🇬🇧 British Reaction to Alan Jackson - Where were you (When the world stopped turning) 🇬🇧

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 ก.ค. 2024
  • #AlanJackson #WhereWereYou #WhenTheWorldStopTurning #BritishReaction #Countrymusic #NeverForgotten #9/11
    This is my COUNTRY MUSIC REACTION to ALAN JACKSON - WHERE WERE YOU (WHEN THE WORLD STOP TURNING) so welcome to my channel and I hope you enjoy this reaction video and all of the others which you can find on my channel.
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ความคิดเห็น • 694

  • @lanatrapp1589
    @lanatrapp1589 2 ปีที่แล้ว +276

    Alan is hands down one of the best songwriters of our time. Alan said he couldn't sleep so he got up picked up a pen and God wrote the words.

  • @ashleyranch9721
    @ashleyranch9721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +277

    i LOVED how he did not pause it to talk so then you can really get into the feel of it!!! thanks

    • @taylorfamilyreactions
      @taylorfamilyreactions  2 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      I don’t think I could have if I tried!

    • @ashleyranch9721
      @ashleyranch9721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@taylorfamilyreactions same here if it comes on i just have to listen to it!!

    • @SportsandTrueCrime
      @SportsandTrueCrime ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@taylorfamilyreactions As an army brat of 2 vets who grew up on military bases, have many active and retired military family members, a 911 survivor and 1st responder and a federal agent, this song got to me beyond belief. I remember it like a crystal clear nightmare. I worked at WTC. Survived. Went to get my son and see my mother bcuz at the time cells weren’t working due to the sheer traffic of calls. I hugged and kissed my family then went right back. The first 2-3 were rescue missions. Afterward, it was recovery efforts. I will never forget calling for bodybags like every 5 minutes. At some point we were finding just pieces. An intestine, limbs, appendages, etc. I still haven’t been back to the site to visit the memorial since. 🇺🇸 💪🏾

    • @tammysue6199
      @tammysue6199 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      September 9 11 God bless America

    • @J.M.Savage
      @J.M.Savage ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@SportsandTrueCrime God bless you, and you family. I can't imagine how it must have affected you

  • @cwickner1
    @cwickner1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +86

    Alan's words, "I woke up one morning around 4 a.m. a few weeks afterward, and had that chorus going through my head. The song came out of nowhere in the middle of the night -- just a gift. And I got up and scribbled it down and put the melody down so I wouldn't forget it, and then the next day I started piecing all those verses together that were the thoughts I'd had or visuals I'd had. It was a Sunday -- I remember because, when I started writing it, my wife and girls had gone off to Sunday school, and I finished it that day. Like I said, that song was just a gift. I've never felt I could take credit for writing it. Looking back, I guess I just didn't want to forget how I felt on that day and how I knew other people felt.. He wrote it one week before performing it on the CMA awards

    • @chrismorin1318
      @chrismorin1318 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I remember him performing it that night! So many tears and raw emotions. I feel like that to this very day when I hear this song. I think I'll always cry when I hear it.

  • @chuckschoch
    @chuckschoch 2 ปีที่แล้ว +129

    Sometimes we speak the loudest when we say nothing at all...everything you could have possibly said during the song was written in your eyes. Thank you for reacting to this song.

    • @asaabrahamagulnik574
      @asaabrahamagulnik574 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Your comment just reminded me of an Alison Krauss song (When You Say Nothing At All); I love that song.

    • @maryj2671
      @maryj2671 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wow! loved this comment! Alan could you write a song ? Sometimes we speak the loudest when we say nothing at all.. everything you could of possibly said during our beautiful life together , was always written in your eyes. huh? what do you think Alan? ty chuckschoch such a great comment!

  • @jimreilly917
    @jimreilly917 2 ปีที่แล้ว +209

    On your face I could read all the reactions I had when this first came out. On 9/12/01 and again this year, the Queen ordered her Guards to play our anthem. She’s been pure class since WWII. 🇺🇸🇬🇧

    • @terryskidmore6739
      @terryskidmore6739 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Yes she is. God save the Queen ❣️🇺🇸🇬🇧

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@terryskidmore6739 keep in mind I’m American saying that…and every grandparent came from Ireland right after the civil war in the 20s. What Churchill did with the Black n Tans he can suck it. But QEII DROVE FOR THE MED CORPS IN WWII. I have deep respect for that.

    • @patriciaotoole5930
      @patriciaotoole5930 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Ty

    • @aletmartins6940
      @aletmartins6940 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It still makes me cry.

    • @johndalessandro6433
      @johndalessandro6433 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yes she was!!!'when she passed , even though she wasn't our queen, we felt it! She didn't just wear a crown and wave, she got her hands dirty during the war as a mechanic . She was so young , I will always admire her!!

  • @gregtaylor8651
    @gregtaylor8651 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Army veteran here. I was at the Pentagon when it was attacked heading for that ring to do work. It a day no one will forget, but it a day, I relive every year. My children were in school and daycare while my wife was visiting her parents in Germany. This song brings me to tears even today. All the words are spot on for me as my brother and his wife were on there way from NC to VA to get my kids because they had not heard from me due the phone lines and cell lines were all down.

    • @lilsuzec
      @lilsuzec 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Wow. What a horrible day for you and your family. I was in Georgia, so not as personal, but like he said, we just watched the news on repeat for days. Atl was on lockdown. Some of us were terrified of something happening at the CDC bc of all the diseases we store there.
      Thank God you and your family are safe. Thank you for your service.

  • @ArleneAdkinsZell
    @ArleneAdkinsZell 2 ปีที่แล้ว +101

    I was in my home office, my husband was supposed to be at the Pentagon that day, but he was caught in traffic, he was on the exit ramp at the Pentagon when it was hit. I was a crazy person until I heard from him, all the schools locked down and I couldn't get my children, I have never felt so helpless. I just sat there watching people die, others risking their lives to help and praying for every one and everything, it was all I could do.

    • @deannaledford1270
      @deannaledford1270 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      The nice part about living in a country Community where everybody knows everybody I was able to get my kids

    • @tjk200081
      @tjk200081 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I'm glad to hear that your husband survived!

    • @joypenta3999
      @joypenta3999 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I truly believe in my heart angels where looking down and guard him safety that day! I'm glad he was ok.

    • @Openeyes847
      @Openeyes847 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      My Lord I hope you had anyone with you. My heart hurts for you just hearing your story. Even after all these years, it still hurts. I had no one in any of the attack's. But I knew so many that were soon to be sent to war. I am glad the Lord blessed you and yours.

  • @jam6242
    @jam6242 2 ปีที่แล้ว +137

    I was working in Washington, D.C., that day so I had a first-hand view of some of the events. A number of British citizens were also killed in the attacks (as well as citizens of other countries). This truly impacted the world. As someone mentioned below, as an American, I was very touched when our national anthem was played at Buckingham Palace. Thanks for reacting.

