the entertainment industry, and she got to bring home free DVDs (could they have been tapes?) as a perk.  One night, she brought home Season One of Sex and the City.  I was 22 years old.

We were mesmerized.  Episode after episode, we watched our beautiful city in its pre-9/11 form, showcased in the most extraordinary ways.  This was the city we had dreamt of, the city we swore we’d live in one day, the city we promised never to leave.  This was the city that, despite our newness, was ours, even more so because we’d been there on its most terrible day.

I have moved five times since I came here.  My current apartment is in Boerum Hill, in Brooklyn, and from the little terrace of my fourth floor walk-up, I can see lower Manhattan.  I have a clear view of One World Trade, with its 58 completed floors and cranes at the top.  I am 32, the same age Carrie was when she decided to have sex like a man, and the same age she was when she realized that that wouldn’t quite work.  I am 32, the same age Carrie was when she thought she might be pregnant, the same age she was when she had her picture put on the side of a bus, the same age she was when she collided with Mr. Big on the street, the contents of her purse scattering on the sidewalk for the whole world to see.

Am I in the same place that Carrie was when she began?  A lot has happened since I was 22.  I’ve gotten married, I’ve bought an apartment, I’ve gone to graduate school.  I’ve been depressed, I’ve failed loved ones, I’ve switched careers.  I’d like to think I’ve had sex like a man, and I’ve certainly had my share of pregnancy scares.  I have a relationship that is ahead of schedule, but a writing career that is way behind.  The only constant in all of this has been New York, the magnificent backdrop to every up and down.

I was recently talking to a friend in California who was asking about One World Trade, asking about it’s progress.  “The rest of the country doesn’t know,” he said, “the rest of the country is just picturing a whole in the ground, a crater, utter destruction.”  No, I said,  That’s not true at all!  There are 58 stories—there is progress, real progress!

After everything we’ve been through, am I still in love with the city that has sheltered me for the past ten years?  And can you even be in love with a city—real, complex, complicated love?  Absofuckinglutely.

 

Emily Sproch is a writer and a “Sex and the City” tour guide.  Each Friday, she chronicles the fine line between reality and fiction in her column “Almost Carrie.”

Ten years Later…

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

You don’t even have to really say just what you’re referring to. In the months, the weeks and even the days leading up this week, just about everyone I know has given me a recount of where they were ten years ago.
Ten years ago – when life as we know it changed. Ten years ago, I was in Atlanta, working for CNN. I had just gotten to work and was watching the live reports of how a small plane had hit the World Trade Center. I saw the flames and wasn’t buying it. Small plane? No way.
I started calling friends and family to say I thought we were under attack. I was on the phone with my friend Kathy when the second plane hit. Suddenly there were reports of other planes, other attacks. CNN Center went to lock down and life as we know it changed.
This column is supposed to be about travel. And travel is where people associate the most obvious changes in routine. Before September 11, 2001, you could walk your loved ones to the gate at the airport. You didn’t need an ID to get on a plane. You didn’t need to put small liquids in a baggy to pass through security. You didn’t need to remove your laptop from its case, take off your shoes, take off your coat.
Now, it’s so standard, you don’t even realize how it used to be… ten years ago.
This week is about remembering those days a decade ago and the events that changed them forever.
It’s hard to believe Sunday will mark an entire decade. People are a bit on edge now. They are concerned that even though Osama Bin Laden is gone, his minions will attempt to make a statement.
In short, Bin Laden is dead but continues to terrorize us. There are those of us who will never feel safe again no matter how good security is, no matter how great Intelligence works.
It’s okay to be cautious, but please don’t be fearful. That’s no way to live.
In addition to the ceremonies on Sunday morning, there are several other events you can attend or take part in:
Thursday – 9/8/11
7:30 p.m.: Port Authority and United Community Civic Association will hold a candlelight vigil at McManus Memorial Park located at 81st Street and Grand Central Service Road, Queens.
7:30 p.m.: The Public Theater Explores “The 9/11 Decade: New York and America After the Towers,” Alec Baldwin hosts the event and the discussion to follow
7:30 p.m: Performance of Richard Nelson’s “Sweet and Sad” at 25 Lafayette Street, Manhattan.

FRIDAY 9/9/11
8:30 a.m.: Unified Court Systems Officials hold a memorial mass at Supreme Court, Mineola.
3:30 p.m.: Manhattan College (Riverdale, Bronx) holds “We Remember” service. Former mayor Rudolph Giuliani will be featured.
4 p.m.: St. Paul’s Cathedral, Manhattan – Free performance by Young People’s Chorus of NY
4 p.m.: Tribute by the Broadway community held in Times Square
5 p.m.: Columbus Circle, Manhattan – Free performance by Young People’s Chorus of NY
5:30 p.m.: Peace of Heart Choir sings at 9/11 anniversary event at Central Park South and West 59th Street, Manhattan.
6 p.m.: Imam Feisal Rauf hosts Muslim event honoring years of interfaith work to recognize various groups and individuals since 9/11 (Interchurch Center, 475 Riverside Drive, Manhattan)
8 p.m.: Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation holds “A Tribute to Our Heroes” fundraising concert at St. George Theater, Staten Island.
8:30 p.m.: Trinity Church near Ground Zero – Free performance by Young People’s Chorus of NY

SATURDAY 9/10/11
8:46 a.m.: Hand in Hand/Remembering 9/11 event along Manhattan’s West Side waterfront between Greenwich Street and Battery Place, Manhattan.
1 p.m.: Peace of Heart choir sings at 278 Spring Street, Manhattan
2 p.m.: FDNY holds memorial service at for firefighters and their families at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Manhattan.
3:30 p.m.: Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan holds reunion BBQ for 9/11 first responders, recovery workers and volunteers
6 p.m.: Trinity Church’s St. Paul’s Chapel will remain open for all-night vigil, prayer and meditation.
7:30 p.m.: Lincoln Center Concert – Lincoln Center, Manhattan.