View Full Version : On August 21st
Cadaverous Pallor
09-11-2007, 08:15 AM
Me: "Checking out?"
Patron: "Yes, please." hands over card
Me: "Ok...your videos will be due on the 28th and your books will be due on...." looks at receipt, pause ".....September 11th."
Patron: "Oh." looks away
Me: "Yeah." looks away
---
Patron: "I'd like to get these please."
Me: "Sure. Your due date is....September 11th."
Patron: "Mm. Guess I won't forget that."
Me: "Right." busies herself with bagging books
---
Patron: "It's so nice in here!"
Me: scanning books "Much better than outside, eh?"
Patron: "For sure."
Me: distracted by conversation, hands over receipt "September 11th."
Patron: shocked "WHAT?"
Me: winces "The due date, the books are due then."
Patron: "Oh." reads receipt carefully to make sure
---
Me: "Books are due on the 11th."
Patron: "Of September?"
Me: "Yes." *pause*
Patron: smiles in sympathy, nods
---
Me: looks straight at patron "Your books are due September 11th."
Patron: "Oh, ok." looks down
Me: unwavering, said with import - "Have a nice day."
Patron: looks up, smiles "I will, thanks."
NirvanaMan
09-11-2007, 09:12 AM
Yeah. I have a lot of big meetings that were scheduled for today, but though it made me almost, wince at first, there seemed to be no reaction from the other party.
Also, Jaguar chose today to unveil its new sedan that is supposed to make or break the company. Got an email about it the other day, as I tend to have difficulty severing ties. Too loyal. Anyway, I just felt a bit uncomfortable reading it and the date they chose without comment. It's going to happen, I know. It just feels awkward though...
Interesting. Personally, I don't have any problem with it but the date already had some personal significance (though of a type I place exactly zero value on). So my first reaction on seeing the date isn't the same as for most people.
Strangler Lewis
09-11-2007, 09:22 AM
Interesting. Personally, I don't have any problem with it but the date already had some personal significance (though of a type I place exactly zero value on). So my first reaction on seeing the date isn't the same as for most people.
Happy birthday? Happy first communion?
It's my birthday but I do absolutely zero to observe my birthday. Before 9/11 I frequently didn't even notice it until my mom would call sometime in the week after to say hi.
Since then, it is harder to completely forget since the press insists on harping on the date for some reason. Plus, this year I had to renew my driver's license and of course I put it off to the last minute.
But still, on seeing anything with a date of 9/11 my first reaction is not "hey, that is happening on the anniversary of a terrorist attack" but rather "hey, that is happening on my birthday." This includes the terrorist attack.
The one good thing that came out of 9/11 was that I could pretend to have a good reason not to observe my birthday but that is starting to wear thin (and I have new coworkers this year who need new convincing that I really don't do birthdays).
€uroMeinke
09-11-2007, 09:40 AM
Just tell them you're JW
BarTopDancer
09-11-2007, 10:04 AM
Ducks training camp opened today. Seems almost wrong. I don't necessarily think that 9/11 should become some sort of holiday - because in 50 years it will be another Pearl Harbor Day (a mark on the calendar and little more), but it seems wrong, awkward, or both to do anything 'fun'. I take pause when the clock says 9:11 and I take pause when I see the date on a calendar.
Anybody who knows me particularly well would find that to be really unlikely.
Those who I know well enough to share more personal information with do know that I was raised JW and that is probably where it got started. Plus, my experience is that most people think that JW's deep down really want to celebrate their birthday and are denying themselves (and they think it is some form of child abuse to not do your kid's birthdays). They therefore feel completely free to try and push birthday celebration on them anyway. Every year, for example, my grandmother would give me a gift on my birthday, and Christmas, and tell me it wasn't a birthday present. Teachers, friends, and coworkers have generally behaved the same.