    • @aletmartins6940
      @aletmartins6940 2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      I agree. The Queen is much loved for allowing the US anthem to be played. It broke my heart that so many Americans were stuck and couldn’t get home.

    • @christianlequoix7473
      @christianlequoix7473 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      That was hands down the true definition of honor and respect. Knowing how much respect for that to have happened, I was proud to have English ancestry like never before.
      God Save the Queen.

  • @michelleortega1514
    @michelleortega1514 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    Toby keiths red white and blue is really how we all felt.

    • @davidtullis2810
      @davidtullis2810 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I agree but at the same time it's what gets the US into all these wars around the world that cannot be won

    • @michaelb.3982
      @michaelb.3982 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@davidtullis2810 Be thankful, you're an American, little girl !
      ''Wars around the world'' ??????

  • @HeatherHolt1313
    @HeatherHolt1313 2 ปีที่แล้ว +63

    Brings tears Everytime I hear it. That day my 8yr old and 6yr old sons learned what absolute hate and evil were. There was no hiding it, no downplaying it, couldn't do anything but TRY to explain.

  • @ginnyedmister3717
    @ginnyedmister3717 2 ปีที่แล้ว +63

    I was getting ready for work and watching the news. Everyone at first thought the first plane was an accident but when we saw the second plane fly right into the second tower we knew we were under attack. Just thinking about the people who held hands and jumped out of the windows breaks my heart and brings tears streaming down my face. We need to always remember.

    • @aletmartins6940
      @aletmartins6940 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I knew people had jumped, but just this weekend saw film and heard about the man and woman who held hands and leaped. I cried.

    • @raquelmyers9159
      @raquelmyers9159 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I wasn't born whenever 9/11 happened but it still feels personal and like I was there, I can't watch footage of it without crying.

    • @DivineFate900
      @DivineFate900 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yep. After what happened. We know in our hearts that things will never, EVER, be the same again.

    • @elizaolsen9532
      @elizaolsen9532 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I was at the hospital waiting on my sister to get out of heart surgery. We were watching TV in her room and I too thought it was a movie until my niece called and asked if we saw the news . That's when the second plane hit the north tower . I had to get home because my grandson was in first grade and they were supposed to be watching President Bush talk to thier sister class in Florida. Thank God he didn't react when someone whispered into his ear . The school called to tell me they were releasing the children . I got home just as he came home . He's Mom worked for a company that had their headquarters in the south tower . I thought this was as bad as when I was in Dallas during a field trip to see President Kennedy's trip to Texas . I still see the horror of that day .

  • @heatherlaforest232
    @heatherlaforest232 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Thanks for reacting to this. I noticed throughout the song that you were reliving what you saw on the news that day, I could see the pain & heartache from all the innocent people/children that we lost. I was living in Florida when it came on the news & I just couldn't believe it. When the news showed people jumping out of the windows of the twin towers, I picked up my daughter (who would've been 4 mths old on the 14th). I held her rocking back & forth crying for everyone that died then called my mother in Massachusetts just to make sure she was ok as we cried together.

  • @HappyValleyDreamin
    @HappyValleyDreamin 2 ปีที่แล้ว +133

    Thank You so much for doing this for us and for sharing your experience when you watched what was happening here. It means so much to us. I will never forget that day for as long as I live. I remember watching the Changing Of The Guard at Buckingham Palace and the band played our National Anthem. The Queen and PM Tony Blair were both there. OMG! I sat there and cried my eyes out watching that. It was so touching💕💕💕

  • @jtp8393
    @jtp8393 2 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    Let’s see if I can do this!!! In 2001, I worked in a vocational training center for people with mental illness and other cognitive/intellectual disabilities in Uptown Minneapolis. I was in my office early that day, around 7:30am. Shortly after (note that NYC is one hour ahead of us here in the Midwest), one of my staff called me to ask if I had heard about the "small" plane that "accidentally" flew into the WTC in NYC!!! I went to one of the work rooms and turned on the TV. By now there were speculations that it was a jumbo jet and that it was no accident. Then I saw the second plane hit live on TV. From that point on, all is blurry for me. I remember tears, lots of tears, confusion, calling my relatives out east (with no response), calling my family here in MN. The one thing that keeps haunting me to this day is the stillness in the sky that afternoon and in the days that followed. You see, uptown Mpls is in the flight path to MSP, and there is usually a lot of buzzing in the sky all day long. When they grounded all flights over the entire country, that unbearable emptiness/stillness somehow made it very hard to cope with what was happening. It seems weird that I fixated on the emptiness in the skies but maybe in my mind, that became the symbol that my brain associated with the tragedy that we were experiencing. To make matters worse, while I was trying to sort through my own confusion, anger, grief, etc., work was also very intense during those following weeks because I worked with many people with mental illness who needed extra care to cope, especially those with conditions that included paranoia and anxiety. This is the first time in 20 years that I revisited that chapter of my life. Although I have tears in my eyes, it somehow feels better to express than to avoid facing the memories of that terrible day.

    • @bethkahn8278
      @bethkahn8278 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Same here working in a nursing home. Turned on the tv in each room I worked in. My son enlisted that day. He was 17.

  • @judydechant9205
    @judydechant9205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I am an American and I truly appreciate you doing this reaction video for us. I was in Virginia at that time taking a college course. Our instructors dad was expected to pass away and she was going to head to Texas after her her last class, sadly he passed away that day. The head of the school came in to let her know to call her family in Texas while we sat in class waiting. An hour later the head of the school came in and told us that the WTC had been attacked. She released all of us to go to our cars for another hour ( where all of us logged into our radios and many tried calling their families in New York ). After we returned to class, the school sent us all home. After I got home I could see the news on the TV of all that transpired that day. It was a very somber day. Thank you again from the USA 🇺🇸

  • @SickGirlRocks
    @SickGirlRocks 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    ❤️ I was getting ready for work. I woke up my husband and when I got to work all we did was listen to the radio all day. I think everyone knew someone affected directly. It’s devastating that here we are 20 years later and we are so messed up we have ignorant people here tearing down memorials because they are made up of American flags and we have people in college who don’t even know who was responsible. It just makes you want to shake people!!

  • @mimomof2
    @mimomof2 2 ปีที่แล้ว +65

    I remember watching his performance of this song on the CMA's for the first time. I don't think there was a dry eye in the house.

    • @shelleytorok1406
      @shelleytorok1406 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The silence as he performed and the reaction when he finished.... no words

    • @juanitamansfield2428
      @juanitamansfield2428 ปีที่แล้ว

      I worked for a Dr's exchange emergency service

  • @judyjones1044
    @judyjones1044 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Alan Jackson wrote and performed this live at the CMAs in October 2001. Your heartfelt reaction and story touched me. I live in Washington State. My father in law called and told us to turn on the TV. My 21 year old nephew was in NYC at Rockefeller Center when the planes hit the towers. Longest 4 hours of our lives before we heard he was safe.

