September
11: Revising Our Stories
by Tammie Fowles
This month as we celebrate yet another anniversary of the birth of America
as a free and independent nation, I'd like to take just a few moments to
introduce you to another kind of birth, a BirthQuake.
A BirthQuake is a transformational process
that's triggered by significant challenges in our lives, or what I call
quakes. It's a right of passage that much like childbirth
involves both the pain of labor, and the magic of delivery, and links
beginnings with endings, as all births invariably do.
Beginning with the first tremors of the
quake, it ushers in an uncertain and often perilous time, a time
"when everything is rocked and shifted, when our foundations crack,
and treasures lie buried beneath the rubble."
On September 11th, 2001, we confronted a
collective quake, one that shook the very foundation of our nation. It
brought our mighty towers down, and left our brothers and sisters entombed
beneath the ruins. While the debris is cleared away how, some of us are
still haunted by the images of crashing planes, erupting flames, the faces
of terror, smoke and ashes...
On September 11th, time came as close to
standing still as possible in a country where "hurry up," and
"get moving" are just about as common as any term of endearment
I can think of. On that autumn day, the wheels of our great machine
came to a grinding halt, and in the spaces between then and now many of us
we have begun to look at ourselves and our country more closely.
The world changed on September 11th.
And so did many of us as well. The pain, the suffering, and the terror
that has plagued so much of the world has become much harder to ignore. My
ongoing quest to be a good mother, wife, therapist, daughter, friend, and
American becomes overshadowed now from time to time by unsettling
questions.
What are my responsibilities as a world
citizen? How would I need to live my life differently if I committed
to living up to these responsibilities? What would I need to give up? Is
it possible to be a worthy child of God if I turn away from the suffering
of God's other children?
How should I respond to the terrible fact
that the number of war deaths in the world are increasing at astounding
rates? What is my responsibility to the estimated 40,000 children who die
every single day from starvation and poverty, when I am a citizen of a
country that makes up roughly only 5 % of the world's population but
consumes more than 30% of its total resources; a country that recently
declared obesity as a national epidemic? And how will I manage to
effectively silence my clamoring voice of conscience if I choose not to
make changes in response to those answers that I’m not even sure I want
to know?
The world that I live in is the same
troubled but equally beautiful world that it was on September 10th, 2001,
but today I see myself, and it, differently. Strangely, even my sense of
the past has somehow been altered. There are many images from the world
trade center attack that are still vivid in my memory. One is a picture of
a terrified dark haired little boy in a striped shirt running away from
the flaming towers, screaming. The first time I saw that picture, another
far older and more famous image came vividly back into focus for me, that
of a frail and tiny Vietnamese girl running in terror from Napalm.
Today those two children, both worlds and
decades apart, will be forever juxtaposed in my memory, a brutal reminder
that the location of the ground where desperate children flee, or dead
babies lie, is completely irrelevant. Their agony is unspeakably tragic no
matter where it exists. Only now, for the first time in our
privileged lives; our generation of Americans saw the horrible mask of war
on our own children’s faces.
Today, while I am beginning to hold my
country more accountable, I have also come to love it more fiercely.
It may very well be true that we are a nation in crisis, housed on a
planet in peril, yet it was in the very midst of conflict and danger that
a triumphant people of the newly formed United States declared to the
world that, "out of the unity from many, a new order of the ages is
born."
Less than a week after September 11th
Katherine Amsden and I sat in her office, aching to do something, anything
to ease the overwhelming grief that had not only invaded our own hearts,
but had us completely surrounded. As we watched courageous and exhausted
rescue workers pushed far beyond their physical and emotional limits,
repeatedly risking their own lives, the word heroism took on a far deeper
meaning.
We were proud of these heroes, we were
profoundly grateful, and at the same time, our hearts were breaking not
only for the lost and dead, but for those living who would not abandon
them.
Experts of trauma advise that the best line
of defense against trauma is to take action, to do something. And so we
did. We wrote a song, the first song that either of us had ever written.
We wrote it for the firefighters, the police officers, and the emergency
medical personnel whom we would never see in quite the same way again.
They represented the very best of us, and
they had the courage to confront the very worst. I'm hoping that during
this process of recovery and rebuilding we'll follow their example. That
we too will have the courage to not only face what at times may seem
unbearable, but to work with their same amazing commitment to change what
needs changing.
Harold Goddard wrote that, "the
destiny of the world is determined less by the battles that are lost and
won than by the stories that it loves and believes in.” I am hoping that
the stories that we the people of the world ultimately embrace are more
tolerant, wiser stories that include life, liberty and justice for all
people, everywhere, and that together we might begin to love and live this
old story into a new beginning – a BirthQuake. During the month of
July as we continue to honor our heroes, perhaps we can also envision the
heroic that exists within each and every one of us…
__________________
Tammie Fowles is a psychotherapist,
trainer and the author of, “BirthQuake: The Journey to Wholeness.” She
has appeared on both radio and television. Visit her website at http://sageplace.com.