Rerun: What were you doing September 11, 2001?

I posted this on my blog 6 years ago, 2 years after the events on Sep 11. I just thought I’d share it again.

September 11, 2001. It’s one of those infamous days in human history where just about everyone can tell you exactly what they were doing when it happened or when they heard the news. Just like the Challenger disaster (January 28, 1986), or Columbia (February 1, 2003), or JFK (November 22, 1963). I wasn’t around for JFK though.

I remember vividly what I was doing that day. It started off as a normal routine day, as it probably would have for anyone else. I had a couple of bone density units to survey that morning. I recall walking around the department, making my daily rounds. As I was finishing up, I happened to walk by one of the waiting rooms where for some reason everyone was clustered around the TV. It was a news report about how a plane had crashed into one of the World Trade Center towers. My first thoughts were “Holy crap. Bad bad accident”.

It wasn’t a terrorist event yet. Just a tragic accident, a plane gone out of control and hitting the WTC. Went back down to my office to grab my equipment to start my surveys. Sent my wife a text message to her cell phone saying a plane had crashed into the WTC. She was in class at the time, but being from NYC I knew she’d want to hear about it. Then headed back up to Ultrasound where the bone density unit was.

There were even more people clustered around the TV now, and more events had unfolded. I remember telling the bone density tech asking me what was going on. Told her about the plane crashing into the WTC. Everyone was glued to the TV, but I had work to get done, so I set up the scanner. While I was waiting for it to start up, the news came that a plane had crashed into the Pentagon. It was certainly shaping up to be a very odd day. What are the chances that two planes would crash into buildings on the same day…the same morning even.

Then, while I was testing, reports of the second plane hitting the other WTC tower were broadcast, and I started thinking that these were no accidents. After I finished, I went back down to my office, unloaded my stuff and went back upstairs to the TV. Watched the news for a little while longer and then headed off to see what other people were saying.

I didn’t see the towers collapse until I saw the news after I got home. Everyone was buzzing that day. I don’t remember what happened with the rest of my afternoon. I think I spent it talking with other people about what happened. All the news sites on the web were slow, or not responding, so there wasn’t any info there.

My wife took the rest of the day off after she received my message. The rest of our evening was spent glued to various news stations watching the aftermath of the disaster. For several days after, the news was about all we watched. There was much speculation about who was behind the attack and why. The rest I guess is history.

9

Went to see 9 at the Terrace Hippodrome tonight.

It’s kind of a strange movie to describe. With Tim Burton as one of the producers, that’s probably to be expected. All CG animation and quite well done. It takes place in a post-apocalyptic world where nobody is left except these tiny little doll-machines and one big giant bad guy machine. Not quite sure how they work or what makes them go, but it’s not really all that important. The combination of tech and spirit in the story line made me think of Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within and a few other only vaguely remembered movies.

It’s not a long movie at just over an hour and is pretty easy to watch. I quite enjoyed it.

4 stars out of 5.

Dragon*Con photos

Some of the photos I took at DragonCon.

Spartans from 300. These guys were pretty buff.

Dragoncon attendees dressed up as Spartan warriors from the movie 300

A group of bounty hunters posing for photos

Star Wars bounty hunters posing for group photos at Dragoncon

Phil Plait (BadAstronomy) in one of the Science track sessions

Phil Plait (Bad Astronomer) speaking at a panel at Dragoncon

Lou Ferrigno riding in the DragonCon parade

Lou Ferrigno riding sitting on a car in the Dragoncon parade

BSG Colonials

A group of Battlestar Galactica (reboot) colonial warriors marching in the Dragoncon parade

Ghostbusters

Ghostbusters in the Dragoncon parade

The Babylon 5 panels and Q&A sessions had me squeeing like a little girl.

Babylon 5 panel speakers at Dragoncon

Time to get healthy

A note was waiting for me in the mail today with the results from some recent blood work I had done as part of my annual checkup a few days ago.

Good news: Mostly healthy.

Kind of bad news: Cholesterol is starting to get on the high side. LDL is getting close to high, and HDL is half of what it should be. Iron levels are also a little low too, so the doctor recommended an OTC iron supplement.

Guess some diet modifications are in order.

Dragon*Con: Way more fun than should be allowed

For the longest time, cons were those places where the weirdo hard-core geeks that dressed up gathered. Not the kind of thing I ever imagined myself wanting to go. Anybody who took their favourite show/character that seriously was just too bizarre to my brain.

DragonCon is really something that needs to be experienced. It’s just too hard to describe, and any telling of the things that go on at DragonCon make it sound like it’s just a collection of weirdos, freaks and geeks.

I went, and I saw. At the first panel I went to (Babylon 5), I squeed like a little girl. And then I got to meet and talk to Bruce Boxleitner, and I squeed some more. I saw celebrities like Lou Ferrigno, Richard Hatch, Dirk Benedict, most of the Stargate: Atlantis cast, and many more. More squee’ing when I got Tracy Scoggin‘s autograph and photo taken with her (also a self admitted sci-fi geek). Photo with Felicia Day (OMGSQUEEE!!).

Yes, I became a total fan boy and one of them. Admittedly, I didn’t really have that far to go.

There were lots of people dressed up in costumes and many that weren’t. There were costumes from just about every genre, show and character you could think of. When my friends and I thought about a show or character that would be cool to see or dress up as, sooner or later we’d end up seeing someone else dressed as it.

But that’s not all there is to Dragon*Con. There were the fan tracks that covered everything from your favourite sci-fi/fantasy, literature, arts, costuming to podcasting, science and space. Writers workshops, art shows, costume contests and of course the celebrity panels. There are way way way more things going on than you could ever possibly see at once.

Don’t just take my word for it though. You should think about going to see it for yourself next year.

Pictures soon. Have close to 600 that I need to go through and weed out.