October / 2001
From The Editor

Everyday heroes

It's September 11. As I watch the surreal images of collapsing New York City skyscrapers and the gash sliced into the Pentagon-surely the biggest world event of my lifetime-I'm struck by the small stories.
Yesterday, researching an article I was writing, I phoned an information officer with a federal agency in Washington, D.C., to check the number of employees who worked there. He called me back this morning to tell me the Agriculture Department's Rural Utilities Service was authorized to employ 381 staff.
"What are you doing in the office?" I asked. He answered, "It's crazy out there with everybody trying to get home. It's quiet in here. Seemed like a good time to catch up on some work."
I have to finish this column three weeks before it will be printed and mailed. By the time you read this we'll have a somewhat better idea of how such horror could happen. By the time you read this I will have figured out some way to explain it to my 7-year-old daughter. I have this feeling the stories in this magazine might seem frivolous compared with the suffering of so many victims and their families and their friends.
But I have another feeling that maybe the small stories we print in Kentucky Living about everyday people are exactly what matters, especially as we try to understand this confusing and scary disaster.
From New York I heard one such story of a person going about her job. As I listened to the radio during the first hours of the attacks, an excited news anchor interviewed a composed-sounding spokesperson for a New York City hospital, about the hospital's emergency procedures.
"You must be expecting hundreds of victims," said the interviewer. She calmly replied, "We already have hundreds of victims here."
An everyday person doing the job she was trained to do, even under extraordinary conditions.
One way I survive difficult stories from the world news is to remind myself that news reports the unusual. And I think about the people I know, those we write about in this magazine, and all the readers of Kentucky Living-more than 1 million people keeping their everyday lives moving forward: mothers, teachers, farmers, students, bosses, workers. And I always conclude, "We'll be fine."
No news story compares with today's. But I expect that by the time you read this, it will be clear that this horrible story will be overcome by this country's millions of everyday heroes.

Paul Wesslund
Editor