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Petunia1950

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Posts posted by Petunia1950

  1. 3 hours ago, Joan and Harry said:

    Hi Bill & Mary Ann, We will be on the Volendam in January with some of these same stops and have been enjoying your posts. I read something about a blog with pictures.  Would you mind sharing where we can see your blog? Thanks so much.

    Joan

    I'm not Bill or Mary Ann -- but the blog can be found at https://cruisingwithbillandmaryann.blogspot.com/2023/09/report-1-september-5-2023-tuesday.html.  It's pretty fabulous 🙂

  2. 1 minute ago, Nickelpenny said:

    Just ‘cause they have MD/NP/DO behind their doesn’t mean …..  ok never mind 🥴 ( I have met several docs in my career that I wonder how they passed the boards)

    The best doctor I ever had told me once -- "just remember 50% of doctors graduated in the bottom half of their class".  And he wasn't one of those.  But it did make me realize that doctors are NOT all-seeing, all-knowing.  They are human, just like the rest of us.

    • Like 16
  3. On September 11, 2001, I was working in an office building at Dupont Circle in Washington, DC.  The terrace on the 9th floor looked west toward Virginia -- buildings in DC can't be taller than 130 feet on commercial streets so we had an unimpeded view.  After news got around about the terrorist attacks, most people in our firm ended up on the terrace.  And we could see smoke rising from the Pentagon with F16s flying so low that you felt like you could almost touch them.  And then the office shut down for the day.

     

    I generally used the Metro's yellow line to get home, but since it crossed the Potomac River via an over-ground bridge, it was closed, so I walked several blocks to get the Blue line – a longer trip for me, but one that was still open since it was underground for the most part.  Every store front going down Connecticut Avenue to the Blue line station had a CLOSED sign on the door.  There was virtually no traffic, since the bridges used by automobiles going into Virginia were also closed.  Metro's Blue line stop at the Pentagon was also closed, and Pentagon employees had been bussed to the next closest stop – Arlington Cemetery – some of them with visible signs of injury, albeit minor.  The ride was almost in complete silence and we sped through the Pentagon stop virtually holding our breath.

     

    The main thing I will never forget because my house was 2 miles south of National Airport and because I was raised in the Air Force, I was used to hearing planes take off and land day and night.  For the next two weeks, there was nothing -- just eerie silence.  On the Sunday that the airport opened long enough to let the private planes leave, I cried because things were finally returning to normal.  Except unfortunately they have never returned to normal.

     

    I think everyone will remember exactly where they were at that horrible point in time.

    • Like 13
    • Thanks 6
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