It is almost but not quite twilight on the creek. I am sitting at the table on the deck, looking down on the creek as it reflects back the trees, the fading light of the day, the glint and glimmer of life on the creek. Far away, I hear a plane, heading toward the Columbia County Airport. Swathes of sunlight illuminate my neighbor’s yard; the air is coolish and there are hints of fall upon us.
It is September 11, 2016, fifteen years beyond the event that has changed all our lives.
It is a hard day for me. Not as hard as it would be if I had lost someone in the Towers. I did not. At that moment, as many of you know, I was living two blocks north of the evacuation zone. I will be forever at the corner of West Broadway and Spring Street seeing the aftermath of the catastrophe of the first plane hitting the first tower. Forever I will be there. It only takes a moment and I return to that spot.
As the first and second Towers fell, people ran down my street, screaming. I watched them from my windows. Late that night, I sat on my bed, never having felt so alone as I did that night, my partner of the time, Al Tripp, stranded but safe on Staten Island, while I listened to the screams of fighter jets overhead.
It seemed that in some way, the world ended that night. At least that’s the way if felt on Spring Street in SoHo on September 11, 2001.
It is now fifteen years later. I am living in the house Al and I purchased on the 8th of September, 2001. We had come to Columbia County looking for a place and found the cottage, the first place we had looked at. We looked at several others and then decided, as we were filling up the car with gas, we should buy it. We had a list of thirteen things we wanted. This place had twelve.
Now, all these years later, I am so grateful to be here. When Al Tripp and I separated, he suggested we sell the place. I bought him out as I could not imagine my life without the cottage. It is and has been and will be my refuge.
And I am grateful we bought it before 9/11 because after then, the Valley became alive with people fleeing New York. There are several people I know who live here who came after 9/11 and have not returned to the city since.
We have all been changed by 9/11. It is the horror that looms over our lives. But a generation is growing up that never knew 9/11. They only know the world that has grown since then. This is their reality. Mine is that I know the before and after.
On this day, I always feel particularly alone. That day is scoured in my mind. Al was trapped on Staten Island, where he worked. I was in Manhattan without him. Friends encouraged me to join them, which I did. But as the evening went on, I found myself needing to be in my own space/place.
I walked from 14th Street home. Arriving there, I sat on the bed, a stunned man, listening to jets overhead. That is the most visceral moment I have of that day, sitting on my bed and hearing jets overhead and knowing the world would never be the same again.
It is almost but not quite twilight on the creek. I am sitting at the table on the deck, looking down on the creek as it reflects back the trees, the fading light of the day, the glint and glimmer of life on the creek. Far away, I hear a plane, heading toward the Columbia County Airport. Swathes of sunlight illuminate my neighbor’s yard; the air is coolish and there are hints of fall upon us.
It is September 11, 2016, fifteen years beyond the event that has changed all our lives.
It is a hard day for me. Not as hard as it would be if I had lost someone in the Towers. I did not. At that moment, as many of you know, I was living two blocks north of the evacuation zone. I will be forever at the corner of West Broadway and Spring Street seeing the aftermath of the catastrophe of the first plane hitting the first tower. Forever I will be there. It only takes a moment and I return to that spot.
As the first and second Towers fell, people ran down my street, screaming. I watched them from my windows. Late that night, I sat on my bed, never having felt so alone as I did that night, my partner of the time, Al Tripp, stranded but safe on Staten Island, while I listened to the screams of fighter jets overhead.
It seemed that in some way, the world ended that night. At least that’s the way if felt on Spring Street in SoHo on September 11, 2001.
It is now fifteen years later. I am living in the house Al and I purchased on the 8th of September, 2001. We had come to Columbia County looking for a place and found the cottage, the first place we had looked at. We looked at several others and then decided, as we were filling up the car with gas, we should buy it. We had a list of thirteen things we wanted. This place had twelve.
Now, all these years later, I am so grateful to be here. When Al Tripp and I separated, he suggested we sell the place. I bought him out as I could not imagine my life without the cottage. It is and has been and will be my refuge.
And I am grateful we bought it before 9/11 because after then, the Valley became alive with people fleeing New York. There are several people I know who live here who came after 9/11 and have not returned to the city since.