  • @tallestmountain
    @tallestmountain ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The difference between this song and so many other 9/11, is that most of them are filled with anger. This one just unites us.

  • @larynanntapp6333
    @larynanntapp6333 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Thank you for not stopping this video. It was obvious that you were struggling while listening to it and that tells me what kind of man you are. Please take care of yourself. Regards from Kentucky.

  • @donfleming9886
    @donfleming9886 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    One of the greatest songs ever written in any genre. It just never gets any easier to reflect on that day. All these years later it's the same degree of sadness, shock, and devastation.

  • @janethoffman4197
    @janethoffman4197 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    We will never forget. Thanks to our friends around the world who rallied around us. This song brings a tear yet every time I hear it. Thanks for reacting to this!❤️🇺🇸❤️

    • @kenfreeman5940
      @kenfreeman5940 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      We will never forget. However our elected officials have already forgotten. The words say one thing but their actions say another.

    • @elizabethannedavis5176
      @elizabethannedavis5176 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This.

  • @sarahmckee3914
    @sarahmckee3914 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I was actually giving birth to my youngest son. Unfortunately at about 230 pm I began to crash and went in for emergency surgery. Dr's said I had about a 40% chance of living. My son was completely healthy thankfully but I didn't get to see my son till the next day when I began to stabilize. Blessed to have a reason to celebrate every year on 9/11.

  • @magic8ball1982
    @magic8ball1982 2 ปีที่แล้ว +138

    9/11 is definitely our generation's JFK story. Everyone remembers exactly what they were doing the moment they found out.

    • @cards0486
      @cards0486 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Many of us were kids on 11/22/63, I was 12. We were very aware of the horror of what hit our country. But didn’t really feel the depth of it.
      9/11/01 we were adults; and immediately thought back to that November day in 1963.
      We had the sick feeling and overwhelming grief that adults had then.
      I felt it harder on 9/11 of course. Now I was 50. And I had a classroom of 3rd graders.
      Those older had experienced December 7,1941. The attack on Pearl Harbor was a day just like these two days.
      Those “you’ll always remember where you were when you found out” days.

    • @sharonw.9091
      @sharonw.9091 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@cards0486 I was in the first grade when JFK was assassinated. Like you, I didn't understand the situation until I was older. It's strange how you remember tragedies with moments in your own life.

    • @trevorsmith9162
      @trevorsmith9162 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cards0486 9/11/01, I was 12. i was at school 6th grade history class my teacher walked in she had a blank look on her face i remember she was crying the principal came over the loudspeaker and told us what had happened & that the world would never be the same.

    • @ffwr-109
      @ffwr-109 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@trevorsmith9162 6th grade Spanish class here.

    • @annpachini2155
      @annpachini2155 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cards0486 I was in the 7th grade when President Kennedy was assassinated. I will never forget that day. When it was announced you could have heard a pin drop in the school it was so quiet

  • @Changeiscoming47
    @Changeiscoming47 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    We Americans did the exact same thing you’ve described. We were so shocked and in disbelief that it wasn’t registering at first. I was a senior in college. Never, ever in my lifetime to that day could I have imagined anything like it. We all remember the entire day. Every minute. Bless you for caring so many years later ❤️

  • @toodlescae
    @toodlescae 2 ปีที่แล้ว +61

    Another good one on this subject is Have You Forgotten? By Darryl Worley.

    • @cathybrown8334
      @cathybrown8334 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I got to see Darryl Worley in concert, everyone was crying while he played that song. Darryl has never gotten the success he deserves.

    • @suescully2061
      @suescully2061 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I will try to find it and have a listen xx

    • @christianlequoix7473
      @christianlequoix7473 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cathybrown8334 He sang it on his USO tour.... We didn't forget.

  • @oougahersharr
    @oougahersharr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was late for work that day. I live in Vermont (the state to the left of New York in the USA, but I lived at the top of the state and NYC is at the bottom of NY state). I worked in IT in a very large government office at the time. I was running late so didn't turn on a radio or the TV or anything, just got up, dressed, and drove to work, no radio. I checked in at the desk and the guard said nothing. I went through the next security check, into the IT department, and there was NO ONE around. I figured someone must be in the back server room, so I checked through that security and went in. EVERYONE was back there, glued to the 57 inch TV we have to help magnify computer components for repair work. I thought that they were watching some sports event I forgot about and that they'd be in trouble if they didn't stop. I walked over to say something to one of them and as soon as I reached the group, the Pentagon seemed to explode on the scree. I gasped and said, loudly, "my God, we're at war!" As a Vet, I was horrified that there would be war so soon (I'd served in 90-91 in Kuwait-Iraq). A girl in charge said "this was a bomb, maybe?" And someone else pointed out that something had happened to the twin towers, as well. I was in shock as the rest of the team suddenly filed out, as if they couldn't take any more, and went back to work. I was left watching the TV (my job was in that room, so I had sole access to that TV at all times unless someone signed in).
    I left it on and watched the first tower fall then the second, going out to report this to the others as it happened. Then I found out from the girl in charge that our secretary was at the World Trade Center for a seminar. We hadn't gotten word from her due to communications being down coming from NYC. Then someone else asked Lois, "wait, wasn't your daughter on a plane today?" I went back to the TV and came back to report the plane that went down in Pennsylvania and everyone was horrified, because Lois' daughter. Lois said, "if she'd dead, she died a hero. Get back to work!" We later found out that Lois' daughter was on a fifth plane that was stopped in the airport before taking off.
    And Joanna, our secretary, has been in Building 7. While she was coming out the door to evacuate, the group she was with was crossing a street and one lady stopped to take pictures. Joanna grabbed her and pulled her back onto the sidewalk to yell at her, separating the group in two. A fireball came roaring down the street between the group and Joanna and the lady she was yelling at. That fireball came when the second tower fell. Joanna and that lady had been saved by Joanna pulling her back and yelling at her.
    We were told by DC NOT to evacuate so they could keep track of where the employees were, but this was such a large government building, we were certain we were on the list to be hit, so the BIG BOSS evacuated everyone and let HQ yell at him if they wished. Driving home, I can remember it raining so hard I had to pull over because I couldn't see. However, a couple years ago, when talking to my Mom about that day, she told me "the skies were clear blue, no rain." I had been crying that hard I thought it was raining.
    We lost so many people that day, citizens, visitors, everyone. Not just Americans went down. And the entire world was effected. I will never forget standing in that server room, alone, watching as the news played out, singing to myself to try to keep calm because I KNEW we were at war, even if we hadn't gone to war yet.

