Tag Archives: social awareness

Citizens Aren’t Powerless to Prevent Atrocities

I’ve known Adam Lanza too. (He isn’t my son.) He had a different name, but the same profile. We’ve all met these people. They live in every community. And it’s not too late to stop them.

They are too disabled to hold a job. Their disability doesn’t lie in their limbs, but in their minds. They live with their parents, or in a group home, have no friends, and no reason to leave the house.

This is not the picture of a happy life. Shunned by society, they have only their family, or hired caretakers, who may be very sick of them. Just think about how you feel after a week with your parents. Then multiply that by 1,040. That’s how many weeks Adam Lanza spent with his mother and almost nobody else, from what it sounds like.

The solution proposed by experts and amateurs alike: Adam Lanza, and Jared Loughner, and the other mass murderers were mentally ill. They needed help, from mental health professionals.

Adam Lanza did need help. As my brother said on the phone yesterday, “six-years-olds draw hearts and want attention. They have nothing to give but love. Anyone who would kill them…it’s sick.”

It’s heinous. And such indiscriminate violence must be borne out of great pain. When animals and humans are in a great deal of pain, their cognitive functioning is not optimal. High emotions block rational thinking. Targets are missed. Social cues are misread. They lash out or in, hurting others indiscriminately, or hurting themselves. A mental health professional can help a person identify this behavior. He or she can prescribe medication to improve functioning, teach coping skills, and refer the client to community resources and activities. But here’s what mental health professionals can’t do: they can’t reduce the pain.

The pain that comes from isolation and dysfunctional relationships with family members who many disabled people depend upon for survival will not go away through talk therapy alone. A mental health professional is not a friend. And being a mental patient is not a role that carries esteem. Humans need friends, esteem, and activities that offer a sense of achievement in order to stay healthy.

The Adam Lanzas and Jared Loughners of the world needed to be part of society in order for that pain to go away. They needed to have roles that prevented them from getting so sick. They needed to be welcomed somewhere, and to do something well. A mental health worker could have helped them find those things if society had provided them.

There are plenty of roles for disabled people: bagging groceries as a volunteer, discussing American presidents with old folks in an assisted living facility, walking the neighbors’ dogs, weeding gardens for a landscaper, playing chess at the corner store or park, participating in synagogue or church events, writing fan fiction for a thriving fan fiction community, or working with a group of Linux users to create a new Java-based widget platform.

When society obsesses over the need for mental healthcare for the Adam Lanzas of the world, it passes the buck. It undermines the importance of social acceptance for disabled people. It’s like a person with a messy house who throws a banana peel on the floor and screams, “I need more housecleaners!”

If we keep our houses cleaner, we won’t be dependent on housecleaners.

We can welcome disabled people and offer them small roles that get them out of the house or into a social milieu. When they apply for jobs at our businesses, we can give them small, manageable tasks once a week. When they apply to join our synagogues but can’t afford the membership fee, we can waive it. When they apply to join our quilting group, bowling team, or gardening club, we can accept them, even if they make us slightly uncomfortable. We can greet them with kindness and conversation when we encounter them in public or at their homes.

If having disabled people around frightens you, that’s understandable. Check with their family members, their doctors or therapists before inviting them into your world. We do that with employees for good reason. But don’t categorically reject them. Because that’s what has occurred in the case of Adam Lanza and Jared Loughner, and the result is atrocious.

We can cry out for more psychologists, more welfare spending on mental health services, do nothing ourselves, and accept the collateral damage. Or we can step up and be citizens. Those are the choices.

Emily Meehan is a writer and a children’s advocate who is producing a feature film she wrote after spending six months working with foster children living in a Northern California group home. Learn more about the film here.

 

Posted in Altruism, Behavior, Child Advocacy, Education, Family, Loss, Sharing, social awareness, Special Needs, Teaching Compassion, Theory, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Don’t Hate….

I was lucky enough to attend a lecture by Dr. Terrence Roberts last semester at my school.  I remain overwhelmingly inspired by the optimism and notion of love for others expressed by a man who experienced such blatant discrimination in his youth.

Dr. Roberts was one of the famed “Little Rock Nine”.  For those of you who aren’t familiar, they were nine afro-American students who dared volunteer to be the first to enroll at the previously all white Little Rock Central in 1957.

Although the constitutional desegregation of public schools passed in 1954, many whites did not comply, including the governor of Little Rock, who denied the first attempt for these nine teenagers to enter the school.  A second attempt, escorted by the local police also failed.  It wasn’t until September 24, 1957, that Terrence Roberts, Ernest GreenElizabeth EckfordJefferson Thomas,  Carlotta Walls LaNierMinnijean Brown, Gloria Ray KarlmarkThelma Mothershed, and Melba Pattillo Beals were allowed to set foot in the school, and only then because Eisenhower ordered the army’s Screaming Eagles to escort them.

According to Roberts, these children faced such hatred, in fact, that the Little Rock police actually visited each of their homes to fingerprint them, so that when their bodies were found they would be “more easy to identify”.   They each needed a soldier by their side throughout the entire school year.  Why just one year, you ask?  Because the governor decided to shut down the school the following year, allowing only one black student, Ernie Greene to graduate from the institution.

This may sound naïve, but I’m proud of the fact that it’s difficult for me to wrap my mind around how people can have such hatred toward each other.   Dr. Robert’s matter of a fact explanation: “For 335 years discrimination was constitutional.  After 335 years it’s second nature.”  Old habits die hard.  Do the math; this breed of bigotry has only been outlawed for 58 years – and there are still many who maintain stereotypes or unwarranted resentment.

I believe and hope that our readers do not carry this type of animosity toward those of other races and cultures.  If not, you are welcome to your opinion, and I’d love to start a discussion. Regardless, I worry not about offending anyone with those sort of ideals.

If every educator, parent, and relative of a child makes the effort to teach our youth first to embrace their own cultural identity, and then to be empathetic and even celebratory toward diversity, we could raise the first generation to be largely unbiased against color, religion, disability, socioeconomic status, gender, preference, and any other person everyone!

We are not born with biases, we learn them along the way, whether intentionally taught or otherwise.  I believe it would be a great service to our society and youth, if we could inspect our own learned stereotypes, whether we believe them or not, in order to make an effort to not perpetuate them.

Ok I’ll get off my soapbox now, but I hope this food for thought touches at least one person who passes it on and on and on….

Posted in anti-bias education, celebrating diversity, Education, Politics, School, social awareness, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment