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by vladig17
4805 days ago
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Even though there is some rather sharp back and forth here, I think it's awesome that this discussion is happening. The points on both sides are really good. Personally, I don't think this is purely emotional elation. I live in Boston, the bombing happened down the street from me. I think it's important to point out that the disruption here should not just be measured in terms of number of dead or injured. It's the threat to the way we are used to living our life every day, and the perceived threat to the future way we will live our life. This week, I have.. * Closed down my office because I was afraid for the safety of my employees
* Heard from one of my best friends that his former colleague got killed on-duty (Sean Collier)
* Listen to my friend express fear because she is planning to take a train to the waterfront for dinner
* Had my mom show up out of nowhere to meet me at the airport because she heard there wasn't a way to get into the city I didn't lose my life. My friends didn't either. I have nothing to complain about. But I want to make the point that there isn't an easy metric to put around the way life has ground to a halt here over the past week (at least none that I know of). We all experienced a type of stress that is hard to capture in numbers. And, we're happy to get our lives back to normal. |
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