Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Wild: Attitude Instead Of Reassurance

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Wild: Attitude Instead Of Reassurance

    WILD: ATTITUDE INSTEAD OF REASSURANCE
    By Patricia Wild

    Somerville Journal, MA
    Dec 14 2006

    While waiting for a bus recently at New York City's Port Authority,
    an alarm suddenly went off. You know the sound; you've heard it a
    thousand times: an insistent, rhythmic, loud beeping, annoying but
    since you have heard that noise a thousand times, hardly alarming.

    Nevertheless, a soothing voice immediately could be heard on the
    Port Authority's public address system, reassuring commuters and bus
    travelers that the beeping meant nothing, please don't be frightened,
    everything's okay.

    "What's the big deal?" I wondered. "Someone must have accidentally
    set off an emergency-exit alarm. This must happen all the time. Why
    the announcement?"

    And then, of course, I remembered: I was sitting in a building in a
    city that had been attacked. I was surrounded by men and women who
    had lived and worked in NYC on Sept. 11, 2001 and who, quite possibly,
    were still traumatized. To its credit, therefore, the Port Authority
    made a point of letting people know that in this particular instance,
    they had no cause to be afraid.

    That incident in the Big Apple came back to me on the evening of Dec.
    6 when, suddenly, my house and every house on my block lost our
    power. Like many of my neighbors, I imagine, I immediately assumed
    the worst: A terrorist attack on Boston. Hadn't I read recently
    that Gary Hart (Gary Hart?) had proclaimed that another Sept. 11 was
    inevitable? Simply a matter of time? Panicked, heart racing, I groped
    around in the dark for my cell phone and dialed 9-1-1. (Only later
    did I realize that I should have at least tried the landline. Which
    worked.) A state dispatcher immediately connected me to a Somerville
    dispatcher. And that's when the gaping disparity between my Port
    Authority experience and my hometown reaction to this situation
    kicked in.

    Because, I'm afraid, instead of reassurance I got attitude. Instead of
    someone on the other end of the phone understanding that I'm standing
    in the dark, I'm terrified, I'm imagining the worst, I'm definitely
    not thinking straight, I got impatience. A deep sigh. A female voice
    whose bored, dispassionate tone communicated, "Why are you bothering
    me with this?"

    Yes, it's true, she did explain that a manhole cover on Somerville
    Avenue had just exploded. That was useful information. But at any time
    in the conversation did she give any indication that she understands my
    panicked, terrified state? Did she ask me if I was okay? If I'd hurt
    myself stumbling around in the dark? If anyone else was hurt? Heck,
    no. I got zero questions about my safety, what was happening on my
    darkened street. Wouldn't you kind of hope that a Somerville 9-1-1
    dispatcher would understand how panicky people think? Wouldn't you
    kind of hope that in an emergency situation, a Somerville 9-1-1
    dispatcher would ask the questions that should be asked?

    There's so much more that could be said about this: About how, when I
    found out that the Central Library had power, I decided to go there so
    I could read. About how, driving down my street, I passed an elderly
    neighbor's house and realized with horror that I hadn't thought to
    call her to make sure she was all right. About how, at the library,
    I sat beside a Muslim grandmother keeping watch over a sleeping baby
    lying in a carriage while the baby's mother searched for VHF movies
    and I wondered about the circumstances which had brought these three
    to Somerville. Had they huddled together in the dark, terrified,
    panicked? About how the subject of the book I'd read is the 1915
    Armenian genocide and about how, sitting in a well-lit, warm, safe
    place, reading that 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered while their
    Turkish neighbors watched, my guilt at not calling my elderly neighbor
    increased. About how much more brightly my neighbors' Christmas lights
    seemed to glow when the electricity finally came back on.

    The day following the power outage was Dec. 7, the 65th anniversary
    of Pearl Harbor, an ironical coda to this incident. Pearl Harbor's
    anniversary was a tap on the shoulder from the past. Remember:
    History happens. Life changes on a dime. Keep candles, matches,
    and flashlights handy.
Working...
X