Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Never Forget

towering


monument to mastery, thought over steel
brow creased, dreams and greed, you are power
in a reality of data paper ink you accumulate
sure of means, free to speculate, you are power.

fluorescent yellow tape across your back
hair matted, sweat and ash, you are safe
in a flash of yellow orange red white heat
shards of glass, tons of concrete, you are safe.

your true essence obscured
personified by instinct and fear, you are love
in a tear for compassion courage hope unseen
a yearning, a chance to be, you are love.



                                                -- Mary A. Bourke, 2002




Our Flag is Still Here

[photos copied from Web]


Never Forget.





Monday, June 30, 2014

1/12/02: EPILOGUE

My trip to Los Angeles over the holidays was successful.  I spent Christmas and New Years with family and old friends, found an apartment in Los Feliz and bought a used Honda.  It all costs more than I estimated it would.  Naturally.  I am starting to feel some pressure of running out of money.  I am nervous, not sleeping well.  I will be moving at the end of next week.  Mentally, I’m already an Angeleno again and no longer a New Yorker.

Last week I sent a certified letter to my building management stating the reasons why I am moving out: the emotional distress of being in this neighborhood has become too much to bear, the physical effects of being here (nausea, headaches, went to Beth Israel for anxiety-induced vertigo), and getting laid off in October.   I stated that I have made best efforts to make it work here, and I have failed.  That was a really hard thing to write down.  I have failed.  I couldn’t make it work.  I don’t anticipate that there will be any problems in getting out of my lease, however, because their stated policy has been to let people break their leases with a one month’s rent penalty.


I plan to come back to New York for September 11, 2002, to remember the victims and heroes and to celebrate the resilience of our nation and of my friends and fellow residents here in Manhattan.  I look forward to this milestone, to be able to look back on a more complete healing process and see how far we’ve come.  In the meantime, I have lots of living to do.  So do you.  Let’s get on with it.


Mom and me at the Rose Parade in Pasadena on January 1, 2002.
I have never been so thrilled to start a New Year.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

12/19/01: EVERY GREAT ENDING HAS IN IT A NEW BEGINNING

DAY 100 Since the Attack.  The fires at Ground Zero are now officially, completely out!  This is great news for the air quality down here and also must be a tremendous morale booster for all of the people working so hard to clean up the Pile.

The past two weeks or so I have been isolating, avoiding, being a hermit.  I have been seeing people, but I haven’t been answering the phone or opening my mail.  I have been trying to sort out my next move.  What should I do?  Where should I go from here?  Life is short, what do I really want to do?

I have decided, I am moving back to Los Angeles.  I will look for a job there and focus on becoming a professional screenwriter.   I will be glad to be around family and old friends, happy not see destruction every day and relieved not to worry anymore that my health is in jeopardy at every breath.

I am also relieved to have made a decision about my next move.  It’s a bittersweet move, however.  I am sad about leaving the great friends I have made here.  I feel a deep melancholy at leaving this City, perhaps the Greatest City on Earth.  I will miss my beautiful apartment on the Hudson River.  Who knows when I will ever again have such a great view in a place that I love so much?

I am going to Los Angeles on Friday, December 21, for the holidays.  I will look at used cars and apartments while I’m there.  I want to live in Los Feliz or somewhere actually in the City of Los Angeles.  Though I have always said I’m from LA, I have never technically lived in Los Angeles, but in Pasadena, the Valley, a short stint in Malibu, etc.  I have done a lot of reading recently on Los Angeles history, which has reminded me how connected I feel to LA.  I will move in February.

I wish I had inspiring words of wisdom with which to end this journal.  As so many of us, I suspect that in many respects I am a different person than I was when the day started on September 11.  What a difference an hour makes.

But I wish I could pinpoint how I am different.  Which new feelings, responses and perspectives are ingrained in me forever and which will fade in time.  I wish that the purpose and lessons of the events over the past three months were clear to me so that I could share them directly with the world.  As corny as it sounds, I truly would like to teach the world to sing.  Unfortunately, I still don’t know how to myself.

Catch you on the flip side.


Mary Bourke
Battery Park City
New York, New York
December 19, 2001


Saturday, June 28, 2014

October & December Views - Cleaning Up

The Site, mid-October.  Amazing progress in clean up, they’ve removed most of the destroyed outlying buildings.  The white tent is Red Cross, where workers eat. 

