The last thing you want or need is 500 words from me about the Chardon High School shootings earlier this week. Other than having a niece and nephew who are students there and who thankfully escaped safe and sound, the whole thing really has little to do with me.
And even if it did, seriously, what do I know? I'm not going to tell you anything you don't already know. I'm not going to give you any pearls of wisdom to make sense of the whole thing. I have no insights and little advice to offer.
But I will say this: What happened in Chardon on Monday morning in no way made me hug my kids any tighter or feel any more apprehensive about dropping them off for school. I'm no more worried for their safety today than I was last week.
Why? Because my approach to parenting has always been to operate at a consistent state of low-level panic. I don't show it very often (people will describe me as being "laid back"...I wish), but deep down, every day I run through a mental checklist of Things That Could Go Wrong for the Kids.
What if they get hit by a bus? What if they get into a fight? What if someone picks on them? What if they fail a test?
And yes, what if some kid brings a gun to school? That's something that crosses my mind from time to time, largely because I live in Wickliffe, Ohio. As many of you know and/or remember, we in Wickliffe dealt with our own school shooting back in 1994. A heroic custodian was killed and two staff members and a police officer were wounded, including my old 8th-grade football coach, Mr. Grimm.
I didn't have kids in the school at the time. In fact, my oldest daughter, Elissa, was only 7 months old. Every day I would take her for an afternoon walk in the stroller so that she could get some fresh air and a little shuteye, and I could get some exercise.
We generally took the same circular route, one that took us past Wickliffe Middle School. It was pretty nice for early November (an online weather almanac says the high in Cleveland that day was 57 degrees, but I seem to remember it being warmer). As we walked down Route 84 toward Lincoln Road, it suddenly seemed like sirens came from every direction all at once. Police cars, fire trucks and ambulances from surrounding cities zoomed past, all of them turning down Lincoln toward the elementary and middle schools.
I didn't know what was happening at the time, but my first instinct as a parent was that it couldn't be good and that I should turn around and go home, so I did. When I got back to the house, I put Elissa down for a nap and turned on the TV. And there on CNN, for all the world to see, was a still photo of the middle school lobby, with glass and debris on the floor after a lone gunman had come in and shot the place up.
Like I said, I had no older kids at the time, but I was shocked. I had attended that school. I had lived in this city my entire life. There were the usual choruses of, "This is the last place you would expect something like this to happen," just as we heard over and over again about Chardon. It was terrible.
It's still terrible. It's terrible because you can't be a parent in this city and not have that memory burned somewhere into your mind. At some level of my consciousness, it's always there.
That's why I am no more on the lookout for things that could hurt my kids now than I've ever been before. When it happens that close to home, it never quite leaves you.
I hate that we live in a world like this. I hate that in addition to all of the natural worries I have as a father, there's always that incident hovering in the background, too. But it's the way things are, and it's something we deal with as parents.
As I type this, I'm wearing a red shirt and a red and black tie in what I hope is some feeble but meaningful gesture of support for the people of Chardon. Few if any of them will ever see it, and I suppose it's really more for myself than anything.
In a few weeks, things will start to return to something approaching "normal" in Chardon. People will be back in their routines. Teachers and kids will go back to classes, assemblies and school concerts. The TV people will finally leave, surfacing once a year on Feb. 27th to mark the anniversary of the shootings. And slowly but surely, as it always does, life will go on.
But I'll tell you one thing. The memory of it will never go away completely. The parents of Chardon, Ohio, will always carry it with them, and perhaps subconsciously they'll continue hugging their kids a little tighter and worrying about them a little more every day for the rest of their lives. It's just what happens. It's heartbreaking, but it's what happens.
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Very well put. It's hard to collect all of those subconscious thoughts wrapped in staggering emotion. Scott, as a fellow parent and american, I have been riddled with anxiety over the same issues. Remember in 1984 the McDonald's shoot out in San Diego? I was 11 years old and got struck with fear then. I remember walking over to McDonald's from Lincoln middle school with a troop of cheerleaders and a secret vile of anxiety that a thirteen year old shouldn't have. And then the list goes on from there. The middle school incident, and when my daughter was at pope john paul in Evanston, IL. I got a letter in her cubby talking about a lock-down in the school because of a "loose gunman" in the neighborhood the day before. It's like getting struck by lightening. The idea of having no control. I appreciate your insight on this issue as I take all my kids to school today. I do feel though, that this is a terrible symptom of society. All you can do is, do your best. I think? -Tara
ReplyDeleteThanks for your thoughts, Tara. Right on target. And yes, I suppose the only thing to do is pray and do what you believe to be right for your kids. You'll never stop worrying (it's part of the job description, I suppose). I had forgotten about that McDonald's shooting, but it was a great reminder to me how incidents like this are probably affecting my 11- and 13-year-old as much as my older kids. Sadly, I've never once asked those two how they're feeling about this since it happened, but I promise I'm going to do that tonight.
