I live in NY and when 9/11 happened, I was in my 4th day at a new middle school where I didn't know anyone. I was already nervous and tense as it was because I was very shy and didn't make friends easily, not to mention that the school was in a bad neighborhood and it was the first time I ever had to go somewhere that wasn't close to my house on my own.
I remember early in the day, we kept hearing announcements from the principal calling students to the main office so they could be picked up. I thought it was weird but just shrugged it off. It wasn't until I went to lunch and heard other kids talking about stuff that they heard. There were rumors of a bomb going off, a helicopter crashing on the roof, a plane landing on top of it. It wasn't until we got back to class that we were told what happened, and at that point, it was just a waiting game to see who would be picked up next.
It was really scary when I got picked up my mom tends to overreact to things, so what she was telling me was there were planes and bombs and all sorts of stuff, and she was really worried about my brother who was working in the city, and my sister who was in the Marines at the time. She hadn't heard from either of them and assumed they were dead or something. Luckily that was not the case, and my brother's girlfriend, who worked near the WTC, had just had their first kid weeks before so she was spared. When we got to my stepdad's house, it was very eye-opening and shocking to see the footage. I remember being so bored because we didn't have time to stop by our house to pick up anything, and we weren't even certain of how safe it was to go outside.
I'll always remember that event more than anything else in my life because that was a true defining moment. I was only 12 at the time, which is the age that most people claim children gain full awareness of the world around them, so for me, I always consider that time to be a rude awakening because it shattered all of the illusions I had of the world as I realized that it wasn't as safe of a place I had thought.