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A
Childhood Defined By Before and
After 9/11
By Garrett Kling
Published September 05, 2011
I
am part of the paradigm shift
generation of 9/11.
We
embody a group of Americans who
lived two childhoods: pre and post-9/11.
Born
roughly between the years of 1988
and 1993, we spent the first part of our childhood in the 1990s in a
country of
seeming invincibility. Immediately following the Cold War, we were born
into a
time of relative peace as the beginning of the Information Age was upon
us.
In
school we read textbooks about the
American Revolution, but never truly appreciated the freedom it gave
us. We saw
pictures of poverty during the Great Depression and the disease-filled
trenches
of World War I, but couldn’t comprehend any horrifying scenario
occurring in
our day and age.
Because
we were born into a country of
such prosperity and economical stability, we took all we had for
granted.
Reciting
the Pledge of Allegiance was
just the routine to start the school day. Memorizing the Preamble of
the
Constitution merely meant a solid test score in history class. The
American
flag was merely a pattern of stars and stripes, not seeing it as a
representation
of hard-earned liberty.
But
when the Twin Towers fell on that
day in 2001, our innocence fell with them. In a moment we felt a rapid
paradigm
shift from the protection of our childhood and into the reality of a
War on
Terror.
Suddenly
the ground of the once
peaceful land we walked on felt unsteady. Our youthful hopes came to a
screeching halt as our entire country stopped in one single instant.
All that
we had ever learned about our country felt as if it were being
shattered into
thousands of sharp pieces that cut into our naivety.
On
the same television that we grew up
watching cartoons were abrupt images of planes crashing into buildings,
terrorists striking civilians and a war imminent in the Middle East.
All of
this was not happening hundreds of thousands of miles away, but on our
own
soil, in our own dwelling place and to our own people…
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the rest of the column at Foxnews
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