About the Tide of History September 16, 2021
Posted by Peter Varhol in Education, Uncategorized.Tags: 9/11, current events, History
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This story starts about 20 years ago, when my manager at the time Shari Zedeck mentioned that her daughter had entered and won a statewide school history competition, where she was required to research and write about a significant event in history.
She chose to write about Watergate, and by all accounts did a really good job of it. My immediate and visceral response was that Watergate wasn’t history, it was current events. After all, while I was a teen, I remember it well. But it made me ponder on just what history means, an idea that I carried forward into my most recent blog post.
The answer is that if you had a front row seat, it wasn’t history.
So what did I have a front row seat to? November 22, 1963, I was in the first grade at Johnson Street Elementary School, and we were abruptly sent home from school about half an hour early, without explanation. I got home to find my mother in crying in front of the TV. “They killed him.” (I hope you know who).
So the mid-late 1960s, and everything beyond, I at least know second-hand through the news (and the news is a separate discussion). None of this seems like history to me, even if I had to read about it in the newspapers (Pittsburgh Press and Beaver County Times).
Yet one news source made the point that the soldiers killed in the suicide bombing at Kabul Airport were at best babies on 9/11. To them, 9/11 was something that they learned about in school. There couldn’t have been any direct memories.
So what is history? It’s actually a moving target, depending on your perspective of the events in question. The distinction may well be an artificial one, except that current events tend to shape your life, and history is more or less academic. Was my outlook and attitudes shaped by the assassinations and race riots of the 1960s, duck and cover in elementary school (look it up), the Vietnam War in the early 1970s, the gas lines later in the 1970s, and so on? I think so.
Current events take on a certain personal point of view. I wanted to fly, soloed the day after my 16th birthday, was in Junior ROTC in high school, ROTC in college, an Air Force officer for six years. My vision prevented me from being a pilot, but I was affiliated with the military for more than a decade. The Vietnam War, Grenada (bet you don’t remember that one), and Beirut gave me qualified respect for those who served, while recognizing that our policy makers were not by any means perfect.
History does not have a personal perspective; even if I’ve visited historical locations, the events surrounding them remain removed from my experience. That doesn’t make them any less real, but it does mean that they don’t have the same impact.
So take advantage of the current events in your lifetime. I have lived in interesting times, which is both a blessing and a curse.
Honoring 9/11 Victims September 9, 2021
Posted by Peter Varhol in Uncategorized.Tags: 9/11
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I have a bit of a personal connection to 9/11; two of my work colleagues were on the planes that struck the World Trade Center Towers. It was a somber day for all of us in the office, and one that I will never forget. I usually write a blog post on the anniversary, and in recent years have tried to do something in recognition of all of the victims.
This year, the 20th anniversary, I am once again running in a race, the Never Forget race from Virtual Strides. Because it is virtual, I am able to do it anywhere I like. This September 11 I will be in Zurich, Switzerland speaking at Swiss Testing Day, and running it the afternoon I arrive.
Because I was an adult at the time of 9/11, and because it touched people that I worked with and cared about, I will never forget. But 9/11 has already became a part of history for many younger people, who lack the “I was there” perspective.
And that’s okay, as long as we don’t forget. It becomes an indelible part of our history. If you were too young to have a front row seat, you should at least know the story.
One More Trip Around the Sun September 11, 2019
Posted by Peter Varhol in Uncategorized.Tags: 9/11
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And it is once again 9/11, eighteen years later. I was a working mid-career adult at the time, and it is striking to me that people who are voting for the first time this year were likely not even born on that date. It is history to them, and that is how it should be. My own memories remain vivid, at work, knowing that the world had just changed, but not knowing what that meant as to just how.
It’s personal to me, though perhaps not in a deep sense. I lost friends and colleagues that day. Last year, I did a virtual road race in support of their memories, as well as those who were first responders. This year, I wanted to once again acknowledge those memories.
Today, we are afraid, not like we were in the immediate aftermath of that day. I remember that evening, watching President Bush walk across the White House lawn to a podium set up out in the open. He was as protected as any human being could be, yet I cringed that yet another airplane, or a missile, could come crashing down at any moment.
Today we are afraid of the randomness of our existence. We could be at work, at the mall, in a restaurant, and our next breath could be our last. Of course, that was always true, but we believed we had a modicum of control over our future and our fate, only to be violently reminded that we are players in a larger drama.
If you could, please take a moment today to remember those who were going about their daily lives, only to have the Fates suddenly and randomly cut their cords short. And remember those first responders who gave their lives and their health to do their difficult jobs to the best of their ability. Thank you.
This Year I’m Doing 9/11 Different September 10, 2018
Posted by Peter Varhol in Uncategorized.Tags: 9/11, Heroes Run, Never Forget
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I lost two coworkers on 9/11, one in each plane from Boston to LA that were hijacked and flown into the World Trade Center towers. I and others in the office have vivid and forever memories of the events of that day. I’ve written about that in the past. Now I have something that I think is better, and more useful.
I have registered for the 9/11 Heroes Run. It honors military, first responders, and victims of 9/11. There are nationwide runs, both 5K and 10K, but there are none local to me in New England, so I have made it a virtual run. I can run any race between September 1 and October 14 and it will count. I also made a small donation to the charity. For the first time, I think I might help make a difference on this day.
Upon registering, you are asked to designate your hero. I chose Graham Berkeley, one of my fallen coworkers. I didn’t know Graham well, but he seemed to be a unique and multi-talented individual.
I know it’s an overused idiom, but Never Forget.



