Sunday, September 10, 2006
Posted by Dona under Tributes
[5] Comments
My memories of 9-11-01 are crystal clear. There was so much happening, and yet it all seemed like slow motion. I was watching the morning news when they showed the fire from the first plane that hit the Tower. I saw the second plane hit, and from that point on, I was frozen – I couldn’t move or do anything but watch. My sister works across the Potomac from the Pentagon. She called me to let me know she could see the smoke after the third plane hit, and that her company was closing and she was headed home to Virginia. I cried – both for the innocent souls that were dying, and also the fear of the unknown. I confess to being a “weepy-eyed patriot”. I cannot hear, or sing, the National Anthem or American the Beautiful without crying. And parades with a lot of big bands and flags flying give me goosebumps! But, seeing armed guards on the top of the White House and not knowing where the fourth plane was headed made me very, very angry. How dare the y do this to my country!
The incredible sadness set in during the days that followed. All the souls that left us that day left a gaping hole in our hearts, even larger than the one left by the fallen buildings and the plane that hit the ground. Take a moment on this Day of Remembrance to share in remembering the life of one of those special people.
Tribute to Christopher Michael Duffy
Christopher Duffy was only 23 years old on September 11, 2001. He had only begun to live. He was the second oldest of five children. He graduated from Fordham Preparatory School, where he was the captain of the Lacrosse team; and Villanova University with a bachelor’s degree in finance in 2000. He had just moved into his own place on 81st Street in Manhattan in early September and was working as an assistant equities trader on the 89th Floor of Tower 2. (9-11 Heroes)
The New York Times said:
Christopher was determined. At 160 pounds, he was the fullback on his high school football team. He was captain of his lacrosse team and spent a good part of his time on the field knocking other players down.
But when his two brothers, one older and one younger, both grew to over 6 feet tall and Mr. Duffy stopped at 5-foot-10, he decided he just was not big enough. So he made up for it with muscle. “Chris was the most ferocious of the three of them,” said John Duffy, Chris’s father.
Chris Duffy was known for his weekend “Duff Jam” parties in high school. When his parents went away, Mr. Duffy and his friends would play. “They covered their tracks,” said his father. “But over the years we learned about the extent of the parties.”
His sister Kara said her brother was a smart dresser, loving to shop at stores like Hugo Boss. Still, outside the office he was often seen in flip-flops and a Hawaiian shirt. His 12 closest friends, who were honorary pallbearers at his memorial service, wore suits — and flip-flops.
I didn’t know Chris, but I wish I could have known him. He touched many people in his short life and left behind friends and a family who cherish his memory. As one of his friends said, “The world is a little sadder without Chris in it - Only God knows how far Chris would have gone - his potential and love of life were limitless.”
If I rise on the wings of the dawn, If I settle on the far side of the sea,
Even there your hand will guide me, Your right hand will hold me fast.
Psalm 139