  • @bentonthrasher1194
    @bentonthrasher1194 2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I remember specifically... I was in my middle school home room which was also my first period algebra classroom. We had just been handed our prework which is basically the warmup for the day to lead into the days lesson. We were (mostly) all heads down, working on the assignment when I heard the door open and another teacher come in; this wasn't terribly odd, due to the configuration of the school and our classes all the teachers kind of shared the same grade students so there was a lot of keeping up between them. But I'll never forget what she said, which I didn't realize the significance of it at the time, "they hit us." My maths teacher answered, "huh?" -- "They hit us, an explosion or something, in New York, look at channel 4."
    A few moments later my teacher turned on the news station and I think it was just a few minutes before the second plane hit. The black smoke billowing from the first building, the chaos on the streets, no one knowing exactly what was going on. We soon realized it wasn't a simple explosion but a plane had hit the tower. At first there was speculation that it was a small passenger plane, but then reports came in that it was a large jetliner but people still kind of refused to believe iit. And then.... The second plane hit the second tower and life changed forever. I remember the instantaneous change in the reporters and the anchors tones, the way my teachers voice changed. I remember specifically each bell rang at the end of the hour for us to go to our next classroom, but we were told to stay. I remember around lunch time nothing had been prepared so we were served sack lunches with sandwiches, chips and juice. I remember we finally ended up changing classrooms around 1PM or so, only to be notified that we would be ending the day early and the busses would be running and parents had been notified.
    I remember when I got home my mother and my older sisters crying, my father glaring at the TV lost for words. I remember feeling lost, being 12 or so years old I didn't understand exactly what was going on, only that it was terrible. I remember seeing people jumping to their deaths from high up the tower. I remember seeing people covered in white dust walking and running away from the collapsed towers. I remember seeing the wreckage, the recovery and the aftermath. I remember seeing ground zero for weeks and months afterwards, wondering if it would ever look different, if it would ever look normal; or if it would be a scar forever, a reminder of that horrific day.
    It does something to a person, even if they aren't directly connected to an event like that, simply to experience it. I remember one of my good friends in school Mohammad started having bullies harass him simply due to his name; he wasn't even from the middle east but from Bosnia. I remember the sadness, the fear, the hate... But I also remember the strength, the will, the courage. We had a dark period in America after that. But we rose from the ashes as we have done before. And now, in current day, we lose ourselves in political conversations or disagreements about certain hot topic issues. We forget the fact that above all, we are all Americans and we share this great experiment that is the USA. I hope and I wish that we do not lose ourselves in these things for long, that we learn to listen and learn and conversate and debate and take the time to understand each other. Because we've been through much, much worse than what we currently must deal with, regardless of how bad some of it may be.

    • @ellicechamberlain711
      @ellicechamberlain711 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Very well said.

    • @cherylmacvane8791
      @cherylmacvane8791 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are a good, remarkable young person, with sense, compassion, wisdom and love. Please don't change. I'm proud of you.

  • @joyceshook8612
    @joyceshook8612 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Alan Jackson is the best, all his doings are number one to me! I have his songs from the beginning He’s number one to me!!

  • @tndeer1950
    @tndeer1950 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Obviously, being American, this song has always been special and struck a chord with me.
    But, your reaction has touched me and was very much appreciated.
    I wish I could meet you in person to talk about country music because I have enjoyed your channel very much.
    Keep up the good work my British country music friend.
    Michael in Tennessee

  • @louisetemples7011
    @louisetemples7011 2 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Thank you for your compassion and empathy! You have a wonderful caring heart and I respect and appreciate you very much! Thank you for reacting to this amazing song!♥️

  • @gramalinda750
    @gramalinda750 2 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    I stopped by to ask you to react to Tony Keith’s “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue” but I see I’m late. Love your channel! ❤️

  • @chueysmama2622
    @chueysmama2622 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Thank you for your heart felt reaction. It was a terrible day. I was in my 30's back then, I happened to be with my Grandma and her sister. We were already watching the news, as they did every morning. I'll never forget the looks on their faces or that fear, pain and anger I felt well up in me. Horrible time, but we as Americans pulled TOGETHER and acted as ONE people in such a beautiful yet sorrowful way to do what we could as a UNITED country. I wish we still felt together as one.

  • @kellie6048
    @kellie6048 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was in 9th grade in my 9am class. The intercom came on and told all the classes to turn on the news. One of the planes had just hit. Teachers were quickly moving from classroom to classroom talking to each other. And I just remember that afterwards the silence and quietness set in. As a bunch of 14-15 year olds from a no where town we didn't understand the gravity and reality of it. None of us had ever even been to New York, some had never even seen a big city. But the fear and silence in the teachers as they watched the TV was deafening. When the second plane hit the intercom came on and told the teachers to turn off the TV's. My teacher did, she sat silent for a moment or two and then tried to tell us what happened and the impact it was. She struggled with it, her voice was shaky. The whole day the intercom would go off every 5 minutes with kids names called to be picked up from school. When I got home mom and dad sat me down and explained it all to me.

  • @terryskidmore6739
    @terryskidmore6739 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Every year on September 11th I listen to this song. We will never forget. Thank you for posting this. 🇺🇸🇬🇧

  • @pamspead9090
    @pamspead9090 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I was at work, a Retirement home, we were all in shock, my son-in-laws sister was sent to NY to the towers for work as the company she worked for had offices there. Thank God she wasn't there that day. I still remember the horror and sadness

  • @josephking6251
    @josephking6251 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was nine years old when it happened. I stood in shock, no clue why this happened; why someone would do that to so many souls. The impact is still affecting, it gave birth to me wanting to do something more when I grew up.

  • @trudymorris9981
    @trudymorris9981 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was on my way to work and listening to the radio in the Chicago area. When I got to the office it was on the tv and everyone was in shock.

  • @sallypursell1284
    @sallypursell1284 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I was 50 years old, and home alone during school, since I worked Night Shift. My brother called from New York City to tell me that he was okay. I didn't know why, and he told me to turn on the TV. I stood in front of it much of the afternoon. I felt so stunned, and grieved for so many people and their survivors. I am a nurse, and I wished I had been in New York. I would have certainly gone to help.