ReplyDeleteThanks for penning this, Scott. Our Chardon community is so amazing. We will pull through this but will never, ever be the same. We all want to try to make sense out of the senseless. What I knew before and what I know now, is that we parents need to make sure that we are plugged into our kids' lives, into their social spaces, in with their friends, and be as emotionally and intuitively connected to them as possible. This isn't about metal detectors, it is about being mental detectors. If parents aren't doing it, then it's up to the larger community: peers, teachers, extended family, and neighbors. This is the only way we'll ever be able to prevent something like this from ever happening again. Blessings and prayers. ~ Nancy
ReplyDeleteThat sums it up far better than I could have, Nancy (particularly the "mental detectors" piece...brilliant). Thanks for replying, and thanks for the leadership you're providing in Chardon. I know you're all aware that the rest of us are thinking about and praying for you all a lot these days, but consider this another reminder. ;)
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine what these parents were going through at the time it was happening...wondering if it was their child.The ones finding out it was. As parents we have a deep instinct to protect our children..a love like no other. And when you can't do that you spend the rest of your life wishing you could have...that feeling never stops even though there was nothing you could have done to prevent it. Those parents that lost their children have such a long road ahead of them...the tears that never stop and the heartache that will only quit when their life is over. The hurt..well it's called pain management because it doesn't go away and the tears come less and less after a few years..but never stops...there's just a break between each breakdown.I know I drive my daughter crazy with all the questions every day when I pick her up from school...what happened and with who. I'm just always trying to read the events of each day. She doesn't know I'm in protection mode. My middle son is at college..I know something could happen just walking across campus. It's natural for our hearts to go with them wherever they go. Don't know if that makes sense. When we lost our oldest son in college it changed everything...gone in a blink of an eye. I remember wanting to go to him. But there was no reason to. You never get through being a mother...ever! Just remember even after a year, 2 years have past...send a card to these parents. Let them know they nor their children are forgotten. Nothing helps a heart more than those kinds of jesters. I have been so emotional since the news broke and as one more child died..it would hurt more. Any one that has lost a child relives those feelings and hurt because they know what those parents are feeling...and you wish they didn't have to go through it...
ReplyDeleteI meant to add...I already hugged my son that tightly and had a very close relationship with him all his life so when he died (I can actually say that word now)I didn't have to regret anything as far as not tell him I loved him enough or should have given more hugs...it's just I wasn't through giving them...I wanted it to me all of MY life...
ReplyDeleteMary Beth, thank you so much for sharing your story and your heart. Like Nancy, you put it far, far better than I could have, and you certainly got to the heart of the matter. Great advice and a great addition to this topic. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI'm not even sure where to start with this one. ABSOLUTELY LOVE the notion of "mental detectors!"
ReplyDeleteYour words are spot on, Scott...but, I did hug my child a little tighter and I did send her off to school with more worries than I think I have ever had. I even instructed her to break a school rule, telling her to keep her phone in her pocket (on silent, of course) instead of in her locker. I'm not one to break those kinds of rules. Yesterday, I did.
Being from Wickliffe, of course I will never forget Pete's always outpouring offering of helpfulness. I was lucky enough to have him all through elementary school, he was just the best! I can't say I can recall my exact memories of the WMS shooting (my Mom had passed 11 months prior, I was in a fog), but, of course, the events are something that will never fade from memory. That kind of thing just doesn't happen in Wickliffe. And as foolish as it may seem, I've adopted the attitude of "we've had ours, we're safe now." Ridiculous, I know.
I do recall Columbine, too vividly. I was a parent for less than 7 weeks when that occurred. I sat glued to the TV, holding my infant daughter, tears streaming down my face. For hours.
And I remember the shooting at Case Western Reserve University vividly as well. I had worked day shift that day. I picked my daughter up from her daycare and we spent some time at the lagoon behind the Art Museum. I heard the sirens, but with UH and Cleveland Clinic so near by (and CPD 5th District and CFD Station 10 right around the corner), I didn't think twice about those sirens. I even saw a CPD cruiser on our way home, flying by with his lights and sirens, and I figured he was lost because of where he was. Turns out, he really was lost, for a few minutes, anyway (he was 2 blocks from where the shootings were occurring). I had been home about 2 hours before I heard the news, and I immediately started to drive back to work to see where I could help. I called the station, and was was ordered by a supervisor not to come in.
