Violence—random,
sudden, illogical, and lethal—has become a fact of life. Shootings and acts of
terror, homegrown and imported, with or without racial or religious overtones, have
become gruesome signposts along a seemingly endless path of public and private
horrors. They are taking a toll on our children.
No child should
have to wake up each day as if he or she was on 24-hour-a-day guard duty. But
in the United States this is the reality.
We can no longer think
of these as isolated incidents, aberrations or confined to urban settings. Denial,
an emotional trap door, is not a viable escape in a world where a sense of imminent
threat is ever present.
In the immediate
aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attack, writer Jeph Loeb and artist J.
Scott Campbell produced a nine-framed cartoon entitled “Please Stand By,” that
featured a very young girl watching cartoons.
By the third and
fourth frames, the image on the screen changed to a live feed of the Twin
Towers ablaze. As the little girl stood transfixed, stuffed animal in hand, the
commentator announced, “We interrupt this program to take you live…,” the
little girl turned away and called, “Mommy…” The next three frames began with
her mother dropping a basket of laundry. Then, with her face contorted in
anguish, she embraced her daughter to shield her from the unrelenting images.
The final frame is a close up of the little girl asking, “Mommy, when are the cartoons
gonna come back on?”
Among those who
are left in the wake of violent acts are the survivors - friends and family
members of victims, who live with the emptiness, frustration, and rage of
incomprehensible death by violence.
Earlier this
month, as the mother of the oldest child of Alton Sterling, the black man
fatally shot by Baton Rouge, Louisiana police, expressed sorrow and outrage at
his death, Cameron Sterling, 15, the oldest of Sterling’s children wept inconsolably
by her side, for the entire world to see and experience his heartbreak.
One day later a
St. Paul, Minnesota Montessori school cafeteria supervisor Philando Castile met
a similar fate. Just one day after his shooting, five police officers,
protecting hundreds of people in Dallas,
Texas, who were peacefully protesting the two shootings, were gunned down and
murdered, ambush-style, by a lone shooter who was fueled by racial hatred and
bent on misguided revenge. Ten days after the Dallas
shootings, three Baton Rouge police officers met a similar fate.
Beyond those left
in the direct wake of violence are growing numbers of young people who are fed
a regular diet of horrific episodes of violence through graphic media accounts
such as the live streaming of a bloodied and gasping Philando Castile, filmed
by his girlfriend Diamond Reynolds who wanted the world to join her in bearing
witness as he took his last breaths.
In the aftermath
of trauma, children (and others) feel fearful, unprotected, hyper-vigilant, and
hopeless and on their own; similar to orphans who feel they must take care
themselves.
We are living in
world gone mad, a place where the rich diversity of colors, shades, languages,
orientations, beliefs and rituals should be shared and celebrated rather than
drawn as battle lines. The answers do not lie in books of psychology or popular
bromides, or in aspiring national leaders who have proven to be untrustworthy.
The answer lies
in being mindful - paying attention on purpose, making connections with one
another and building a sense of communality.
https://longislandweekly.com/cartoons-gonna-come-back/
Andrew Malekoff is the Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through 24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
Andrew Malekoff is the Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through 24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
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