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Showplace Of The South

 

Showplace Of The South 

Original photograph hosted at Flickr.com.

Until Further Notice

 

Until Further Notice 

Original photograph hosted at Flickr.com.

What I Remember

I don’t think I have ever written down my remembrances of September 11, 2001.  So, even though it seems incredibly trite what with every blogger in the universe paying tribute and remembering and marking the solemn occasion and so forth, it is probably as good a time as any to record my memories of that day here in this, the repository of my scattered mind.

I was in Orlando, Florida.  I was finishing up my first stint at the University of Alabama, and had decided to enroll in a flight school (the timing, right?) in nearby Sanford.  I had driven down the night before, and the plan was to get up early the next morning and go apartment hunting in Altamonte Springs.  My hotel was a crappy, interstate-side La Quinta Inn – with a door that hardly locked at all and in a neighborhood that was never, even at 3 a.m., quiet.  Despite my exhaustion and the noisy environs, I was actually in a pretty good mood.  I was graduating.  I had a purpose in life.  I was taking charge and doing something different and new and exciting. 

Being a little creeped-out, however, I slept with the television on – something with some soothing talk that I didn’t have to concentrate on too much: CNN.  I woke up, probably a little late but not unexpectedly so since I had gotten in late the night before, probably sometime around 8:15.  CNN still softly going through the morning-show routine, I took a shower.  When I stepped out and toweled off, there was a smoking hole in one of the World Trade Center towers, and the talking heads were speculating that a small plane had gone off course (which I thought was odd since it was by all appearances a clear, gorgeous day in New York City).  As reports trickled in – witnesses who said it was a much bigger plane, aviation experts talking about what may have gone wrong, etc. – the tragedy manifested itself right there in front of me… live on television.  The anchor was interviewing someone and they had the split-screen going, with live footage of the Trade Center on the non-interview half.  As the interview was going on, an airplane appeared in the wide shot on the right-hand side.  The airplane was low and in the middle of all the buildings.  I remember thinking "well no wonder an airplane hit a building – look how close they fly to those skyscrapers!"  Then it went into the side of the second tower.  The plume of fire burst out the other side and the story changed.  The anchor and his guest stopped mid-sentence as people everywhere tried to process what they were witnessing.

I sat on the edge of the bed and watched the footage continue.  The rescue efforts.  The speculation on who was responsible.  The Pentagon and the plane crash in Pennsylvania.  When I would walk outside the door (never too far from the television) to have a cigarette, what I noticed first off was the absence of sound.  I don’t know if I was imagining it or what – obviously there was still traffic and people doing things outside – but there was no aircraft noise overhead.  The sky was an impossibly clear blue.  They had grounded all air traffic, but whether my mind just accentuated that fact or if Orlando was actually perceptively quieter I have no idea.

When the first tower fell, I called my father, mostly just to talk to somebody friendly and real.  He answered the phone with a familiar "heyyy, buddy!"  I said, "you’re not watching TV, are you?"  He said no, and I told him he’d better turn it on.  He said okay and asked what channel.  I said "it doesn’t matter."  We watched the second tower come down together.

The rest of that day is not very clear to me.  I remember ending the night in a sports bar across the street, sipping and not really enjoying a beer with a tiny spattering of locals.  No one was talking.  There was no music on.  All the televisions were on the news channels.  I remember sobbing like a child when Congress sang "God Bless America" on the Capitol steps.  I broke down again in my room later that night, when they showed the band at the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace playing "The Star-Spangled Banner" in place of "God Save the Queen."  In the in-between spaces I alternated from outright tears to numb, slack-jawed shock and horror. 

And that was that.  The next day I got up and found an apartment.  I stayed another night, then packed up and came home.  I graduated.  I got my commercial pilot’s license.  Life happened.  Unfolded.  Life went on. 

I will end with a couple of links.  9/11 was a horrendous atrocity.  It was, indeed, a defining moment for my generation – just as the assassination of JFK was a defining moment for my parents’ generation.  But, on this day of remembrance, I find myself considering the larger facts.  Consider the casualties of 9/11 against the casualties of, say, the war in Iraq.  Which is more atrocious?

No, we should never forget.  We should honor those who were innocently slaughtered, and those who gave their lives to save them.  Be we should be mindful of our own actions as well, lest we go down in the annals of history as even more despicable than the Al Qaeda terrorists who carried out the attacks – the mastermind of which, by the way, is still very much at-large.