Kevy Baby
09-11-2007, 10:49 AM
I don't necessarily think that 9/11 should become some sort of holiday - because in 50 years it will be another Pearl Harbor Day (a mark on the calendar and little more)...While I did not lose anybody because of Pearl Harbor, I do not consider December 7 a blip on the calendar: it is a day to remember (not celebrate) a dark day in the history of this country.
Cadaverous Pallor
09-11-2007, 01:56 PM
The very fact that one of the most oft-used names for the event is "September 11th" makes saying the date out loud awkward. Even 12/7 is "Pearl Harbor Day". We don't call it "WTC day". "Nine-Eleven" is a good substitute because people don't usually refer to dates this way. It seems that referring to it as "September 11th" has stuck completely and I don't see it wavering for another generation at least.
I've gotten used to having to say the date all day long as a part of my job (for 2 days, actually - the day that it's the book due date, and the day that it's the one-week DVD due date). It still sucks.
Kevy Baby
09-11-2007, 02:09 PM
I don't think it could rightly be referred to as "WTC Day" because the day also saw the Pentagon attacked and an intended attack on the White House (thankfully averted by some brave individuals - one of the best silver linings that day).
I've always thought that the most common "name" for the events of the day is "nine-eleven". I myself don't really hear "September eleventh" used except along the lines of "the events of September 11".
I am curious how you hear "September 11th" used - in what context? Or is it just me that doesn't hear it that way?
Kevy Baby
09-11-2007, 02:10 PM
BTW: Your OP was quite poignant.
Cadaverous Pallor
09-11-2007, 03:53 PM
I've always thought that the most common "name" for the events of the day is "nine-eleven". I myself don't really hear "September eleventh" used except along the lines of "the events of September 11".
I am curious how you hear "September 11th" used - in what context? Or is it just me that doesn't hear it that way?I've heard them interchangably used...
And thanks. :)
Sorry about my first post up there. I failed to notice that this was in Open Mic and therefore didn't respond to your post in the way in which you probably intended it (a drawback of only using the "New Posts" link is that I generally have no awareness of the forum I'm in).
innerSpaceman
09-11-2007, 05:17 PM
BTW, most people don't say "Independence Day"
Some dates simply become better known for the date.
AllyOops!
09-11-2007, 05:57 PM
Oh, come on. Like none of you woke up and also reminded yourself that 50 Cent's new CD drops today? Buncha closeted Fiddy fans.
;)
Okay, in all seriousness, it is a date that does cause one to pause and reflect with sadness. You can't help but to remember every moment of that day. I know this time, six years ago, I was en route to my Grandma & Grandpa's house after work, and the sky was so eerlily empty and silent.
I remembered it first thing in the shower this morning, and then, because I blast my Sirius radio in there, I heard Howard Stern mention it. This is the first year that he isn't replaying his broadcast from that day. I admit, it's very hard to listen to it, especially when you hear the terror and speculation in their voices.
When I got to work, and changed my little desk calendar I immediately had a pang in my heart. And everytime I glance at it, I can't help but remember. :(
Cadaverous Pallor
09-11-2007, 07:03 PM
Sorry about my first post up there. I failed to notice that this was in Open Mic and therefore didn't respond to your post in the way in which you probably intended it (a drawback of only using the "New Posts" link is that I generally have no awareness of the forum I'm in).No problem. I have no problem with my pieces causing conversation.
innerSpaceman
09-11-2007, 07:13 PM
I, too, have a twinge when I see or write this date, or have to schedule something mundane on it.
Because the event has become known by its date, I think - for the people alive on 9.11.01 - this will become more of a touchstone than other such mass-consciousness events.
I remember when JFK was assassinated, and I daresay everyone alive that day remembers what that day was like. But I don't particularly remember it happened on November 22nd. (is that even right?).
We'll never forget September 11th. And because it's called "September 11th," we'll never forget to never forget it.
alphabassettgrrl
09-11-2007, 08:19 PM
I started a new job that day and I still kind of jump when I see the anniversary date on my pay stubs.
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