  • @LadyGator1983
    @LadyGator1983 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Thank you for doing this reaction today! I live in South Carolina, in the United States. As you said I think everyone remembers where they were the day the world stopped turning. I worked for a plaintiffs law firm at the time. One of our cocounsel worked into the north tower. Literally, I was in the bathroom getting ready for work. My husband called me into the living room to tell me that a plane had struck the north tower. From that point on, I was glued to the TV and never went to work. I remember at one point, actually feeling like the world was coming to an end. Alan Jackson was truly inspired to write this song. My prayers go out to all of those families who lost a loved one that horrific day. I pray that I never witnessed anything like that again in my lifetime. 🙏🏼🇺🇸🙏🏼🇺🇸🙏🏼🇺🇸

  • @tippytoe1250
    @tippytoe1250 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I was driving to jury duty in LA. I heard it on the radio and didn’t believe it was true. Got to court and they directed us to all leave. I cried for all the people who lost their lives and their families for days.My husband has an uncle who worked in the second tower. He wasn’t in the office that day. But today he works the new freedom towner next to the memorial site. In 2019 we took our kids to see the memorial. Their great uncle got them little badges to scan into the freedom tower for the 360 view.

  • @carmenelliott470
    @carmenelliott470 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am from Canada and I remember waking up and seeing on the news what was happening. I went to school (grade 9, age 14) and the whole school got together and we all just sat silent. On September 11th, 2010 I had my beautiful daughter. It’s our day to celebrate her but I always remember those whose lives were lost that day. The greatest gift we have is love. It costs nothing to be kind. For anyone out there who needs to hear it; you are beautiful,you are worth it, and you are loved. 💜

  • @henryfreimuth9359
    @henryfreimuth9359 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    First of all thank you for your service to your Country
    Powerful song. I was in the military, just joined less than a year prior. Recently had graduated from my initial school after after basic training.
    That particular morning I was on “base escort duty” meaning I sat around till some servicemen needed a ride typically to report the base I was stationed at. I received a call to pick up someone from bootcamp at the airport and escort them to base (about an hours drive).
    During the drive I was listening to the radio and the DJ’s interrupted the songs saying “just in!” “The World Trade Center in New York was struck by an airplane and responders are evaluating the scene, no one knows what or why it happened, potentially some of the plane’s equipment malfunctioned.” Didn’t think much of it and turned down the radio. I picked up the new guy from the airport, and as we started driving back i saw dozens of emergency vehicles. Fire Engines, Ambulance, Law Enforcement flying by me ( I was stationed in Virginia at the time btw).
    I turned the radio back on and they said “another tower was hit by another plane, and they are treating the scene as potentially intentional or terrorism”
    Once hearing that I increased my speed to get back to base as I approached the base the was traffic entering the base at least 1/2 mile long jammed up. But there was a Military Policeman in empty lane rushing government vehicles through the jam so as to get to the base much quicker.
    As I approached the gate the Marine MP immediately said “Identification, Alpha Personal only beyond the gate, report to your unit immediately!” We flew into the base hoping out all kinds of busy chaos happening. I reported to the Duty Officer and he told me go to the barracks get your gear, we are deploying in less than 30 minutes!”
    Within 2 hours of the second trade center being hit, we were flown by helicopter to New York for “Operation Noble Eagle”. Smoke and dust covered most the city proper. It was mayhem for civilian emergency personal, responding as far away as Pennsylvania, to best of my knowledge. After the towers fell, we stayed on site for 1 week helping and assisting making sure so no other threats were happening in the area.
    After that week I was immediately sent on a Naval Ship bound for Iraq where I spent the next 7 months. Everything about my newly accepted military career had changed at that point, as did the military itself. As the military prior that day of the attack was in peace mode for almost a decade, and in a flash it was go time. It continued to be “go-time” with numerous deployments for me over the next 9 years i spent in service rotating to the middle-east back to home back and forth.
    Until I decided to leave the service after 3 deployments in 9 years. I was tired of “getting lucky” to keep making it home, and felt my duty had been fulfilled. I was tired and ready ready to move on

  • @VerchielxKanda
    @VerchielxKanda 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thank you for reacting to this!!
    I was nine years old, in class, and my teacher had the TV on already, because she looked at the weather every morning, just in case we got to go play outside later. The principal came over the loudspeaker and said that all teachers needed to turn onto the news channel immediately. She complied and the first thing we saw was two burning buildings. They did a replay of the second plane hitting in a small screen at the bottom. All thirty of us kids were silent, confused on why that happened. We saw people jumping from the buildings, falling to their deaths, and then we saw the buildings falling. One classmate said "People were in those!" A couple of kids were crying. I was just pale faced and confused.
    When she turned off the TV, our teacher calmly said " I know you probably want to ask some questions. There are things that happened on that TV that I can't tell you, because I don't know myself. But I will do my best to answer you." One kid immediately asked about the people who jumped, and she told him that they did that, because they felt that it was the only thing they could do. She told us that we would understand when we got a bit older and encouraged us to talk to our families about this. We immediately got to work on a Twin Tower memorial project.

  • @EchoRider515
    @EchoRider515 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I live in Poughkeepsie, NY. About an hour & 1/2 from New York city. That morning, my boyfriend had to go to court & asked me to come for moral support. When we were walking across the street to the municipal building I heard a loud roar & saw a plane too big to be flying that low. I pointed up & said if that plane is landing at 1 of the 2 major airports in NYC, he's flying too low & if he's coming into the smaller local airport, he's coming in way too fast! I grew up right by the smaller one, so you get to notice this. Also my husband was in the Air Force, so we lived on a few air bases. I remember being very shook up. Then seeing ANOTHER ONE & having an anxiety attack! We went into the building & were only seated a very short time when suddenly the bailiff & security guards were hustling everyone out. They were trying to be orderly and professional but, it was obvious that they were very worried & even scared. They instructed those who were to be in court to leave the building but not go home as court may continue. We went directly across the street to a diner. And there on the TV we saw it!!! 😰 When we went outside we could actually see clouds of smoke from that far away! It was the worst & most frightening feeling ever. 💙💔😭

  • @shelleytorok1406
    @shelleytorok1406 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    He performed it live at an awards show less than 2 months after the event
    It had not been released, so had never been heard and there wasn't a sound during the performance but the reaction when he finished... Wow
    CMA 2001 check it out

  • @themeg1540
    @themeg1540 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I was 15 when it happened and in a small school in Michigan. Watched it happen on a TV in the class. Our school had televisions in every class and even the cafeteria. We just watched all day long in every class. It was so quiet all day. Even when there were a few hundred of us in the cafeteria for lunch, no one said anything. Usually, it was so loud you barely could hear the people next to you talking. That is the thing that I remember the most - just scared silence.

  • @ashleyranch9721
    @ashleyranch9721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    i live on this song and i cry about it every time!!!😭😭😭

  • @josephkondrat6478
    @josephkondrat6478 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I was going to a nearby town for a meeting when the country radio station turned to the news, which it never did before. Just listening to the news report, I knew we were now at war with someone. The horror of that day ran on the television for weeks with every passing funeral. Even today not all the dead have been accounted for. It will be a day remembered like we remember the attack on Pearl Harbor.

