Writer's Block: 9/11 - Where I was THEN. And where I am NOW.

Sep 11, 2011 10:02


The QUESTION:

9/11: Where were you?

It's hard to put this in words.

But, I'll try.

I could start by saying that this day is being treated like it's MY generation's "day that JFK was shot" or "day that MLK was shot"...only obviously on a much bigger scale. Over 3,000 lives were lost, not just one or two, during a two to three hour span during one ( Read more... )

9/11, tenth anniversary, writer's block

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Re: part 2/2 dieastra September 16 2011, 11:46:02 UTC
(had to split the comment, it was too long)

Nice talking to you, am friending you back, and to think that we only met because of David Tennant! Isn't that great? We both share the love for Sherlock, although I have yet to see the RDJ version, and Stargate, although I am rather a Richard Dean Anderson girl myself - have met him four times and he is just a down to Earth nice guy. And in addition to Doctor Who and David Tennant I also have to throw in John Barrowman, I'm afraid - there's nobody else like him in this world. Saw him live in concert last year in Cardiff, it was amazing. And the icon with David Tenannt happened in June in London at the stage door. Was also amazing.

Have you seen the flag counter on my LJ? People from over 90 different countries have seen my Stargate action figure stories - if you click on it to have a closer look, there are a lot of countries I never would have guessed that they even get the show over there! I like that I can bring people joy with my ideas.

Native American, huh? That makes you officially the first one on my friends list. Must tell you, the Germans are especially fond of Native Americans. The reason is that one German author Karl May who wrote books about the Wild West - surely with lots of clichés and not everything true, but the center of his stories was that friendship between a German and an Apache chief called Winnetou, and showing that Red and White can live together rather than fighting. He died in 1912 but his books are still very popular to this day.

Back in Eastern German days there even were lots of so called Indianistik-groups, people and whole families who on the weekends lived in tents and sew their own clothes and wanted to be a bit back to the roots and back to nature. We had terrible ecological problems, woods dying, rivers full of toxin, so I guess that was a kind of protest. Nowadays we can swim again in the river Elbe or catch fish, you could not do this twenty years ago, it was dead. So, I think the idea that it is possible to live with nature and only take as much as you need appealed to these people.

Another example of that we should learn from each other, instead of destroying old ways.

Sorry, my responses tend to be rather long in general. I like to rattle on ;)

(And yes, birthday party! Yay!)

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