MedicPrincess
Forum Deputy Chief
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The "other forum" I post in got me thinking about this. So since I didn't find it here, Where were you on that day in September???
I was working as a temp for ENRON Downtown Houston. At the moment they were hit I was on I-10 driving to work, when all of the sudden traffic stopped moving. Then the radio said it looked like a "small" plane hit the WTC. It's horrible, but I remember getting pissed because traffic was stopped, and that meant not only would I be late, but I would have to park half the world away and walk and the heat in downtown Houston in September at 5:00 when I got off that day was going to be opressive (that was before I found out about NW Florida Heat). So I am sitting there all pissed off because traffic wouldn't move, when the radio said another plane hit the other tower.
Suddenly I was less angry, and more confused. By the time I got to ENRON that day, the Pentagon had been hit and the 4th plane had went down. There were TV"s in the elevators and they were tuned to CNN. That was my first chance to actaully see what happened. By the time I had reached the 45th floor where I was temping that day, they had received a bomb threat and we had to evacuate...and the elevators were off limits.
It was pretty scary to walk outside and see the entire area I worked is crawling with police, fire, EMS, military. They were, in no uncertain terms, telling us to get away from the buildings and evacuate the downtown area. It was later when I talked to my sister who was an upper level manager at ENRON that I found out, that whole group of businesses in that area were on a so called list of Possible Terrorist Targets.
On my way home the radio reported the towers had "fell." It wasn't until I picked up my son from daycare and got home that I actually understood what they meant by that. As heartbroken as I was about the towers falling and the loss of life there, I remember just being enraged about the hit on the Pentagon. I believe I even expressed a "How dare they" sentiment.
I was working as a temp for ENRON Downtown Houston. At the moment they were hit I was on I-10 driving to work, when all of the sudden traffic stopped moving. Then the radio said it looked like a "small" plane hit the WTC. It's horrible, but I remember getting pissed because traffic was stopped, and that meant not only would I be late, but I would have to park half the world away and walk and the heat in downtown Houston in September at 5:00 when I got off that day was going to be opressive (that was before I found out about NW Florida Heat). So I am sitting there all pissed off because traffic wouldn't move, when the radio said another plane hit the other tower.
Suddenly I was less angry, and more confused. By the time I got to ENRON that day, the Pentagon had been hit and the 4th plane had went down. There were TV"s in the elevators and they were tuned to CNN. That was my first chance to actaully see what happened. By the time I had reached the 45th floor where I was temping that day, they had received a bomb threat and we had to evacuate...and the elevators were off limits.
It was pretty scary to walk outside and see the entire area I worked is crawling with police, fire, EMS, military. They were, in no uncertain terms, telling us to get away from the buildings and evacuate the downtown area. It was later when I talked to my sister who was an upper level manager at ENRON that I found out, that whole group of businesses in that area were on a so called list of Possible Terrorist Targets.
On my way home the radio reported the towers had "fell." It wasn't until I picked up my son from daycare and got home that I actually understood what they meant by that. As heartbroken as I was about the towers falling and the loss of life there, I remember just being enraged about the hit on the Pentagon. I believe I even expressed a "How dare they" sentiment.