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As the nation marks 20 years since the devastating attacks on September 11, Max Giaccone '14 shares how his journey of grief and growth has evolved since losing his father in New York City on that day in 2001.
September 8, 2021
Max GiacconeӰԭs father, Joseph, was the director of global infrastructure at Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm, on September 11, 2001. The firmӰԭs corporate headquarters was located at One World Trade Center in Manhattan. The day the towers fell, the younger Giaccone was in fifth grade and only 10 years old.
As he mourned and worked through his grief with his family, he says he latched on to different passions of his fatherӰԭs, such as music, which would ultimately lead him to the University of New Haven to study music industry. Giaccone credits the arts, and specifically music, with helping him heal.
ӰԭMusic can be a simple escape from reality,Ӱԭ he said. ӰԭYou can put yourself in the songwriterӰԭs shoes and run away for a bit if you need to. I think songs have a way of communicating and expressing your emotions better than most things. I think songs tend to have the words youӰԭre looking for when you donӰԭt.
ӰԭWhen those milestones come up it is always a stark reminder of who is not there,Ӱԭ Giaccone continued.
Giaccone says back in 2011, on the 10-year anniversary of the attacks, he was Ӱԭjust branching into the beginning stages of adulthood,Ӱԭ as he was about to turn 21, graduate from college, and more.
ӰԭI was trying to figure out who I was as a person, while still never really dealing with the trauma of losing my father in such a public way,Ӱԭ Giaccone says. ӰԭI put a lot of band-aids on those wounds, but I never truly addressed them.Ӱԭ
On 9/11/2011, he was interviewed by Katie Couric on Good Morning America. Months earlier, shortly after Osama bin Laden was killed, Giaccone wrote reflecting on 9/11 and his emotions since.
In 2021, he says heӰԭs in a better place, and, for him, the memories are easier to revisit.
ӰԭI just recently went back to a bunch of home videos and was able to get through them, and they allowed me to reconnect in a way. I saw my fatherӰԭs goofy, funny side. I saw the way he interacted with me and my sister. It just kind of reinforced a lot of what I have known all along, which is that I had a pretty awesome dad.Ӱԭ
Giaccone, a NYC-based events producer for the entertainment, sports, and music industries who has worked such high-profile events as the Super Bowl and the menӰԭs college basketball final four, says there are times where the emotions can still sting, though.
ӰԭEspecially when we get to this point in the year, but I am doing my best to celebrate his life and his memory at this point, rather than mourn the loss of him,Ӱԭ he said.
Giaccone says he takes some time every year to post something personal about September 11. He wants people to understand it is more than just an Ӱԭalways remember, never forget #9/11Ӱԭ sort of post for him, and many others.
He also stresses the importance of not taking for granted any time with loved ones. Giaccone says he and the more than 3,000 other families who lost someone in the attacks that day Ӱԭare living proof that something you cherish the most can be taken from you so quickly.Ӱԭ He reminds others to tell the people in their lives they love them, whether via phone call, text message, email, or any other available means.
"IӰԭd give anything in the world to have five more minutes with my dad,Ӱԭ he said. ӰԭThere truly is not a day that goes by that I donӰԭt think about him and wish I had the chance to talk to him."
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