Farewell Teddy

Senator Edward M. Kennedy  1932-2009

thanks for getting me all misty-eyed, Jeff Danziger

It is a sad day, to be sure… and it would have been regardless of the political climate.  But with the bitter partisanship, the stalemates and standoffs, the pussyfooting and the pandering, appeasement and acquiescence, the embellishments and the fearmongering and the overarchingly corrosive debates going on across the country and in DC’s halls of power, Senator Kennedy’s death is much, much more poignant.  It has already been suggested (three days ago by Sen. McCain, for example) that the Senate would be a great deal more civil and productive were our Liberal Lion on the floor.  I’m willing, in my admitted pessimism, to go further. 

Meaningful health care reform is impossible without Ted Kennedy.

At worst, nothing will be done.  The entire initiative will stall out among intra-party squabbling and bipartisan deadlocks.  At best, we will get some watered-down version that will ensure the insurance/drug/healthcare corporation money and influence keep flowing.  No real change.  No real progress.  What the movement needs is twofold – and Senator Kennedy could have delivered them both. 

First, we need a statesman who will shake Washington’s marble columns with his roar – and, second, we need someone whose roar will be listened to and considered on both sides of the aisle.  We need someone to stand on the Senate floor and shake his (or her) fist and stand up for the little guy, and who is so well regarded as not to be dismissed as just another liberal crackpot.  I cannot think of another politician in Washington with those qualities.  Ted Kennedy was a towering liberal who was, at the same time, deeply respected by his conservative rivals.  Who will reach across to the other side and still stand strong on progressive principles? 

Obama (whose progressive leadership is in question, anyway) has left the Capitol and has taken Senators Biden and Clinton with him.  Does anyone else have the potential to fit that mold?  Who will step into Teddy’s shoes?  What icon have we now?  Who can we point to and proudly say ‘this is our standard-bearer… this man(or woman) represents us, shouts for us when we have no voice, fights for the public good… and DELIVERS!’? 

Anyway. 

Josh Marshall’s Talking Points Memo has a long roster of remembrances from national and world leaders.  It is worth a read.  If you have a little more time, watch the video of Vice President Biden’s remarks.  Very moving. 

Thanks, Senator.  And goodbye.  You are greatly missed.

Goober Natorial

The primaries are still over 9 months away, but the Alabama gubernatorial race is already hot and crowded.  I have my early preferences, of course, but I will refrain from posting judgments here at this early date.  What I will do is offer links to the candidates’ official websites, where you may (and are encouraged to) peruse each individual’s biography and platform.  The 2010 election is looking mighty important.  Our education system will likely face more budget cuts and unemployment is sure to remain high.  I honestly do not know who will best serve Alabama’s citizens.  One thing is certain, though – and this is coming from a lifelong, liberal democrat here – whoever ends up filling that position will have a class act to follow.  Ladies and gentlemen, your contenders:Flag

Robert Bentley (R)

Bradley Byrne (R)

Artur Davis (D)

Kay Ivey (R)

Tim James (R)

Bill Johnson (R)

Roy Moore (R)

Ron Sparks (D)

On Smiling

© Siegfried Woldhek 2007© Siegfried Woldhek 2007You know, I was on the fence as to whether today’s post would be angry or happy.  In the end, happy has won out.  Sure, I can get a lot more material out of dark, moody or controversial subjects, but sometimes the day ends up being too bright to immerse myself in the muck.  

Today I was reminded of a phenomenon that is actually very simple – a smile can brighten an entire day.  Trite, is it not?  Don’t think I  don’t know it.  But it is true.  I remember having really bad days completely transformed into wonderful days just because a person I passed on the sidewalk smiled a kind “he© Siegfried Woldhek 2007llo” smile rather t© Siegfried Woldhek 2007han just keeping their  eyes cast down at their feet.  It is almost like that fleeting, shallow connection is enough to restore the idea of the basic goodness of our fellow human beings. 

We have a duty, I think, to be kind to others – and I am often guilty of failing to practice that very basic rule.  It is a small thing to smile, but it can set off a chain reaction of silent, mutual empathy among the people who move in and out of our little  lives every day.  So, in aid of nothing less noble than human kindness, here is a how-to guide to smiling.

It is not like I was having a bad day today, but a tiny, genuine, sideways smile just lit it all the way up.  Thank you for that.  Now go out there and make other people’s lives a little brighter. 

Good night!

drawings above from the Anatomy of the Smile collection by Siegfried Woldhek