On Friday I called my children’s school to speak to the security guys working the front desk. I didn’t think much about doing it before I acted. It was purely an emotional response to the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut that morning.
I want…to thank you guys, for all that you do, I mean..to keep our kids safe, I sputtered.
They thanked me and assured they would take anyone down if they tried to enter the place.
I felt a little foolish after making the call. My kids were safe. We live in Canada. Crime rates are down. This kind of horror happens in gun crazy USA.
That’s what we all do…tell ourselves it happens elsewhere. There is no more elsewhere. It is right here, a shrinking global village where the camera is always running, the light always on. Madmen, once left to their own devices, are inspired by media saturation. They continue to plan acts that will outdo the last one. Infamy is guaranteed.
What can we do?
- We need black boxes onscreen to cover the name or photos of future killers in any news coverage. Keeping their profiles hidden would then allow us to eulogize the victims only.
- We need politicians to wipe away their tears and put teeth into their leadership. Guns kill. Most of the yahoos who think they need a handgun are not trained to use them in emergency situations where they need to remain calm.
- We need to build schools on top of hills and surround them with high walls. Inside, students receive a garden of Eden and scholarly discourse when the bell rings every day. Intruders who attempt to climb the stone walls would fall to their death.
- We need public funds, earmarked for big prisons, to build big and bright centres instead for the mentally ill.
- We need fundraising initiatives for mental illness research to be as strident as anything done for heart and stroke, cancer and diabetes.
I look at my children and know the only answer is to love them harder, to remember the “worried thought, brave thought” strategy as outlined by Harvard professor of psychiatry, Nancy Rappaport in today’s New York Times.
“We teach kids to counter a worried thought with a brave thought,” she said, and to “know that although the worried thought may come back, the brave thoughts are always there as well.” A worried thought might be “A shooter will come to my children’s school and there is nothing I can do about it,” with the brave counter “School shootings are still rare, and countless people are working to make them rarer still.”
I need brave thoughts. How else can we absorb these horrific acts?
If you’re a thirteen-year-old Toronto student who can’t sleep at night because of all you’ve seen and heard that day, you write a poem.
This was sent to me yesterday by a friend. She tells me her son wrote this to work through his feelings.
We should be handing out pencils and paper instead of guns.
I include it here with his permission.
Connecticut
I cannot even bear
Or get my mind around this
The Connecticut shooting
What these little kids had to witness
What they must have thought
What was going through their heads?
How did they know what was going on?
What was done and what was said?
Did the kids see a man in a costume, and to his side, strapped toys?
Were they scared when he walked in the door?
What went through there little minds when they heard the first loud noise?
And their teacher dropped to the floor
These five and four year olds
Six, seven and eight too
What we have been told
Is nothing compared to what they had to go through
How scared they must have been
Calling for their mom and dad
So much of life still to be seen
“Mom I want you right now so bad”
“What is this man doing?
I don’t understand anymore
Just a second ago
We were learning two plus two and four plus four
But now everyone around me is sore
I don’t know if I will see you guys again
Dad, what’s this red sticky stuff on the floor?
I thought you said this only happened in pretend?
Dad, Mom help me, I’m scared to loose you guys
Okay, I’m going to count to ten and you guys take off the disguise
Okay I’m going to open my eyes
Why is it not you, can’t you hear me cry
Too many tears
Now my eyes are dried
Just one last thing
“Remember, I love you guys”
I don’t think anyone can truly understand
We must still all be stunned
This sorry excuse for a man
Went in to a school with four automatic weapons
And opened fire on these newborns
These babies, these children
They haven’t lived even half a life
And now it is ended
They were getting in the Holiday cheer
Their parents already getting the gifts ready
Now suddenly no children, just fear
And a present sits lonely underneath the tree
What bugs me most is that the coward took his own existence
He does not deserve that privilege and that right
He deserves to suffer the consequences
He should have rotted in a jail for the rest of his life
So these are my thoughts on a paper pad
My heart goes out to the families
Those poor Mom’s, those poor Dad’s
I feel for all the people who were affected by this deed
I get that this poem is rough
And if I offended you, forgive me
But I had to get that off my chest
I wasn’t affected, and yet the pain still digs deep
And all I could hear as I wrote this
Was a child talking, with lots of things to say
So I put what I thought I heard in this poem
So please, pray for these children and their families every day.
by Charlie Mortimer
Thank you for sharing, Charlie.
For more poetry: We were all children once.
For more on education: Trashy costume? Yawn.