Oklahoma Nesties
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People typically ask, "Where were you during the OKC bombing?"
OKLAHOMA CITY -- It has been 16 years since the Alfred P. Murrah federal building was bombed in downtown OKC. April 19, 1995, 168 people perished in the bombing including 19 children.
Starting at 8:45 a.m., we will live stream the remembrance ceremony from the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum
Re: 16 years...
I was a sophomore in high school. It happened when I was in band, I think.
I was new to Oklahoma and had no idea what was going on until I got home and turned on the news. My first trip to downtown OKC was to check out the building with my parents...I had gotten glamour shots earlier in the day at Penn.
I was in 4th grade at the time. Although I lived in another state I remember hearing about it and seeing the pictures. I think the pictures are what stayed with me.
DH said that the week after it happened they had to come to the city (he grew up in S. Oklahoma) for a dr.'s appt and part of the building was still standing. He said it was the eeriest thing he has ever seen.
I was 9 and in 3rd grade when it happened. I was at a LARC in the Park event, and I remember feeling a little shake...but not thinking much of it. As the day wound on [we were at this thing most of the day], teachers started whispering and crying - two things you never want to see adults do when you're that age. We got back to school and went about the day, but it wasn't until I got home that my mom explained what happened.
We had moved to Oklahoma less than a year before that, so we had family members calling us all night, freaking out and wondering if we were anywhere near the bombing. I remember watching coverage and asking myself, "Who does something like that?" A couple of weeks later, my parents drove us to OKC and by the bombing. I'll never forget that night.
Kaylee & Cole 06.14.08
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1/28/12 Texas Half Marathon 2:38:03 Instant PR!
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I was in the 8th grade, and we were on our way to the state band contest in Stilly. We were in Norman, having breakfast at a McD's when the news came out. Someone had a radio on the bus and had picked up the coverage. We were devastated, and we wanted to help, but we went, performed, and instead of staying downtown in a hotel, the school board wanted us to come home.
There was a tornado on the way. It was about two miles from where we pulled the bus off the interstate. Not a good day.
I remember everything about that day, except the performance. I remember nothing on the music side of things. I remember everything else.
I was a junior in high school. I didn't hear about it until lunch. I was getting in a friend's car and heard it on the radio.
I remember frantic phone calls from relatives in Korea. They hadn't been to Oklahoma, and they thought we were really close to the site.
I was in 5th grade, I remember that we were studying clouds. At first we thought it was a loud crash of Thunder but you could feel it...
I remember that a couple of weeks following it my mom would leave after we would eat dinner. She would go to the Myriad and serve meals to the workers. She would come home in time to catch a couple hours of sleep and then would head back to work at 7 am. We took a lot of trips downtown, my parents wanted us to be able to remember it, I am honestly thankful for that as scary as it was.