Lower Broadway, one long stretch of memorial walls.  Taken late-December on my way to the airport to go to LA for the holidays. 


View from Chambers down Greenwich Street to the Site.  You didn’t used to be able to see the black building with the flag on it at all.  Thank God for that building, it blocked debris from my friend Melva’s building, which is just behind it. 


View from Melva’s apartment of the Site.  Taken in December.  Her building, 120 Greenwich, has yet to re-open and she has since moved to Broad Street.  Once a Downtown girl, always a Downtown girl! 

Looking south from the Tribeca Bridge overpass down West Street.  Crossing here can be hazardous.  Regardless of my mood setting out, every time I walk by here I feel a surge of anger. 

The first cruise ship in New York Harbor after 9/11.  A welcome sight!!  Taken from my apartment. 


A daily sight since 9/11: neighbors moving out, or family members cleaning out deceased neighbors' apartments.  Taken from my apartment. 


The piano!  Or, “Day of Mary’s Musical Rebirth” 


A Site worker takes a moment for his own musical rejuvenation in Rockefeller Park.  His respirator hangs from his belt.  Taken from my apartment.


Above human allegiances and enmity, nature’s glory continues unabated

Friday, June 27, 2014

11/14/01: IF I WERE DIRECTING...

The following was my response to my ex-husband’s email request to his friends who are filmmakers and journalists to produce a documentary about September 11 attacks and America’s course of action since:

<< 
It’s a pleasure to meet all of you.  You are all impressive.

The circumstances which led to the September 11 attacks is a story that needs telling.   And if someone could tell the whole story, the facts would speak for themselves about who’s to blame.  Obviously, a handful of terrorists don’t just wake up one morning and say, it’s a beautiful day, after breakfast why don’t we hijack a bunch of planes filled with infidels and crash them into the center of global economic power!

I want to know the story.  I want to know the real history of relations between the U.S. and the people who perpetrated the attack.  There are as many interesting and relevant story angles as there are people involved, starting generations ago.  But the President himself has told us repeatedly where the real story is: “Follow the Money.”   

A documentary which simply lays out the history of financial transactions, fortunes made and the power wielded by these fortunes, governed by human qualities of greed, fear and misguided intent, will tell the primary story.  In my opinion, documentarians would not need to interject their personal judgment in the presentation of these facts.  From whichever angle the story is told, if it’s told honestly, there are no innocents when the end result is over 3,000 people murdered, except many of the victims.

For a smaller scale example, look at the NYC Fire Department.  They are national heroes, we focus on their personal stories of heroics.  These stories are vital to our healing and remembering the positive power of being human.  The stories you won’t hear much of, if at all, are of firemen looting victims’ apartments, fighting with NYPD and protesting against the Mayor in their need to hoard grief.  A story which followed the actions of certain firemen and left it up to you to determine if they were good guys or bad might leave you vaguely disillusioned, but you would probably decide that the FDNY are good guys.

In contrast, the people who allowed, aided indirectly and perpetrated the attack you might find to be bad guys with a few misguided good guys in their midst.  But the point I’m trying to make is that to truly document what lead to the attack and ensuing retaliation, the documentarians would not need to have any conclusions in mind while laying out the facts.  Perhaps, they wouldn’t even need to ask the question, “Who’s to blame?”  Really, who isn’t?

***

Thank you for your vote of confidence that I could help produce a documentary.  I was a VP at VH1, until their recent round of lay offs.  However, I was VP of Convergence Strategy.  My expertise is in building large entertainment Web sites and helping TV executives develop shows and revenue packages which incorporate multiple media platforms.  I don’t produce TV shows, there are many people on this mail more qualified to produce a documentary.

I am putting together a memory book, of sorts, of the WTC attack.  I live a few blocks from where the Towers once stood, I was home during the attack.  I watched the Towers burn, the second plane flew over me before disappearing into the South Tower.  I saw people jumping out of the buildings and the collapses.  Since then, I have made a point of connecting with survivors, with victims’ families, with my neighbors, with City officials, with NYPD officers, National Guards and other new residents of my neighborhood, with myself! to try and process what happened, what I saw.  I took pictures during the attack and continue to document my personal experiences “behind the wall” in Downtown Manhattan.  I am definitely interested in finding answers.  I might have something that could contribute to a documentary about the attacks, and as you can see I’m not short on opinions about such a documentary, but I’m not qualified to produce it.

best,
Mary

>> 

Thursday, June 26, 2014

11/4/01: ANOTHER MARATHON DAY

Is it cold or is it hot?  Is it raining or is it not?

