Tales of recovery from the ultimate in disasters In the immediate aftermath, rancor and complaint disappeared. Competition was quelled. We got a visceral understanding of what's important in life. Eventually, routines kicked back in and the small stuff claimed attention again. Hundreds of downtown Manhattan enterprises were battered by the terrorist attacks. Many failed utterly. Many more are struggling back. Like all of us, company owners medical insurance information physicians life insurance were flat-out devastated for a time and then began picking up the threads of business. Here are stories of two New York businesses and what it took for them to survive. One had insurance and one didn't. Here, too, are ways to be as ready as anyone can for disasters that no one can ever anticipate. The paper chase Bradley Sacks, a medical malpractice lawyer, was preparing a car insurance company physicians life insurance client for a deposition early on Sept. 11, 2001, in his second-floor office on Vesey Street, less than a block from the World Trade Center. The first blast knocked them out of their chairs. Shortly thereafter, an ominous shower of shoes, papers and suitcases came raining down outside the windows. "I saw the front of the second plane passing across the space of the towers," Sacks says. cruise travel insurance physicians life insurance Everyone was ordered out of the building. "We all left about 15 minutes after the second plane hit. There were bleeding and screaming people everywhere. I was walking across the Brooklyn Bridge, on my way home, when the second tower fell. I made sure my client and assistant were safe." At home, Sacks found the office's high-speed lines were still up. He began downloading files and physicians life insurance physicians life insurance making calls