When someone says to me, “Where do you live?” And I answer,
“Newtown, Connecticut,” there’s usually a shocked silence. Then, the response
is “I’m sorry.” Well, I’m not sorry. I’m
honored to be a member of my community of compassionate, resilient folks who
are still struggling a year after the Sandy Hook shooting to find a way to
guide our children safely and wisely into the future.
Most of us who live here have been dreading this one-year
anniversary. At 9:30 am on last December
14th, my phone rang, and there was an automated message from the
school superintendent telling us that the schools were in lockdown. My heart leaped to my throat, and I ran into
our office to tell my husband. Our
daughter, our only child, was a junior, and immediately the phone rang again
with a friend telling us that she had just heard that there was a shooter in
the high school. For a half an hour, we frantically searched the Internet and
TV channels looking for more information. Friends and neighbors began coming
over to sit with us in front of the television and pace around anxiously
talking on their cell phones, desperate to know more. Then, the local newspaper
had the first news on their website that the gunman was at Sandy Hook. The horror tumbled forth, with each piece of news
worse than the one before.
I stepped outside
with my dog to breathe and have some silence. It was a breezy, sunny day, and I
thought about how beautiful it was where we live. I had looked long and hard to find this place
to raise our child in an environment that was healthy and safe. How could this
be happening here? Then, I thought that it could happen anywhere in this
country. More important was the
realization that we were here and that even though I couldn’t see it right at
that moment, there was probably a reason that the Universe had put my family in
this place at this moment in time.
In the following days and weeks, it was surreal. Diane Sawyer and Anderson Cooper reporting on
the steps of Town Hall. Traffic jams as strangers blocked the streets and
brought teddy bears and candles to makeshift memorials. We’d be standing in
line to get an egg sandwich at the deli and the girl who works the cash
register would shout out, “Someone from Montana is buying all of you breakfast
right now!” Crazy threats shut down St.
Rose’s church and caused candlelight vigils to be cancelled. Police surrounding
the high school like it was an armed camp. Funeral processions that made going
to the grocery store an hour long event while I sat in the car with tears
running down my face as the hearses passed by.
And always, always, the courageous response of my neighbors and the
whole town offering love and kindness instead of anger and hate. The principal
of the high school emailed the kids almost every day reminding them: “Our collective strength and resilience
will serve as an example to the rest of the world. Be strong, Newtown.”
Then, we
had to go on. It hasn’t been easy, and I see the emotional scars it left on our
children every day. There is a level of
tension and suppressed fear and anger that lives just under the surface of
day-to-day activities that did not exist here a year ago. Last night, when we
learned that a student in Colorado had gone into a high school, attempting to
kill a teacher and severely wounding a girl and killing himself, my daughter
was so shaken up that I was at a loss of how to explain it to her as I hugged her
and she cried.
When a
small group of us gathered Thursday night to seek comfort from each other, we
realized that beyond the issues of guns and safety in our schools, we have to
find a way to show our kids that the answer when they get mad or frustrated is
not to find a gun or build a bomb and go out and kill someone. I don’t know yet
how we will be able to teach them that lesson, but everyone in this country
needs to try. It must become a priority
because the reality is that our children are killing each other and themselves,
and we can’t keep letting it happen. We
all have the power to change this. Please, don’t let it keep happening.
4 comments:
Thinking of you, your family and your community this morning.
Amen. I don't know what else to say -- you said it so well. Amen.
Big hugs...I think we need to teach our children about God, as a loving Father to every single person who lives. Teach what the Bible says about life, about death, and how to treat and love each other. If we could do that, our world would resemble heaven a little bit more and everyone would be kinder. Keeping Newtown in my prayers.
I've thought of you often this past year (and previous decades.)
I am glad you got to Point Reyes. It's a place to heal one's soul in any kind of weather. Enjoy the holidays. I have many wonderful memories of our childhood Christmases. I miss snow! Make a snowperson for me. Jane
Post a Comment