Today began as a fabulously beautiful Fall day in New York City, 55 degrees and sunny.  A perfect day to run the New York City Marathon.  I watched the race start on TV from my couch while eating Pop Tarts.  I toasted the runners’ vigor and motivation and courage with a frosted raspberry toaster pastry.

In the afternoon I went to Midtown and bought a digital piano.  Did you know that Manhattan has a piano district?  I love New York!  Purchasing a piano is perhaps not the wisest move for someone who was just laid off, but I have wanted a piano for so long and now I will have the time to practice.  It will be good for my soul to play again.  The piano will be delivered next week.  I’ll have to find some sheet music.  I hope I can remember how to read sheet music!  I’ll have to take lessons.  Yay!

The piano is a Technics SX-PR603, with a sort of cheazy-looking simulated wood-grain veneer cabinet (which is why I opted for the fake black instead of the super-fake cherry) but the weighted keys have great action and it has 24 piano sounds, all fully customizable, a 16-track sequencer and an 8-track composer.  There are 32 drum kits preloaded, a great selection of instrument sounds, complete accompaniments and endless other things that will take me years to figure out how to use.  And the concert grand piano, large hall effect heavy on the reverb, sounds incredible in headphones and impressive enough through the four “on deck” speakers.  Yay!

After buying the piano I took the R train down to Astor Place to see some friends about our upcoming Thanksgiving trip to Bear Mountain.  Thanksgiving at the Bear Mountain Inn means obscene amounts of food, ice skating on the outdoor rink, brisk walks around the lake and warm, crackling fires in the lodge.

It was too early to see my friends so I loitered on Astor Place.  I called my ex-boyfriend and still dear friend, Jeff, to tell him about my bold piano purchase and went to Starbucks twice.  Two different Starbucks, at least.  One across the street from the other.  No joke.

It was night when I left my friends.   The police had blocked off the streets surrounding 9th Street and 4th Avenue.  A suspicious package, I was told.  The bomb squad was just showing up.  I stood for a few minutes, waiting for an explosion and talking with other bystanders. 

“How do you pick out a suspicious package on a sidewalk in New York City?” I asked.  “It’s probably someone’s laundry,” a woman said.  “Or a homeless guy’s bedroom set,” someone else said.  “What a sad state of affairs we’re living in,” the woman said.  I stood a little bit longer with them before walking around the closed off blocks to view the action from the South side.  The closed off blocks included 770 Broadway, one of my former offices, the headquarters of the division that just gave me and 130 of my former fellow co-workers the boot on Halloween.  I wondered if one of the casualties of this lay off was disgruntled enough to drop off a suspicious looking package outside the building… ?

I didn’t like that I could envision from experience a building exploding and people falling to their deaths and others screaming and running in the streets.  And it bothered me that I was just standing there on this night, in front of the evacuated Kmart, waiting to see it all again.  Thankfully, the thought finally crossed my mind that if there was going to be an explosion, I probably did not want to be standing in the street gawking at it.  This would not be a wise tactical battle maneuver.

So I went into the Kinko’s next door to get four copies of my script made.  Since it was going to take an hour, I went across the street to Barnes and Noble.  I looked at the new 2002 calendars of Zen sayings and eerily disturbing Salvador Dali paintings.  I read a little of “The Oregon Trail” and flipped through picture books of Egyptian pyramids and a handy little “Jane’s Military Helicopters” guide.  I want to be able to recognize what type of chopper is hovering outside my window, in case I need to reference it in conversation.  Is it a Huey or a Chinook?  Is it an Apache attack helicopter or a Commanche?  Is it even American?!

Barnes and Noble was closing so I went up to McDonald’s.  McDonald’s on Broadway (any of the ones on Broadway, really, but I’m talking about the one nearest NYU) ranks as one of the most repulsive dining environments I’ve ever been in.  It’s high volume, to say the least, and dirty with muck on the floor.  Unfortunate people who have no place else to be sit in the restaurant for hours.  The odors emanating from some of these people makes eating a Big Mac challenging, like eating trash dump worms on a dare.  So I took my Big Mac and apple pie back to Kinko’s. 

There was no place to sit as usual so I ate standing on the sidewalk between Kinko’s and a pile of trash in the street.  I kept an eye on the trash pile for one of the “aggressive” rats that NYC is so famous for.  A giant rat suddenly lunging for the apple pie in your hand is not such an unlikely thing to happen here. 

