WHERE WERE YOU ON 9/11?

There are a few days in your lifetime that you remember forever, in great detail.  Where you were, who you were with, and how you felt.  Where were you on 9/11?

For me, it was similar to that first huge memory on Nov. 22, 1963, when Kennedy was shot.  My firstborn was one month old, and I can remember the sun shining in our apartment window in Evanston, Illinois. My then husband was at work in downtown Chicago.  I know I was wearing a black sweater, and my son had on a little white sleeper.

 For about an hour, I simply sat and listened and watched, too stunned to move.  Suddenly, the stay-at-home moms  came out of their apartments and onto the sidewalk, and finally gathered in my apartment because it was the largest and could hold the most people.  And we talked and watched TV,  and no one had anything to eat or drink for hours.

On 9/11, it was a different story.  My husband was able to take walks then, and he had a radio plugged into his ear.   It was a warm , sunny day and we were both wearing sleeveless shirts.   He heard it right away, of course, but when he told me what had happened, I thought at first it was a hoax, or he was mistaken.  Even then, we had no idea how extensive the damage, or how many people had been killed.  Finally, we passed a house where a young man whom we had never met came out from his doorway, and asked us if we had heard what happened.  So it was true.  We shook our heads, and mutely turned away, too stunned to reply.

Looking back, it seems strange that we were at war, but war was never declared (how did that differ from the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor?)  and life went on pretty much the same for those who lived far from New York & DC.

But we will never forget. Where were you on 9/11?

DO YOURSELF A FAVOR

2020 WAS the worst election year I can ever remember.  And that’s saying a lot, considering my age.  Politics got all mixed up with health care.  President Trump went into denial, saying the  COVID -19 pandemic would be over by Easter.  Not true. New York  Governor Cuomo was more afraid of Trump’s criticism than the lives of  nursing home patients.  Instead of taking advantage  of a Navy ship  sent to accommodate covid-19 victims , Cuomo  shipped them out of hospitals into nursing homes.  What a mess.  Locked up at home, we binged watched the internet, listening to our TV cable news station of choice.   It was exhausting. Now that the pandemic is nearing the end, do yourself a favor. Quit thinking about politics.

Do yourself a favor. Now that the pandemic is nearly over, stop worrying about politics.
Health care influenced  the 2020 election. Do yourself a favor and forget about politics.

Don’t predict the dire outcome of Biden’s presidency before it’s even started.  Let it spin.  There’s nothing you can do and if you believe you can foresee the state of the USA in 2024, you’re kidding yourself.  Already, Trump is saying Biden’s first month was a disaster.  No one can know at this point in time whether the Biden presidency will be a success. A lot can happen in four years. Looking back on the history of our country, who could have predicted  Pearl Harbor?   The 9/11 attack on the world trade center?  . The 2008 recession?  The  Covid-19 pandemic of 2020-2021?

This is what I know and believe:  No matter who is elected as President,  the United States of America is–and will remain—strong. .  We are a nation of immigrants, with the courage  to leave their native country,  and the resilience to start a new life in spite of all the hardships they had to endure in a new land.  Yes, some presidents do a better job than others.  But:  four years isn’t enough time to ruin all the marvelous  things that we have achieved in the past four centuries.

 So do yourself a favor.  Return to school or work at home.  Get some exercise. Play games.  Take your family  on  a picnic.   Have some fun.  Turn off the news and enjoy your life.