  • @michellejackson6679
    @michellejackson6679 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Still listening to you talk about that day and u watching the news... My husband (now passed) was on the other side of NSA... (National Security Agency) right outside of Washington DC,,, he couldn't get home,,, the roads were shut down.... I had to go a pick up my 4 children from school.. 1 in High School. 2 in middle school and 1 in elementary school while my mom was with my 15 month old baby. Just want to say. as an American and a MOM... living 30 miles from the White House that day... I will never forget

  • @ChicagoDB
    @ChicagoDB 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You can never go wrong with Alan Jackson…at least 30 massive hits. A fine and talented man!

  • @stparisian
    @stparisian หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    America loves you, ya know. 🥰🇺🇸😘

  • @Justaperson354
    @Justaperson354 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My neighbor worked at the trade center and he never missed a single day of work but his wife went into labor at 2am on September 11th. He missed work for the birth of his daughter. I met him many years after the attack, but that story always sat with me. His daughter saved his life by deciding to be born two weeks early than planned.
    I still remember watching the news with bated breath. My father dropped his coffee mug and the sound of the mug shattering while my mother gasped rings just as fresh as it did the day it happened. If one thing I love the most about Americans is how patriotic and supportive they are in times of crisis.

  • @maddonut621
    @maddonut621 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My 9/11. I was just barely 22 super pregnant with my daughter. We lived in the San Francisco bay area in California. I was watching the news when the reports started scrolling across the screen. My then almost 2 yr old (9/14) sitting on my lap watching as the news kept scrolling through the crashes and info. Hes 22 now and still remembers sitting there with me while i cried. But it was eerie... No planes in the skys. No traffic on the roads. Nothing but silence in a large city. It was almost ghostly.

  • @tomneff7102
    @tomneff7102 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I was 13, in Technology education class, listening to a local radio station at school, WDVE 102.5 Pittsburgh, our Rock station.
    A great song was playing, and just as it was getting to a guitar solo, the song cut off, and the morning DJ broke the news.
    But we also knew this DJ was notorious for making jokes, or as you'd say taking the pi**, so we called our teacher over and told him what was reported.
    His answer to us I'll never forget, he looked us dead in the eyes and said Bulls***.
    He turned the TV in the classroom on, and the image 8s forever burned into my memory.
    14 years later, I was in the US Navy. I was honorably discharged earlier this year.
    Everyone has moments in their life, some great and some not so much, that they'll never forget. This day is one of them for me.
    But the resiliency shown by the country, combined with the unity and heroes of the day (There are many), isn't something I'll forget either.

  • @clpjones1964
    @clpjones1964 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Hits you in the feels, doesn't it? Watching you react to this video and seeing you struggle to hide your emotions (I get it. No crying on camera.) is why I'm now a subscriber. Thank you for this and for "showing your heart." For the record, I cried through the whole video....every time.

  • @suescully2061
    @suescully2061 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    As with all Alan Jackson songs the wording was perfect , Alan is definitely the best singer songwriter of our era, just can't listen to enough of his music. Thank you for showing not just the video but your reaction xx

  • @andreaplummer3841
    @andreaplummer3841 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I live near Houston...the energy center. A target rich environment. We were so scared. Rumors flying around about freeways shutting down because of the refineries and chemical plants near by. Telling people to fill their gas tanks because pumps would be shut down and we might have to evacuate. We spent the day much like you did...watching the news in shock, scared and trying to make sense of it all. I was in high school when Timothy McVeigh blew up the federal building in Oklahoma City. We thought that was our JFK, our Pearl Harbor. Little did we know...

  • @alysiareid6659
    @alysiareid6659 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I cry every time I hear it. Thank you 🤗

  • @Melissa-wx4lu
    @Melissa-wx4lu ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was 16 and getting dressed for school. I watch the news in the mornings because I was weird like that.
    I remember calling to my family as I hurried from my room to the front room tv and put the news on, we all stood there, my cousins and my aunt, all half dressed for the day and saw the second plane hit on live TV and I said, "This is on purpose." And my Aunt started freaking out. Which scared my cousins, 12 and 8 at the time. My grandmother called to talk to us all to be careful at school. We lived on the other side of the country but there were still planes in the air that didn't respond to the orders to land, so the country was holding it[s breath.
    That day at school was very odd, no one taught that day. they had the TV's in all the classrooms hooked up to CNN. I remember I was in art class and all had our heads down on our projects and I happened to look up right at the right moment to see the first tower fall. I said "Oh! there it goes." and the teacher used to turn up the volume. The mood shifted down pretty hard because we knew, even then, that there were people trapped in the upper floors and now they were all gone and the second tower became like a dead man walking, we all knew its fate in an instant.

  • @ernaanspach473
    @ernaanspach473 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The whole world needs to hear these words TODAY!

  • @karenchandler8325
    @karenchandler8325 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I watched that event unfold as my kids were getting ready for school. I was so sad. Then... really angry that their innocence and trust and security would forever be changed. Thank you for your thoughtful words. May we never forget the loss of that day and perhaps, we can focus on the love we witnessed in the aftermath. Our world could really use that outpouring of love right now. ❤

  • @mississippishell240
    @mississippishell240 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    God Bless Us All🇺🇸Thank You

  • @tikval3678
    @tikval3678 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    That day. I was at work for a local radio company. We had 7 stations, I was typing in the logs for the next day. Our production mgr came in & told me to stop everything. He gathered all the staff in the sales office & turned on the TV. We all sat there in shock. One of our salespeople lost his aunt in the South tower. Her husband worked in the North tower and later died from injuries. A D.J.'s daughter was on active duty at the Pentagon. Her office was hit, but she had just left it a few minutes before to go check on something. The world has never been the same since. They say "the show must go on". We went back to work & yes the radio logs were constantly changing for the next few days. It was a nightmare of the worst kind. One you couldn't wake up from.
    Prayers & blessings for all those who
    were at ground zero, the 1st responders, & those who sacrificed & served in the military.

  • @torihawthorne6732
    @torihawthorne6732 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I was in my 2nd period class my freshman year of high school. A teacher came in and whispered to our teacher and she turned on the news just before the 2nd plane hit. I was in shock...

  • @sarahballard89
    @sarahballard89 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was in highschool and 4 months pregnant in Texas when I heard. Everyone got shuffled into the nearest classroom.
    The teachers said nothing but shut up and watch the news.
    It was horrifying and confusing.
    The teachers turned off the TV's after people started jumping out windows. (I'll never forget that).
    After that we were told to stay where we were.
    None of us moved, and barely anyone spoke.
    Everyone cried!
    At the end of the day, those who had parents come for them left first. Which was everyone but me.
    My dumb ass ran away.
    The school called an officer to escort me to my apartment.
    I was 17, pregnant, renting my own apartment, and going to highschool.
    It was a big day having my country kicked in the nards during that BS.
    Sometimes I still see those people falling though.
    I can't think about that day without seeing people jumping out of windows to escape the death by fire.
    So many people

  • @pattiemartin9253
    @pattiemartin9253 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Pentatonix sound of silence and amazing grace

  • @dixiefletcher1986
    @dixiefletcher1986 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    He is a wonderful vocalist and interpreter of how we felt here!