I finished my apple pie without incident with rats or unfortunate humans when it started to rain.

The guy at Kinko’s boxed and wrapped my script copies upon my request, although he didn’t believe me that it was starting to rain.  “Probably water from the air conditioner,” he declared.  I just laughed at him.  How ridiculous is it not to believe someone who says it’s raining?  Do I look like a person who can’t tell a few drops of condensation from a bazillion drops of rain falling from the sky??  Sheesh.

The bomb squad had cleared out and traffic was flowing normally when I left Kinko’s with my bundled copies of hope for a fulfilling future.  I took the N train to my re-opened City Hall stop.  The wind and rain was picking up. Walking home from the subway station I passed a group of firemen who had been “congregating” as one of them was saying on his cell phone.  Not sure at this point if they were congregating to honor or to protest something.  Or to loot.  God love them.

At least I can walk down Warren Street now, which is the most direct route to my apartment from the City Hall N/R station.  The walk was dark and lonely.  There are not many people out Downtown at night these days.  Alone on the Downtown street, I engaged in one of my favorite, rather obsessive-compulsive, walking games, which was to identify the best sniper positions in nearby buildings and the best corresponding places to duck for cover if any shooting or exploding was to start.  The song played in my head repeatedly from that fifties school film about atomic bomb safety, “Duck and Cover”. “Duck! and Co-o-ver…

Even my dentist had told me to seek therapy.

Crossing Westside Highway at Warren, one block South of Chambers where the new Ground Zero no-entry line has been established, is dirty and can be hazardous.  The enormous empty dump trucks come skidding out of the mud pits that once were our beautiful baseball fields, basically heading directly for pedestrians in the crosswalk before turning to go South two blocks to the still-smoking Pile. 

The loaded dump trucks heading North out of Ground Zero are hosed down at the opposite corner of Warren and Westside Highway, right at the crosswalk.  The truck drivers and guards wear industrial-strength respirators and the men washing the trucks wear full hazmat gear.  Makes me feel naked walking by them, just sucking in all that unfiltered air.  I wonder, how is it that these people standing one block from my home are in danger of breathing bad stuff but they tell me I’m not?  Do the lethal particles try to avoid collateral damage to innocent citizens as our bombers in Afghanistan do?  If so, I don’t think I like those odds.

An armed National Guardsman in full camouflage and respirator stopped me as I was maneuvering between the incoming and outgoing dump trucks and contemplating smart airborne benzene spores.  “I’ll have to check your backpack and make sure your cell phone works,” he said.  “Uh, okay,” I said, taking off my back pack.  Then he laughed and put his hand on my shoulder.  “I was kidding you,” he said, “I just wanted to see that pretty smile up close.”  Well, I did smile when he said he was kidding, but really I was thinking “if you weren’t wearing that respirator I’d shove this phone up your left nostril.”

It was harmless checkpoint flirtation, but the thing that most bugged me about it is that I was so quick to agree to show him whatever he wanted and I didn’t think about questioning his right to search me.  Or even ask for proof that he was actually a National Guardsman. 

Of course, I live in the financial center of the world, which was recently the target of the most vicious attack on the United States ever perpetrated.  This is war.  Under these circumstances I apparently, and some would say appropriately, have no rights to resist arbitrary search and denial of easy-access to my home.  I have to do whatever they say when they stop me while I’m walking home. 

I don’t know what to make of this or really how to act.  Should I turn to the Constitution or to Miss Manners for guidance on wartime citizen-to-soldier behavior etiquette?  Sometimes I am overcome with anger when the cops and soldiers say, you can’t go that way tonight, you have to walk up five blocks and around that way.  Or, no cabs allowed in tonight, sorry Ma’am.  Sure.  Fine.  Does lugging my suitcases and groceries a mile through mud puddles, while dodging oncoming trucks and maneuvering around vehicles parked on the sidewalks, qualify as patriotic?  Will Tom Brokaw recognize my sacrifices for the safety of our nation?

Maybe I don’t need a therapist, just an attitude adjustment.  I really do want to react to all of this appropriately.  I am not usually such a flippant, self-absorbed person.  Okay, I am usually self-absorbed but not to the point of dismissing efforts for homeland defense as annoying inconveniences.  At least, I would like to think I am not that self-absorbed! *sigh*

Resuming the trek home, I stopped at my neighborhood deli to buy milk, bananas, Cap’n Crunch and cigarettes.  Diet of champions.  And me!   