I don't hate the world we live in, but I do have serious doubts about some of the messed up thoughts and actions some people have. I was just revisiting Logan Molnar's event on Facebook to "Wear Red Tomorrow For Chardon." I'm still wearing my red, but I was sickened to see that people are now posting about some radical so-called Christian group that is planning on protesting Saturday at Danny Parmertor's funeral. I can't say that I hate them, but I can't help but wonder what is wrong with some people. The outpouring of love and concern has been nearly overwhelming, then to read something so evil...it just makes you wonder. I was watching the news and catching up on my Facebook when I saw those posts. I had just seen the picture of railroad bridge the Riverside kids had painted in honor of Danny, Russell, and Demetrius. The tears started flowing. Then Danny's parents were on TV again, wearing shirts of their precious son...
How does something like this happen? I have no pearls to offer, either. But you're right, life will go on.
I had completely forgotten about the CWRU shooting, Kelly. After awhile, it may be that we just start to block this stuff out. And don't feel bad...I've also had that thought of, "OK, we're been through it once, we're safe now." Doesn't work that way, unfortunately.
ReplyDeleteWatching Danny's parents on TV was really, really tough. I don't know how they got through it. I really don't. They have a long road ahead of them for sure...
Great read, thanks Scott and all who shared. I have a younger brother who was in Wickliffe Middle at the time of the shooting, I had just graduated from Wickliffe High. The fear and shock that you are in, waiting to know if your loved one is ok is nothing I would wish on my worst enemy. My brother witnessed a lot that day and I asked him the other day, what he remembered from it. He said two things, one; that Pete Christopher never hesitated and that he was a TRUE hero as we all know. The second thing he shared with me, was the look on the shooters face; blank, emotionless and completely detached from reality.
ReplyDeleteThat is something that nobody can totally prevent. Mental illness and abuse are very real and often undiagnosed. I know mental illness, I have a family member afflicted by it. I bring this up, not as defense of any of these tragic events, but as we look for answers (mental detectors is brilliant btw) for how to prevent them, the reality is, we can't. This pains me to say, I have two children, I worry about them constantly the same as any parent does. We live in a time where violence is much more accessible, on tv, in video games, internet, movies and even music, generations seem to be becoming desensitized to it.
I believe we all need to slow down and spend more time listening to our children, asking them more than just "how was your day?" Or "what did you learn today?" Today is a gift, that's why its called "the present" , nobody knows what the future holds. The outpouring of love and support for Chardon is great and the community is handling it with such strength and grace but the question I ask for all to ponder, is "Why does it take tragedy to bring out the best in people, would it be easier, if as a society, we were supportive and kind to one another all the time?"
FYI, my brother grew up to be a full time fireman/paramedic for the city of Euclid and my hero, thanks again for such a great read. One love, God Bless
Hi Scott. Your post is beautiful, and in a way sums how it feels to be someone who's "been there", watching this latest tragedy unfold in Chardon.
DeleteI was 12 yrs old - in 6th grade Spanish - when the 1994 shooting happened in Wickliffe. Mr. Grimm was one of my favorite teachers and Mr. Christopher suddenly became the epitome of selflessness in my young mind. It just so happened that my parents were out of town that week, the only time I can remember them EVER going anywhere without my brother and I, and my Gram had come from NY to stay with us.
Its odd how vivid certain details are, while I can barely recall others. It funny what sticks with you, even all this time later.
That being said I feel like that experience should've in some way prepared me to be useful or helpful now. That I should have some insight or wisdom to offer either the kids from Church who were there, their parents, someone. I feel like I should have some secret to share that will make this easier. It's a club no one wants to be a part of.
I'm angry that there isn't more I can think of to do, and heartbroken that anyone else has had to suffer through this kind of experience. And I'm scared...as I always have been... about that lies ahead for my own son, nearly school aged now. It's always been there, in the back of my mind like you said.
Jill: Until this week, I had no idea you had been there when this all happened in Wickliffe. Like you said, a club no one wants to be a part of. The only conclusion I've come to is that you need to pray, bring up little Daniel the best way you know how, pray a little more, and then send him out the door when the time comes. The rest is up to God.
DeleteI'm learning a lot more from these comments than I did from thinking through the actual post. Great, great thoughts from a fellow Blue Devil. Thank you!
ReplyDelete