  • @rorycoats8014
    @rorycoats8014 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    We live just down the road from SHANKSVILLE, PA WHERE FLIGHT 93 WENT DOWN Will NEVER FORGET GOD BLESS YOU SIR

  • @meeting_meghan
    @meeting_meghan 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I was in grade 8 English class (in Ontario Canada) when September 11th happened and later in the year for this same class I used this song as part of a project about music/lyrics.

  • @MemawAngie
    @MemawAngie 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    ❤ You just touched my heart . Real heart felt reaction. Bless you.

  • @darlenewells1255
    @darlenewells1255 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Im American, and was just waking up, as my husband was getting our 10 and 8 year old sons up for school. My husband came in and said a plane had hit the world trade center. I thought "what a bizarre accident". I thought it must have been a small private plane. Then a moment later my husband said 'another one just hit the pentegon". I will never forget that moment when I said, "oh my God, we're under attack!" I turned on the TV and was horrified. Our 10 year old came 8n our room and said "what movie are you watching Mom?" I didn't know how to answer. We live 45 miles from San Francisco, in wine country. We didn't know if SF would be hit next. I cried for hours, watching the news. I had to explain it to my sons. My oldest asked, "Is President Bush gonna get the bad guys, Mom?" I told him, "You better believe it. America will fight back." He told me "When I get big enough, I'm gonna join the army to help!"

  • @sheilaF4713
    @sheilaF4713 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    That song gets me every dang time! Alan said God wrote it not himself. TY God!

  • @Fuzz32
    @Fuzz32 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Twenty years. I was twelve when 9/11 happened. I wept when I first heard this song, as a thirteen year old. I’m thirty-two, and I still cry when it comes on.

  • @Toaster_Weevil
    @Toaster_Weevil 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    It was my first day of preschool. I was obviously too young to understand what was happening and why we were being evacuated (I lived pretty close to NY at the time) but I will never forget how scared my parents were.

  • @for-real-countrygirl4192
    @for-real-countrygirl4192 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you so much for your sweet heart. You're amazing.

  • @codyedwards8937
    @codyedwards8937 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I was in my 7th grade social studies class and ill never forget that teachers were in tears and they loaded us up on buses and sent us home, completely changed my life....went from wanting to be a doctor to joining the infantry at 17

    • @treydixon5966
      @treydixon5966 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you for your service, and God Bless you for everything you have sacrificed to keep us safe.

  • @kathrynhink7379
    @kathrynhink7379 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Every day we should be kind to each other, even when those around us are not. It is hard, but it is a tool to diffuse those on the edge. The world is a different place.

  • @WizardPandora
    @WizardPandora 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was 21 and in Las Vegas for a Bakers convention, as I was studying to be a Pastry Chef, was 7:30am when I got the news, I thought my teacher was joking.
    When I got home that Saturday I got the news my Great Aunt never made it out, she was on the 82nd floor of tower 2

  • @sandrabeard6146
    @sandrabeard6146 ปีที่แล้ว

    I was a patient in the hospital when a nurse came in quickly turned the news on . I watched as the second tower came down . I'll never forget it . The tears I cried ! The disbelief ! How tragic for so many . The young people today think it could never happen. Well we were those young people then . UNITED WE STAND .

  • @sharonharvin729
    @sharonharvin729 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was cooking breakfast for 4 disabled boys . And one that could hardley talk started pointing to the tv when the second plane hit . I stopped and prayed

  • @paulajones1177
    @paulajones1177 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you for sharing this video and your story. I'm in the US. That day is as deeply embedded in me as the Pearl Harbor attack was to my father's generation.
    I was at home with my kids and happened to have the news turned on when it happened. I remember sitting there numb with shock. A part of me kept wanting to wake up from the nightmarish images on the TV. I knew someone who lived and worked in that area. It was weeks of fear for them before word got back to me that they were okay. During those weeks and for a long time afterwards, I felt numb inside from the shock of it all. I still cry when I think about that time. The horror of it has never truly left me.

  • @orangecrush5862
    @orangecrush5862 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My wife and myself were in a depressed daze for a week! Still haunts me to this day as it happened yesterday! 🇺🇸

  • @Ash-dt8qy
    @Ash-dt8qy 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A day I will never forget sitting in math class excited for my friend and I were talking anout our friend who was in Newyork he was going to bring us gifts. But in a min we watched pure terror. To know that so many ppl went to their deaths

  • @Audrey.D.S
    @Audrey.D.S 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was in middle school and in gym class sitting with our gym teacher watching it all live. We we're actually watching at the same time the second plane hit the other tower. One thing ill never forget is how silent it was in the lunchroom that day. All you heard was crying and teachers in corners whispering. My mom acually checked me out early. That day will be burned into my mind for the rest of my life.

  • @Tessie46255
    @Tessie46255 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you for sharing what your day was like on 9/11. All of our memories are etched in stone. May we never forget. Yes, love is the greatest gifts of all. ❤️

  • @markvaars37
    @markvaars37 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This one still gets me. I remember I was in 6th grade and remember they had it on all the tvs in the school. It's still hard to think about to this day.

  • @dal8963
    @dal8963 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Everyone in America alive during 9/11 know exactly what they were doing when it happened but to know storys around the world and how it impacted them so deeply makes me understand we are so connected to eachother. It's beautiful

  • @sherreeadams5176
    @sherreeadams5176 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It was exactly as you said. I woke up and turned on the tele and thought it was a stupid show. I moved the channel and the same stupid movie. That was when my best friend called and told me.. I too, stood in front of the tele for hours crying and praying. I still shed tears.

  • @outabeat
    @outabeat 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I can say that day was the most unreal day and weeks that followed. The cities were quiet. Nobody went to work. There were no aircraft sounds overhead (which was really bizarre). And a random fighter jet flying overhead. My colleagues and I had rifles strapped to our chest and went out and got ready for battle. I know guy that were lost when the towers collapsed. Solid freakin guys. I'll never forget and I'll take that to the grave. And the Brit forces and US forces fought like brothers, side by side back then. Brothers in arms.

  • @adsesser
    @adsesser 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    There are no shortage of songs that were written when this happened. You should listen to Toby Keith's Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue; it was his response song to the tragedy.

    • @cherylmacvane8791
      @cherylmacvane8791 ปีที่แล้ว

      That song of Toby's was fantastic. I saw the video where he's performing it to the troops and they go wild. The words, the rendition, everything was phenomenal, and another classic of that day was born.

