This is an excellent documentary about the men and women who were forced to jump from the towers. The stories of the \'jumpers\' are always what get me the most when I think of Sept 11.
I remember Toronto that week, because a vast majority of flights espeacially those going to New York were diverted to Toronto airport. Posters all around for the next few weeks asking people to donate blood. Groups of tour buses being filled up with Firefighters from Toronto and Hamilton and southern Ontario heading to New York. A very hectic time. I remember the \'extra extra\' editions of all the newspapers coming out and thinking about how i\'ve never seen that done before. I remember walking down the streets of Toronto and all along the sidewalks were just packed with people huddled around a radio or a television. I remember a lot about 9/11 and Toronto, lots of little things. The body language of civilians, couples hugging, people crying, the shocked faces. When the first tower came down I was one of the many on the street around a television and I remember a dad picking up his daughter and just holding her, hugging her. It really brought a lot out of people of course as everyone knows, seeing peoples demeanors change as the realization of what was happening set in. Toronto is like a party city and to be in the middle of a massive city like this and to see the whole vibe and atmosphere change in, well, 102 minutes was really something else. I explain it badly but to see millions in your city, the city you grew up in and around and your so use to just how that city \'feels\' and to watch people go from happy and normal to sad and fearful is a very odd feeling. You feel very helpless and its something I don\'t want to feel again.
As pickles said its a day I don\'t look forward to revisiting every year. I dunno whats up with this year. Its a depressing time of year every year, but this year in particular hit me hard for some reason. Lots of terrible memories.
//www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXnA9FjvLSU //www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXnA9FjvLSU type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344">