We have all been changed by 9/11. It is the horror that looms over our lives. But a generation is growing up that never knew 9/11. They only know the world that has grown since then. This is their reality. Mine is that I know the before and after.
On this day, I always feel particularly alone. That day is scoured in my mind. Al was trapped on Staten Island, where he worked. I was in Manhattan without him. Friends encouraged me to join them, which I did. But as the evening went on, I found myself needing to be in my own space/place.
I walked from 14th Street home. Arriving there, I sat on the bed, a stunned man, listening to jets overhead. That is the most visceral moment I have of that day, sitting on my bed and hearing jets overhead and knowing the world would never be the same again.




Letter From Claverack 09 13 2016 Thinking and ruminating by the creek…
September 14, 2016It is a pleasant night in Claverack, after a pleasant day in general. The weather was gorgeous, hot for just a moment, but mostly it hovered in the 70’s. I spent the latter part of the afternoon on the deck, a good book in hand, while also doing a bit of work, making a few phone calls.
This evening I went to the little Mexican restaurant down the road, Coyote Flaco, with my friend Patrick O’Connor, who bumped into some people he had not seen for a long time. We shared a shrimp appetizer and chicken fajitas and left happy.
The lights are on the creek as it flows softly toward the south. The first serious leaves have begun to fall; my drive is strewn with them and it is fine. I do not need to cling to the summer that has passed. It has been lived fully and well. As I hope will be the fall that is unfolding.
As I do most days, I spoke with my brother and he asked me if I had a take on the day’s news regarding Hillary and I had to say no. I had looked in the morning but not since. In the morning, her campaign announced she thought her pneumonia “no big deal” and so held back saying anything about it.
I was infuriated with her. How many times has she felt something was “no big deal,” only to have it turn around and bite her in the ass? How many times does this woman need to have a lesson learned?
Aye, Chihuahua!
Trump is fending off assaults on his Foundation which may – or may not – have given money to various charities. Some who said they didn’t get gifts found that they did and some just didn’t get them.
And then there is the gift of $25,000 to Pam Bondi, Attorney General for Florida, which might have swayed her to not investigate Trump University. Six months after she dropped her investigation, he hosted a $3,000 a plate fundraiser for her at Mar-a-Lago, his great Florida estate, country club.
Aye, Chihuahua!
To my amazement, Barak Obama’s approval rating is the highest it has been for years. It has always been my thought he will be remembered by history with more kindness than by his contemporaries. In my lifetime, I have known no President who has elicited such visceral hatred from so many people. Maybe I missed something along the way but what this man has endured is remarkable. And I give him high marks for trying, very hard, to be the best President he can be.
Matt Bevin, Governor of Kentucky, used violent metaphors to describe a Clinton Presidency, evoking images of blood on the ground.
My fear is that we are returning to the politics of the 19th Century when Andrew Jackson created the “Trails of Tears” as scores of thousands of Native Americans died by his direction. We, as a nation, do not have a good track record of dealing with those who are not “us” as “us” is defined at any exact moment.
I was raised Catholic in Minnesota. My 8th grade teacher, Sister Anne, told us that we would be persecuted because we were Catholics. At that moment in my life, it seemed nonsensical. No one was persecuting me because I was Catholic. I mean, really…
When I was in college, helping my friend Bill paint his garage, he told me that when he was growing up in Arkansas he would not have been allowed to know me because I was Catholic. Looking at him with incredulity from my ladder next to his, I realized there were places in my life that I did not know where my Catholicism was a liability.
Now I understand more as I see Christians slaughtered on the beaches of Libya and Christians in Iraq slaughtered. We live in world of intolerance that I did not expect or accept as a child. When I was in 8th grade and heard Sister Anne, I thought the world had moved beyond that.
It has not. No, not in any way. Shame on us.
Tags:Andrew Jackson, Barak Obama, Bill Epperson, Claverack, Coyote Flaco, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Hudson, IS, Mat Tombers, Mathew Tombers, New York, Obama, Pam Bondi, Patrick O'Connor, Red Dot, Syria, The Donald, Trail of Tears
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