James Holmes, accused of killing 12 people
The
murder of 12 and wounding of 58 people at a theater in Aurora, Colo.
and the killings of seven in a Sikh temple outside Milwaukee are
national tragedies sparking debate on gun control. Based on my
experience as a crime and violence prevention consultant over the past
35 years, I see a need to share what I have learned about violence.
The
seed for violent behavior begins at home. Good or bad, parents are
teachers. Disconnected families in conflict often fail to teach children
how to develop healthy relationships. Mental, physical or sexual
abuse can make even the most intelligent child anti-social. If
children's needs are not met, they can be thrown off balance, resulting
in anger and feeling powerless. These children can become targets for
abuse at school, becoming isolated and alone. Peers and society
also influence impressionable youth. The breakdown in American culture
has created a "perfect storm" for violent behavior.
Family
conflict, divorce and abuse can create confusion for children. They
often suffer in silence or become bullies with little compassion for
others. If adults don't listen, set boundaries, calmly discipline and
demonstrate personal responsibility, children become frustrated and
angry.
Without guidance and emotional support, children may fail to mature emotionally and often alienate classmates. Children who excel in school can develop an inflated ego and feel smarter than others
Lacking self-awareness, revenge can become a way to get back at society for the pain they have suffered. Without
a conscience, emotionally unstable youth can become obsessed and decide
to play "God" in other people's lives, which can turn deadly.
In
many cities, neighbors are strangers. They expect someone else to solve
problems and don't see their role in keeping the neighborhood safe.
This attitude creates social isolation with no check or balance on
youthful misbehavior that can develop at an early age. Neighbors must
become role models and demonstrate an interest in neighborhood kids.
Disconnected
residents allow fear to divide and conquer. Cities deteriorate as
pimps, prostitutes, drug dealers, gangs and the homeless take over the
streets. Neighbors don't report criminal behavior and may even protect
criminals who do favors for them. Crime goes unchecked, which allows
gangs to fill the void. Without adult leadership, youth may turn to
drugs, sex or other addictions to feel good while everyone else feels
powerless.
Movies and television promote sex and violence because
it sells. Man's weakness is sex. Woman's weakness is tempting men. The
entertainment industry reinforces human weaknesses.
Immature youth
engage in sex without understanding the consequences. Children are
desensitized as men and women devalue themselves and live
self-destructive lives, which can turn violent as moral values
disappear. We become what we promote as disconnected youth feel angry,
alone and nobody cares.
There are thousands of churches, temples
and synagogues in America; however, they don't work to inform the
community about the power of the human spirit. During the past 50 years,
the religious community has lost much of its influence after numerous
scandals including pastors stealing from congregations and the abuse of
children.
Many churches became political action groups as
religious leaders did little to bring the community together, spread the
need for spiritual values or demonstrate the power of "love thy
neighbor."
Every adult needs to know community support helps raise successful children.
Here are two things we can do today:
First, create a network of support around children to help them learn
how to develop healthy relationships. Group participation teaches
children to respect others and develop self-control. Network with
friends and neighbors, and get children involved in a variety of groups.
Second, find emotional support for children at a house of worship of
your choice. Help children discover their spiritual center so they don't
become bullies or victims. Children can discover their identity and
become responsible and self-aware. They will learn how to get along with
peers and become better citizens.
Gun
control is not the solution to this complex problem. Government cannot
fill the void with more laws or by increasing control over American
lives. Concerned citizens must work together to strengthen families,
organize to make neighborhoods safe for children and get involved to
make communities peaceful places to live. Everyone will benefit as children grow up healthy, happy and able to reach their potential.
Ms. Mann,
ReplyDeleteThank you for an article that finally gives parents, and society a real solution to prevent violence.
As a parent and teacher I am very concerned to see the steady increase of anti- social behavior. People either ignore this, or enact ineffective laws that do not make sense.
Your experience is apparent by the wealth of information you have generously given in the article, and we all need to heed your advice to make a positive difference in the lives of our children and our communities.Again, thank you.
Hi Anonymous, Thanks for your comment of 8/14.
DeleteI've been so busy putting together podcasts that I forgot to check my comments about, "The Perfect Storm for Violence." I am posting podcasts every Tuesday (13 so far) on Itunes and Podomatic. Just click on website and Podcast in upper right corner. I would love to hear your ideas and comments. We can do so much more to protect children!
Nice article. Gun control won't change the dynamics of disruptive and destructive thinking. If we want to change behavior we must change the way people think. Our society rewards bad behavior. Gun control would only inhibit those who obey the law. Criminals don't obey laws. If we want better behavior we must have better thinking. TV and entertainment teach sex, greed and destruction, by examples with narcissistic and sociopathic hero worship, We buy it like we but the drugs imported from Mexico and wonder why our national ethics and respect are slipping.
ReplyDeleteRebecca Kimbel
Thanks, Rebecca Kimmbel, for your comment of 8/17.
ReplyDeleteI am posting podcasts every Tuesday (13 so far) on Itunes and Podomatic. Just click on website and Podcast in upper right corner. I would love to hear your ideas and comments. We can do so much more to protect children! Please pass on this info. Thanks!
Having had 30 years experience as a Police Officer in the UK (retired 1995) and 20 years experience in developing domestic violence services from a multi agency perspective (still doing so)I support much of what you say and is relevant to UK society. Not one size fits all so addressing the problem needs multi-thoughts coordinated to a satifactory and productive outcome.
ReplyDeleteThis latest tragedy, Dec. 14 2012, with 20 children and 7 adults murdered in Connecticut is heart breaking! We must start a national dialogue on violence. There are answers!!
ReplyDelete