A 9/11 View -
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2003
Programs: UA 1K, Hyatt Diamond
Posts: 934
A 9/11 View -
September 11, 2001 was tremendously personal experience.
I remember listening to "Bob & Tom" in the morning on the way to work. Which just happened to be in the control center at MSP. I was at my desk when the next tower was hit.
The next few hours were enormously challenging. The communication necessary between government, company, airport, employees and passengers was impressive under the circumstances. All five "stages" of grief sometimes expressed in a blink of an eye.
I remember the first time I was able to set the radio, phone and headset down and take a breath. The place was a ghost town, taxiways lined up line parking lots and the first moment I realized I may have lost countless friends and family.
Having grown up outside of New York City, I had many friends and family who work in the towers or in the Trade Center district. A lifelong "airliner" I may have whispered goodbye to friends onboard as well.
A few days later I stopped counting at 11.
I remember listening to "Bob & Tom" in the morning on the way to work. Which just happened to be in the control center at MSP. I was at my desk when the next tower was hit.
The next few hours were enormously challenging. The communication necessary between government, company, airport, employees and passengers was impressive under the circumstances. All five "stages" of grief sometimes expressed in a blink of an eye.
I remember the first time I was able to set the radio, phone and headset down and take a breath. The place was a ghost town, taxiways lined up line parking lots and the first moment I realized I may have lost countless friends and family.
Having grown up outside of New York City, I had many friends and family who work in the towers or in the Trade Center district. A lifelong "airliner" I may have whispered goodbye to friends onboard as well.
A few days later I stopped counting at 11.