  • @karenchristensen5411
    @karenchristensen5411 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was just getting to work on September 11th. I was also a volunteer for the Olympics that were going to be held in Salt Lake City the following year. We had a special meeting to see if we should cancel them. Thank goodness we decided to go ahead with them. I think it was the best thing for the world to go ahead with them.

  • @usmadgirl3074
    @usmadgirl3074 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Sadly, you are the first reaction channel I've found today to even mention 9/11! I can't tell you how much I appreciate you remembering those who lost their lives & your sympathy for the US on the 20th anniversary of that horrible, unnecessary act of pure evil against our country & all mankind! Thank you so much & God bless you, your family & both our nations! We all seem to be in a bit of trouble these days!
    Another amazing country song for this day is "Have You Forgotten" by Daryl Worley who co-wrote it & sings it beautifully. It describes that day perfectly! Thank you for your compassionate reaction & sharing your experience of that day! I love your sweet reactions! 🤗

    • @cherylmacvane8791
      @cherylmacvane8791 ปีที่แล้ว

      I found that song by Daryl today, and yes, you're right. It's beautifully sung, the words are so appropriate another classic about that day is born.

  • @AndieO
    @AndieO 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I remember being glued to the screen, worrying about my cousin who was debuting on Broadway. We were all so worried. And as quiet as most airspace was, ours was crazy. We were the the first stopping point for airtraffic. St. John's International and the Gander International became home for thousands of people who'd never heard of Newfoundland before that day. Bless all the heroes, survivors, those souls lost and all of the militaries who've spent months/ years deployed.

  • @ericageorge2921
    @ericageorge2921 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was riding in the car with my mom, on the way to school. We were on Rodeo Street, coming from Pritchett, when the music stopped on the radio and the station said the World Trade Center was hit by a plane. I had no clue what the World Trade Center was... and didn't even care. I wanted to listen to music, and I turned the station. I don't remember what I had 1st period.. but I do remember the buzz in the atmosphere about everything. Still not understanding the gravity of the situation. I do however remember 2nd period. I was in Mr. Haggard's history class. The lone sophomore in a junior class. Mr. Haggard brought in a television, but it wasn't turned on to the news of the outside world. He was trying to teach. But he was distracted. Almost frantic. Then, he'd leave the room. We would turn on the TV while he was away, and see pieces of what was happening. A replay of the 2nd plane hitting and the collapse of the south tower, hearing that the Pentagon was hit, and another plane crashed somewhere in Pennsylvania, live footage of the disaster and chaos, speechless and dumbstruck newscasters, speculating and wondering. And then, Mr. Haggard would return, and the news would be turned off, and he'd attempt to teach us all over again. He left the room several times. It wasn't until the last time he left, and didn't return, and we were ushered into the history class next door, that we learned Mr. Haggard's son worked in New York, just below the World Trade Centers. Mr. Haggard kept coming back to class, trying to teach us, because he wanted to stay busy until he got word his son was safe. I don't remember the details (whether he hadn't got to the office yet, or his office was far enough away from ground zero that he was able to evacuate safely) but thankfully, at the end of the day, his son was okay.
    I remember being in the history classroom next door, watching the news coverage, when the north tower fell, on live TV, right in front of our eyes. It wasn't a replay of something that had already happened. It wasn't a movie. It wasn't a nightmare. It was happening, in realtime, and in our faces. I can remember feeling like my stomach had dropped, as if I was on a roller coaster. I remember my mouth started watering uncontrollably, like it does just before vomiting. I remember the knot that formed instantly in my throat. I remember covering my mouth with my hand (whether it was to prevent getting sick, or just reflex from shock, I don't know). I remember tears falling from my eyes immediately, with no warning whatsoever. I remember the gasps and voices in the room around me. I remember silently praying to God, a jumbled prayer of who knows what. I don't remember much else about the school day after that, but I assume it was mostly watching and talking about everything that was happening. I do remember, in 8th period spanish, Mrs. Auvil said we were going to turn the TV off and have class. That the people behind the attacks took enough away from us already, or something along those lines, and we were going to finish the day the way we were suppose to. Eventually someone had convinced her that this was going to be a part of our history, and we SHOULD be watching, and she caved. I remember watching the news that evening at home, and for weeks following. Hearing more and more details of the lives lost, the people responsible, the families directly affected by such an evil act of terrorism. In the years since, I've read books upon books of stories told by those who lived to tell them. I've watched countless documentaries, and movies based on the event. I've listened to hours and hours worth of interviews from survivors, and recorded phone calls from the victims, to their families or emergency services, made in the last few minutes of their lives.
    9/11 is a day I will never forget.
    It was a day full of sorrow and pain, heroism and bravery. It was a day that Americans silently came together, and stood proudly as a whole. It didn't matter if we were young or old; fat or skinny; gay or straight; red, yellow, black, or white; sickly or healthy; Democrat or Republican; christian or atheist.
    On that tragically beautiful Tuesday, we were One Nation. And I'll never forget. 🇺🇸

  • @ss5894
    @ss5894 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was 6. I remember being in school and my teacher got a text on her phone. She turned on the news and started sobbing. The next thing I remember was my mom checking me out of school and driving home and she prayed the hardest id iver seen. Then we sat in our basement floor against the couch, between a coffee table, watching the news and she sheld me and my baby brother's eyes (not wanting us to see) and just held onto us and she just sobbed and prayed. I am 28 now. I was 6 at the time. I'll never forger that day as long as I live.

  • @jeffcompton6804
    @jeffcompton6804 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Crazy hearing you talking about seeing it happening. I was across the pond (Colorado). I woke out of a dead sleep, turned on the TV and for some reason it was on CNN (I NEVER watched CNN). It was right after the first building was hit. Turned to wake my girlfriend and just as she woke the second plane hit the second tower.
    As an American all I can say is thank you for caring. Too many people today have forgotten...

  • @SportsandTrueCrime
    @SportsandTrueCrime ปีที่แล้ว

    I was there! Survivor and first responder. Tower 1 fell on top of my office. No need to have “Never Forget” printed cuz I never will. I remember finally making it to my mother full of dust, ash, soot and she dropped to her knees hysterically crying cuz there was no way to let her know I was alive until then. I must’ve hugged my son and mother for an hour str8. I don’t have PTSD or anything but I haven’t been to the site ever since recovering the last remains we were able. Absolutely beautiful song!!! All Americans should listen to Where Were U and Red, White & Blue every year.

  • @beegee1960
    @beegee1960 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Watched for days. Just couldn’t make myself stop.

  • @steveblades6967
    @steveblades6967 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    respect to you sir god bless usa and the the uk i was on my way to the grocery store and couldnt beleive what the radio was saying got back home and watched the towers fall and cried for them lost lost souls