Category Archives: true life 2001

September 11

We just closed all of the windows in the house. We’re close to the Pentagon and the air is thick with black smoke. It’s beginning to seep into the house. We sat outside with all of the neighbors for a while, but the air was turning our eyes red and making it hard to breath. It was time to come in.

Everyone smells the fuel. It’s not just my imagination. I’ve showered several times now. Washed my clothes again and again. I can’t get rid of the smell, I was no longer sure if it was real or my imagination. Everyone tell me it’s real, but for a while I wondered if they could be humoring me, pretending to smell it. It’s hard to know what the fuck to think.

We never turn on the TV in the mornings. Today, on a whim, Husband did, just as a plane hit the WTC. As they were showing the impact in replay they cut away. A second plane had crashed.

It was unthinkable. It was confusing. It was also New York, it wasn’t here.

I tore myself away and got in the car. I had a meeting, there would be hell to pay if I missed it. The Dean would never forgive me. I had a bad feeling but I went anyway.

As I drove in I surfed the radio stations looking for news. All music. No mention of NY. Traffic was bad on the highway. I had this delusional idea that I should take a shortcut. That it would be a safer route. I don’t do it often, since it’s easy to get tangled in a military convoy if you scoot through at the wrong time of day. It involves some access roads, the Pentagon parking lot, some back roads. It’s hard to know what I was thinking, but I’m pretty sure I felt like of all the potential targets in town, no one was dumb enough to hit the Pentagon. Plus, there wasn’t any news on the radio, so we had to be in the clear.

As I came up along the Pentagon I saw helicopters.

That’s not strange. It’s the Pentagon.

Then I saw the plane. There were only a few cars on the road, we all stopped. I know I wanted to believe that plane was making a low descent into National Airport, but it was nearly on the road. And it was headed straight for the building.

It made no sense.

It was there. A huge jet. Then it was gone.

A massive hole in the side of the Pentagon gushed smoke. The noise was beyond description. The smell seemed to singe the inside of my nose. The earth seemed to stop shaking for a second, but then sirens began and the ground seemed to shake again – this time from the incoming barrage of firetrucks, police cars. military vehicles.

People were pouring out of the building like ants. An MP checked on me. Made sure I hadn’t been hurt. No burning debris in the car, just smoke. Just me.

We had a conversation. I don’t remember it.

He tried to send me south, but traffic was pouring out of the city by now.

“Where do you work?”

I told him.

“Go there. Stay there.”

He cleared me to leave the grounds and sent me on my way. I felt like I’d been hypnotized. The man told me to drive north, so I drove north. It was the stupidest possible thing to do.

I called my boss. I had no memory of how to work my cellphone. I hit redial and his number came up. “Something hit the Pentagon. It must have been a helicopter.”

I knew that wasn’t right, but I heard myself say it. I heard myself believe it, if only for a minute.

“Buildings don’t eat planes. That plane, it just vanished. There should have been parts on the ground. It should have rained parts on my car. The airplane didn’t crash. Where are the parts?” That’s the conversation I had with myself on the way to work. It made sense this morning. I swear that it did.

When I got to work, no one could believe that the Pentagon had been hit. They were busy following reports that the State Department had been bombed. There’s not a lot of airflow in the media center, there in front of the monitors. After a few minutes or arguing with my coworkers, insisting the Pentagon had been hit, it came on the news. The images came on the news.

Up to that point I’d been ordered to attend that meeting I went in for in the first place. My somewhat sooty, smelly, shocked demeanor got me out of it.

Unfortunately, now there was no way to get home. The roads were jammed. There was no where to go.

I finally cleared my head enough to drive and spent hours getting home. I spent an eternity in my car. I couldn’t roll up the windows, the car smelled like the Inferno.

Eventually I got back home, back to the place I should have stayed in the first place.

There seems to be no footage of the crash, only the site. The gash in the building looks so small on TV. The massiveness of the structure lost in the tight shots of the fire. There was a plane. It didn’t go over the building. It went into the building. I want them to find it whole, wedged between floors or something. I know that isn’t going to happen, but right now I pretend.

I want to see footage of the crash.

I want to make it make sense. I want to know why there’s this gap in my memory, this gap that makes it seem as though the plane simply became invisible and banked up at the very last minute, but I don’t think that’s going to happen.

I don’t want to see footage of the crash.

It seems so unhealthy to see the planes in NY crash over and over. To see the building fall again and again. I saw it once, the Pentagon is shambles. I don’t know that I want to see the crash ever again. Even the pictures of the blaze are too much right now as the firefighters try to contain it. It’s weird to watch it on TV while the same smoke drifts by your windows.