One more block left to go and the wind tunnel next to my building was roaring.  Ah yes, visions of winter-to-come in my beloved corner of heaven on the Hudson.  Brutal!  The rain had really started coming down, but I only had a few more steps to the door. 

Once inside the lobby, the doorman loaded a cart with the box, picture and poster that had been messengered to me from my former office.  Not much to show for my two years of intense work there.  Of course, I got more out of that job than leftover office knick-knacks, it just struck me as slightly pathetic wheeling through the lobby with this huge, brass cart carrying a little pile of groceries, damp script copies and a few sad, bubble-wrapped remnants of my life over the past two years. 

That stuff from my office is not worth anything and I didn’t even want it, but leaving empty-handed felt odd.  As if I would be making a statement that I really didn’t care about anything there and I didn’t do anything important enough to keep.  See what a good corporate citizen I am?  I didn’t want the worthless crap from my office, but I followed lay-off etiquette and let them bubble wrap and messenger these unreadable notes, desk toys and music CD’s to me to prove how caring they are of my needs in these difficult times.  Of course, to be fair, the people who actually bubble-wrapped and messengered these things were sincere in their desire to make things easier for all of us who lost our jobs.

To be fair to the whole company, the exit package they gave me is good.  It totals about six months of continued pay, plus whatever bonus I might be entitled to in January.  So I will be getting paid at the highest rate I’ve earned while in their employ (I was promoted twice and given three sizable raises over two years), to not work for them for exactly one quarter of the entire time that I worked for them.  This is a good deal, right?  I should stop thinking about what a sucker I’ve been all this time working so hard for them, right?  And feeling bad about all the projects I started that may never be completed?  And worrying about their future business success?  These are not my problems now.  *SIGH*

After unloading, I returned the cart to the friendly doorman.  In the elevator back up to my apartment, I decided that I would not succumb tonight to freakish obsessions with sniper attacks and exploding buildings, or self-absorbed annoyance at all the little inconveniences of living in a war zone, or resentment and fear over my new unemployed status, or even vague discomfort over the National Guardsman’s innocent joke.

At least tomorrow, I will have Cap’n Crunch and cigarettes to last all day and I won’t have to fight my way through wind and tourists to get to the office in Times Square.  No, tomorrow I will look up sheet music stores in NYC, think about how best to realize my dream of professional screenwriting, take another long bubble bath and burn candles to add to my little wax scene of Giza Plaza.  My Sphinx looks more like a squatting Eskimo and I made the Khafre Pyramid too small, it’s actually almost the same size as the Khufu Pyramid.  I want to fix that.


So let it rain.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

10/30/01: PARTING PACKAGES

Today I went to the headquarters of my division at the 770 Broadway building instead of the 1515 office to meet with Carin in HR.  She handed me a folder and went over all of the sheets.  Lots of information about income continuance, benefits, etc.  I was pleased at how organized they were.  In previous rounds of layoffs we’ve had in our division, we were not as organized.  But this was a corporate-funded lay off, so the parent company was running the show.

Carin informed me, the official day of my separation would be tomorrow, October 31.  Halloween.  The Day of the Dead.  Whoever said September 11 killed irony was dead wrong.

Throughout this entire ordeal, no one other than Carin ever looked me in the eye and told me I was laid off.  Actually, no one other than Carin said anything to me at all.  My situation seemed inevitable, almost karmic.  How many people had I laid off or straight-out fired in my two years of managing the site production team?  At least I always tried to look them in the eye, not mince words about what was happening and thank them for their individual contributions to the company.  As if that made it an easier for them.  Still, you play the game long enough and eventually, everything comes around to you.  Though this is the third time I have been laid off in seven years, this is also the hardest time I’ve had dealing with it.  Perhaps I’m just getting older and I understand better what I am losing and what a pain in the ass it is to start all over.  

No doubt the surrounding circumstances are not making this easier.  It's hard to reconcile normal feelings of disappointment and anger when being laid off from a job I worked hard to create, while I'm still talking to neighbors about other neighbors who never came home from work on September 11.   The worst story I have heard in all of this tragedy, is about the group of young wives and their children having their regular morning playground time at the building next door, who all watched their husbands and Daddys killed.  I can only imagine what they would give for a simple lay-off.