Again and again and again, I tell
myself that I won't let it affect me. Over and over and over, I
remind myself that I am safe. The words are futile; I'm terrified
and angered and sad. Like a scummy film on the surface of a pond,
gun violence blunts the shining sun, diffusing it and muddying it and
making the world a scary place.
Leaving the house wasn't easy this
morning. Then, again, watching the television wasn't any easier.
One of their own was shot down on a sunny morning and suddenly all
those stories the anchors had been reporting over the years were no
longer about the other –
the victims were one of them.
I watched the CNN
correspondent try to hold back his tears as Alison Parker's father
said that his soul was crushed. I listened as Ashleigh
Banfield tried to make sense of the senseless, describing how Adam
Ward's fiancee watched him die from the production studio... in real
time. Just saying the words made them facts that smacked her in her
face; she had trouble physically forming the words.
And, again and
again, I reassure myself that I haven't pissed off anyone in the
recent past. I remind myself that I'm going to an out of the way
place for lunch, that the salon for my haircut is off the beaten
path, that Amster's kids and I will stay safe and secure in her house
this afternoon. There will be no adventuring today; their Suzi is
too terrified to deal with strangers right now.
This morning, at
Starbucks, Mr. 10 and Amster saw the story in USA Today. “Mom! Just like
Suzi!”
What do you say to
a kind, thoughtful, loving 10 year old that will make it be okay?
That I was like Mrs. Gardner, shot but surviving? That random things
happen but not to 10 year old boys? That life is a crap shoot and we
all take our chances just getting up and out of bed every morning?
How can she reassure her little boy that he'll make it to adulthood?
I have no idea, and
I'm kid-sitting for him and Mr. 12 this afternoon.
They came to the
hospital and saw me, tubes running from every orifice, blood pooling
in catchment bags, black and blue and weakened. They know that they
are now older than Christina-Taylor ever will be. They watch me limp
where I used to run.
They know first
hand the consequences of guns in the hands of the mentally ill. What
can I tell them that will reassure, will comfort, will explain? They
don't need to be outraged; they are little boys.
Yet outrage is all
I can muster right now. My Survivors' Group is peppered with
messages about PTSD being triggered, filled with tales of sorrow and
frustration and fury. Mostly, there is a weariness, a desire to find
the lives we once knew, before guns robbed us of loved ones, of our
abilities, of our sense of the world as a safe place.
Christina-Taylor
and I were at a grocery store. Alison and Adam and Vicki were at a water park.
None of us were in the wrong place at the wrong time. We were
doing what we do, in places we assumed would be violence free. I
wanted to shake my congresswoman's hand. They wanted to report on
improvements to a local river. These should have been non-events,
ones in a series of every day activities. We all, each and every one of us, should have been
able to call our fathers afterwards, as Alison did every day, sharing
the experience, asking for advice and compliments.
Instead, they are
dead and I am wounded and guns are everywhere.
Alison's father
was right when he called our politicians cowards. He's the newest
warrior in the crusade to make gun ownership a matter of public
safety as well as a Constitutional guarantee. He vows that he will
not give up until changes are made.
Well, let's
see..... Donald J Trump (when did he add the J?) says it's not guns
but the people wielding them. Marco Rubio wonders about the quality
of mental health care. Hillary says that background checks are
important and that laws should be strengthened but her emails and
server problems have made her more of an after thought than a viable
candidate and the reporting gave her exactly that amount of
coverage.
And then they went
on to Donald J Trump inviting an audience member on to the stage to
prove that his hair is not a toupee.
I had to leave the
room.
This cannot be
allowed. This cannot become ordinary.
Perhaps the fact
that a reporter and a camera man were the victims this time will
change the trajectory of the reportage. When I call Senators and
Representatives, I speak to their aides. I always ask how they feel
about the fact that Gabe Zimmerman was doing their job when he was
killed by a gun. “How does voting against sensible gun
legislation make you feel safer about going to work? He was killed
because he was a Congressional Aide.... just like you are....and that
could have been you and your employer on the sidewalk outside the
Safeway that morning, instead of Gabby and Gabe. What does your
Senator say about that?”
They pause. Often
they gasp. One began to cry.
That was the effect
I was going for, because only when it becomes real to those in a
position to make a difference can there be any hope for change.
Again and again.
Over and over. I am so very very tired of it all.
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