I’ve showered and showered. Ultimately, I think I’m going to throw away my clothes. I don’t think the smell will ever come out.

more on sandra bernhard

The Tiki Crisis of 2001 is now officially over, thanks to Tikis by Bosko. They’re fabulous, check them out for all your Tiki needs! (and you have Tiki needs, even if you don’t know it).

I do this just for you:
I decided to give the (fetid) Sandra Bernhard show another chance, in the interest of giving you the most complete and accurate information possible.

Last night’s episode was actually worse than Monday night. How is this possible? Shouldn’t Sandra and her sidekick be displaying even the tiniest bit of chemistry by now? Suddenly, Regis and Cathy Lee seem like geniuses to me. At least they have some sense of comic timing…

We start out with a monologue about beauty magazines. I agree with every critique in spirit; but her delivery is so bad, her timing so off that it just hurts. Little did I know that the Deep Hurting hadn’t even begun yet. Next she sang a song about Angie Harmon. I wish I was making this whole thing up, but I’m not. She sang a song about Angie Harmon.

The only thing that made the first 10 minutes of the show tolerable was that we had the stereo on, at a slightly lower volume. The exotic sounds of Arthur Lyman made the whole opening sequence strange and kind of cool, but not in the way Sandra intended.

Gloria Steinam was the first guest. She was great, but Sandra kept interrupting her to say stupid and pointless things. When Sandra isn’t interrupting the guest to say stupid and pointless things, her sidekick Sarah is intrerupting the guest to say stupid and pointless things. Shut up. Shut up. Shut up.

Next up was necrophiliac fashionista Andre Leon-Talley. This guy held forth forever about his obsession with Marie Antoinette’s crypt and with his mad dash to visit the room she gave birth in so he could touch the curtains. Later he segued into another story about mausoleums. In between, he and Sandra talked about how awful television is now. Clearly, they’d watched the first two epsiodes of this program together.

By the time we got to the Pam Greer interview I’d pinpointed one of the things that contributes to the Badness of this program. The editing. Throughout the Pam Greer interview, the camera jumped between 5 shots. 5 static shots.

1. Close-up of Pam talking
2. Close-up of Sandra talking
3. Three shot from the center/left of the stage
4. Long shot of the set from the extreme right, through some stupid piece of scenery. You can see the three of them sitting on the stage, but can’t distinguish facial expressions, you’re so far away.
5. Very long shot, from the left of the stage from the top of the set (think security camera), also through a piece of the set. This shot is so far away you can barely distinguish who’s who on the stage.

Through the whole long interview, we jump from shot to shot, always one of these 5 static shots, at a nearly dizzying rate (5-10 seconds for each). The only thing that would make it more annoying was if the camera was handheld. And they had a masturbating chimpanzee as the cameraman. And the show was 2 hours instead of 1. Actually, I’m not sure those things would make it any worse.

The saddest part is, I actually like Sandra Bernhard. I can’t imagine what someone who doesn’t like her thinks of this god-awful mess.

couldn't afford a padded room, so I got her a padded envelope

Further proof Nisa Rant (aka sarah at creative-juices.net) needs a long vacation. I was talking about Chris Rock. She was hearing Chris Rock, but processing it as Kid Rock. As you can imagine, this was very confusing.

It’s entirely possible my endless musings about Gilligan’s Island have finally taken their toll on her. Or maybe it was the ritualized viewing of Petey Wheatstraw, the Devil’s Son-in-Law on Saturday night that melted her mind. She should have stuck around, Viva Kneivel was on after that. When Nisa and I get tired of playing Loverboy covers we have got to cover the themesong from Viva Kneivel

burned again

In lighter news, my taste has been insulted. Again. Not by a snarky Wal-Mart employee, either. Nope, this time it was even better.

Yesterday I drove to a big party supply store after work to see if I could replace our Tiki lights. I get to the shopping center, park the car, stroll to the store and walk in. The party supply store is gone. Gone. It was there a month ago. Now it’s a Hallmark store.

I can’t tell you the depths to which I despise the manufactured cuteness that is Hallmark. Hallmark is definately one of the levels in my personal vision of hell. It’s not one of the higher more benign levels, like the Sears auto-shop waiting room level. No, Hallmark is one of the lower, more painful, levels. Realllly close to the brimstone and the fire.

Needless to say, I’m standing there looking pretty horrified when the snippy clerks comes up and starts condescending to me.

“Can I help you?”
“Wasn’t this a party supply store?”
“It’s a Hallmark store.”
“Okay.”
“Can I help you?” (more nasal this time)
“I’m looking for Tiki Lamps.”
“How TACKY.”

Yeah. That’s right, dude. I’m waaaay beneath you. May you live a long life and someday reign supreme in the Kingdom of Beani Baby Heaven.

I’m two for two. Any other god-awful places I can go for personal insults? Maybe I’ve found a new hobby.