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ten

Some things you don’t forget.

“Did you have classes on September 11?”

“Yup.”

“When were you supposed to be in at school?”

“I wanted to be there at 12:00.”

“What day was September 11?”

“Tuesday.”

“Did they cancel classes?”

“Eventually.”

 

Some things you can’t remember.

I can’t remember if I tried to call any of my friends to see if they were okay.

I can’t remember if I tried to call anyone, for that matter.

I can’t remember who called me or tried to call me.

I can’t remember whether anyone who tried to call would have been able to reach me, anyway.

I can’t remember when I finally turned off the TV.

I can’t remember when they let us back below 14th Street.

I can’t remember when I finally let myself go below Houston Street.

 

Some things you wish were not even a dream.

what kind of fortnight has it been

(with apologies to Aaron Sorkin)

Even as I charged ahead towards a new future in my trips to Boston and DC, in my visits with old high school and college friends I was reminded of an altogether different past—a past in which I envisioned something completely different than the path I now find myself following, a future characterized by Fourier transforms and Smith charts. Delighted as regions of my brain probably last exercised in college sprang back into action talking shop with Amanda and John the electrical engineers and Angela the computer engineer, I nonetheless felt wistful at leaving all of that behind. At the same time, in Donna the teacher, and in other classmates and friends who went onto separate careers, I found some reassurance.

Technology never stopped exciting me. Math and physics still excite me. But are they enough to make me want to wake up in the morning?

Only if I can directly help someone by doing it.

I’ll just have to find some way to be an EE-doc, I guess.

travel safe, mr. shady.

I wasn’t expecting to make those calls again so soon–those calls that no one ever really knows how to make, those calls that, if you’re on the other end, you don’t know what to say in response. If not for that always-on connection that is my iPhone, I might have been relieved of that responsibility. But because I did get the message when I did… it’s one small thing I could do for a friend I hadn’t seen for years. Fred, I will try to make it out to see you, one last time.

Fred and Donna at graduation

This is always how I picture Fred.

By the way, I’m way past done with tragedy for this year.

“I want to be a comfort to my friends in tragedy. And I want to be able to celebrate with them in triumph. And for all the times in between, I just want to be able to look them in the eye.” -Josh Lyman, The West Wing

why yes, they are coming back to me.

(12/365)

I was aiming for wit in today’s 365 post description, but all humor aside, the fortune (which was from yesterday’s lunch) is remarkably accurate. At least, I hope it is.

On a related topic, catching up on life has meant that Project Write Letters has stalled a bit. “This train is being delayed due to a train in front of us. We should be moving shortly. Thank you for riding New York City Transit.”

it wasn’t always love.

[As I troll through my digital archives, piecing together memories of Scott for a brain that often fails to remember the more mundane details of life (it's those details that I think not only help provide context to what actually does matter, but also trigger memories that might be otherwise buried unreachable in my subconscious), I find things that I think are worth remembering. I hope no one minds me sharing them.]

If you asked me nowadays, I would tell you that, despite the tragedy of a certain day, I wouldn’t trade my college years in New York for anything. If nothing else, they clarified my love of the city (a term which, by the way, can only refer to one place) and left me with many fond memories–of people, places, and things, and a siren-like call to return.

(Continued)

on the eve of a new year

2009 is almost over, and I can’t help but wonder where it all went. Not only that, but a new decade (as measured by the tens digit) will soon begin. This new year bring a new calendar decade; but the year after it brings a new life decade (!!!!!!!!!!). Two different decades are almost over, and I can’t help but freak out.

I can’t help but wonder, after having made a few trips to the hospital to visit a dear friend, now that I’ve set a course for a new career, whether these last six+ years couldn’t have been better spent. I can’t help but wish I were already in school. At the same time, there are moments when I can’t help but question whether this new path is the right one. A homeless man, barely dressed enough to survive the cold, passed on the sidewalk without batting an eyelash (I’ve seen so many); ten minutes later, a true Good Samaritan comes to his aid, sending for help. Is that kind of indifference incompatible with the profession I hope to join?

For my friend, I can’t help but be thankful for the miracle of his existence; but, reminded of its fragility and of ours as well, I can’t help but remember the close friends I once had, the friendships I’ve since let fall by the wayside (sadly, his among them)–the friendships I now resolve to rekindle and to never take for granted.

And I can’t help but wonder if I’ve accomplished everything I should have by the time I turn 30. Well–as I’ve heard said, 30 is the new 20…maybe there’s some truth to that.

rest well, kenny fare.

As I listened to the soloist at Kenny Fare’s funeral service perform “Amazing Grace,” I thought to myself: there are songs I am incapable of singing (short of effecting a complete mental dissociation from time and place) because hitting certain notes within their scores choke me up, indelibly associated in my memory with tragic events. Songs on that list include anything they played in church immediately after 9/11, especially “God Bless America”; and definitely “Amazing Grace,” which is certainly a staple of Christian funeral services. I thought of the songs they sung for Auntie Menchie. I thought of “Ave Maria” and how I don’t believe I can listen to it without remembering her, or Grandma. I thought, rather cynically I admit, why have those songs sung if it just ruins your ability to listen to them.

As I listened to the stories of how Kenny Fare impacted so many people’s lives, I couldn’t help but be saddened by how early he was taken away. I remembered my cousin Krystine, who tragically left us at a much earlier age. I remembered classmates who passed away, Elizabeth and Dan and Deneen. I remembered something my brother said to me, about how he wouldn’t know what to do if I were to pass away suddenly, that echoed this same situation with Kenny and his older brother Don. I remembered Mom’s heart attack in a foreign country eleven years ago and remembered that each day since then with her in my life is a gift not to be squandered: it could easily have turned out much differently. I remembered Dad’s own heart problems; though I was much younger at the time, I remembered that the conclusion is the same.

As the service leader asked those in attendance to stand to recite the Lord’s Prayer, I searched my brain to remember the version that includes “for thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, forever and ever.” (Catholic practice is to include the doxology separately, worded as “for the kingdom, the power, and the glory are Yours, now and forever.”) No matter, though; a significant fraction of the audience didn’t say it. Clearly Catholics.

No, this post isn’t a remembrance of Kenny Fare. I didn’t know him well enough. Though, I knew him enough to be able to laugh in appreciation at the shared recounting of his personableness–his loud and boisterous, but friendly, personality, and to be able to sympathize with the deep loss his family feels right now. As his wife, Judy, said tonight: “it isn’t fair.” But if I understand correctly what he was about–then this is a reminder to never take any of our time together, with loved ones (family and friends), for granted. When the time comes for each of us–and we are all of us mortal–it would be foolish to expect no tears of sadness, but there should be no regret; there must be a celebration of the life that passed. No one wants to remember how someone died, but rather how they lived.

Hopefully we all can remember that.