It’s hard to believe that it’s been eleven years since the devastating terrorist attacks on American soil, which left our country paralyzed with the enormity of lives lost and succeeded in the destruction of two of the most iconic towers in the world, occurred. Time has a permutable way of standing still or accelerating in one’s life depending on their perspective. Ask a firefighter to recall the events of that infamous day as he braved the annihilation and he’ll elicit each detail with vivid clarity, as though it had happened yesterday. Ask a parent or a spouse who lost a loved one on that most heartbreaking of days and they’ll reminisce how it feels like a lifetime since they felt their embrace.
I will never forget that morning. “Where were you on September 11th?” has joined the annals of conversation in recent years as “Where were you when Kennedy was shot?” did in past. In retrospect, something did feel very different as the day began. I remember waking to a stunningly beautiful morning in the northeast; the temperature was perfectly aligned with an Indian summer. I also remember thinking, as I pulled open the shades to my terrace, that this was a “Wizard of Oz” type of day … a day where everything looks slightly ethereal, curiously exaggerated in its beauty.
The sky had a patina glaze to it, intense shades of blue set were set against the backdrop of a dazzling sun; there was a lucidity that glossed the atmosphere and seemed to intensify everything it touched, from the leaves of a tree to the feel of the air. It was, ironically, a morning that would make a person feel grateful to be alive.
I remember looking out from the terrace of my apartment as smoke started to billow across the Hudson. My first thoughts were that a huge fire had occurred downtown, something not uncommon in a city the size of Manhattan. As I turned on the television to see if something would be reported on the morning news, I watched, simultaneously, as stunned news anchors reported that a plane had struck the first tower of the World Trade Center, and smoke intensified in the distance from the view of my terrace. It appeared during those first few minutes that this was nothing more than a random and tragic accident. The shock and mayhem that escalated as a second plane hit the second tower left little doubt to what was really happening and the truth became evident: America was under attack. It was a surreal moment.
I also remember distinctly, the immediate days that followed—the grief and heaviness that was suspended in the air, the public trauma and anger that rose with fluctuating emotions, and the pervasive feeling of helplessness coupled with an intense desire for retribution that seemed to grasp all Americans in unison. With the heightened state of consciousness also came a sense of gentleness and interconnectedness that blanketed our communities through a collective grief: People came together as one; the inessential annoyances and vents of frustration aimed at another that often accompany day-to-day life in the city seemed to dissipate, now replaced by a simple courtesy and compassionate nod that silently acknowledged “we’re in this together.”
As we honor those who lost their lives in this unforgettable attack, we can also use this symbolic day to reflect on the 9-11’s of our own lives. No one gets through this journey called Life without the trials and tribulations that accompany it; each one of us must go through, at times, a difficulty we need desperately need strength for, whether the adversity comes in the form of an emotional, physical or circumstantial nature. Remember … when the buildings of your life disintegrate and crumble, first rest in the embers and then rise from the ashes. There are two things I know to be true: You’re always stronger than you think, and life will go on.
“The courage of life is often a less dramatic spectacle than the courage of a final moment; but it is no less a magnificent mixture of triumph and tragedy.”
(President John F. Kennedy)

(Karen Sgambati Photography: September 11th Memorial, Weehawken, New Jersey)