Everyone is trying to make sense of it and figure out who to blame. Guns or mental illness or some combination of factors. How to prevent this from ever happening again. It doesn't make sense, though. Senseless acts of violence are like that.
I was reading about this shooting before work today, just a few minutes before I went out to meet my kids after school. I was reading about it and holding back tears as I listened to my coworkers talk about Youtube videos. It was in the back of my mind all day. I was thinking about this and the senseless act of violence that happened in my neighborhood Wednesday night when two teenage boys shot a man over an argument about sports. Senseless. Violence.
I was thinking about it when I saw a group of sixth graders throwing clumps of dirt at a group of fourth graders playing soccer, and when one of those clumps of dirt hit a boy in the face and he started walking toward me crying, and when I almost lost my cool and raised my voice at the sixth graders that this shit has got to stop. Kids throwing dirt at each other is not the worst thing they could be doing, for sure. But the attitude that it's no big deal is what bothers me. They'll say they're just playing, but somebody inevitably gets hurt and my job is to keep them safe while they're in my care.
The news about the shooting in Connecticut had not reached my elementary schools kids by this afternoon and we were asked not to bring it up so their parents could address it with them first, but I'm sure it will be a topic of conversation on Monday. I hope it will be an opportunity to talk about the point I've been trying to get through to them all year, which is simply don't hurt each other.