Back
"New York City is getting back to normal," they say. "We really need to get back to the normal," I hear repeatedly.
Yesterday morning, I took the subway down to the financial district. The train slowed down considerably after Brooklyn Bridge and didn't even stop on Wall Street. But it did stop on Whitehall, my exit. As we exited the subway, cops told us to go right. What's usually a hectic street was completely closed off except for a tiny portion of the sidewalk down which we marched like school kids on a museum trip.
As soon as we reached the end of the sidewalk, people rushed into their buildings where another set of cops checked our bags and ids. I pressed the elevator button for the 37th floor, trying to fight back the terrible scenarios that my overactive imagination played. At work, I find out that the stupid virus has caused the firm to shutdown all their internet connections. After I stare at my computer for eight dazed hours, I take a company shuttle up a completely empty FDR drive.
We're getting back to normal, the words echo in my mind.
Today, the subway driver announced right after Fulton that they planned to make the Wall Street stop. I contemplated getting off, but figured walking around Fulton street would be more horrifying then being patient. The train slowed to a stop for a split second and the lights flickered. On a regular day, this is a common occurrence and besides being annoyed at not getting to read my book, I don't think twice. Today, I felt like jumping up and hollering for them to move the damn train.
An hour after I get to work, we start hearing loud bangs. All the employees stare at each other uneasily, each afraid to say the words out loud. We still have no net access and therefore cannot check CNN. We rely solely on the firm notifying us of any news. The bangs come and go intermittently for a few hours. I feel sick to my stomach and decide to take a walk.
We're getting back to normal.
They have opened most of the streets, so I pace up Wall Street and ignore the drizzling rain. I stop in front of the stock exchange to stare at the enormous flag covering the building. My passport might not say so, but I feel American. Even though the rain is getting stronger and my friends advise otherwise, I continue up Broadway. I need to see it, I think to myself. It's important that I do this.
I reach the corner of Cedar and Liberty. Just like fifty others, I stare. The smoke coming out of the ground, the air tasting thick and bitter. I stare at the hole, the cemetery adjacent to the street and the church right next to that. I look at the broken windows in what used to be Jake's workplace. People behind me comment on another building and how it looks like it's expanded in the middle and skewed all over. "Is it an optical illusion?" the man asks. "No, that's the building they kept saying was going to crumble, but it didn't. I think it's damaged, I can't imagine people can work there again," the woman replies.
Getting back to normal.
I take out my aiptek and start shooting pictures. For the last week, this has all felt unreal. As if it was a CNN special. I've been trying to cry, trying to understand, trying to believe. I see the posters all over my neighborhood, the flags on every building, store and person. I hear the hope, withering away. I walk around like a zombie. I stare at the street I stood in every Thursday morning and wonder if it will ever be open again. I look at the names and faces on the posters. People whose only fault was to get to work on time and to help out others. My stomach knots but my eyes are dry. My tears which flood during even a Goldie Hawn movie are refusing to cooperate.
Back to normal.
I don't know what's going on. I don't know if it's over or just beginning. I don't know whether to worry about myself or my family in Turkey. I don't know how many more days I can take the subway. I don't know how much more CNN I can watch. I don't know when I will finally break down. I don't know what this is. But I know what it isn't:
Normal.
Previously? The Big Prize.
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