Wednesday, December 7, 2016

December 7, 1941

December 7, 1941. “The day that will forever live in infamy,” according to FDR. The day the United States was pulled into World War II. This is noted by many people on Facebook with pictures from that terrible day and a few words about remembering. It is officially named National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, with the American flag being flown at half-staff to honor the 2,403 Americans who died on that day.

December 7, 1941 is an important date in American history. It should be held as much in American consciousness as Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day. Like Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day, National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day should be a day to commemorate the reason it exists.

Memorial Day is marked with parades, ceremonies, and backyard barbecues –because, DUH, it’s Memorial Day.  Veteran’s day sales abound on the weekend before or after the day. Military personnel are given special discounts. It’s popular to thank a veteran on Veteran’s day. Both are federally recognized holidays. National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, however, is not a federal holiday. Services and ceremonies meant to honor those who died are quietly conducted.


It is time to create a resurgence of interest in December 7th. Not so we have another holiday to cook or stampede the stores on, but so we can teach our children the historical significance of this date. It is important not only to remember those who were killed so terribly, but also to take steps that will make repeating history less likely. We cannot allow another Adolph Hitler to maneuver himself into a position of power. We must always fight to protect those who are in danger from such a person. We must always remember that attempting to prevent each other from gaining influence is not a good reason for death and destruction. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

The Election

So Donald Trump is our President-Elect. Hillary seems to have won the popular vote by a narrow margin, but he won the Electoral vote. So, whether good or bad, Donald Trump is our President for at least the next four years. I have already seen many posts on Facebook bemoaning this fact. People wanting to move to a new country. Celebrities who threatened to leave if he became President being told “Bye, Felicia! Don’t let the door hit you on the way out!” with gleeful sarcasm. People saying they are scared, angry, deeply disappointed. People saying how hurt they are that the racism, fear of LGBT+, etc. runs so deeply, as evidenced by the fact that Donald Trump was elected President. Posts saying, “Hey, thanks a lot for voting for that third party candidate, idiot! You are part of the reason we’re in this mess now!” And on and on…

I did not get to vote in this election. I recently relocated to Texas from Colorado, and did not get my driver’s license and voter registration changed in time to be able to participate in this election. The only person who is responsible for that not happening in time is me. I am not happy or sad that he has been elected, though. Whether it was him or Hillary, my life would not have changed on a personal level. There will be change on a national level because of this election that will eventually affect me, but my personal, day-to-day circumstances are not going to change based on the fact that Donald Trump is the President-Elect. My day-to-day circumstances will only change as I act to change them.

I don’t especially like Donald Trump. To be honest, I think he’s an arrogant, self-centered blowhard who just spews whatever controversial words will get him attention. I can’t stand that behavior. I also don’t like Hillary. Forget the flap about her emails; yes, that was a 3 ring circus, and I don’t think she was truthful, but that doesn’t bother me as much as Benghazi does. Her behavior regarding Benghazi, and the four military men who she seemingly left on their own to die, strikes at the core of my being. It is the main reason I do not want her to be my President. There is much criticism of both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton for various things they have been accused of; this criticism should be considered along with the reasons for it. With that said, I was not physically there to see the bad behaviors exhibited by either one of them, so I really cannot judge either one.

Donald Trump is the next President, regardless of what I think. I am hoping that he does not act as he has said in his campaign. I sincerely hope that so many of his words were just meant to inflame public opinion and garner attention, and not actually reflections of what he will do in office. We will see. If Hillary had won, I would wait and see how she behaved in office, as well.


No matter who is in office, though, I am proud to be an American. There is a lot that needs to be changed, certainly, and it is my responsibility just as much as anyone else’s to work to make that happen, but there is also a lot of good in my country, and I am happy that I get to be a part of it. 

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Veteran's Day 2016

Veteran's Day is coming up this Friday, November 11th. I feel strongly that we must more actively support our military veterans. I've seen some halfhearted support--every so often, a picture of an elderly man holding up a handwritten sign proclaiming his status as a WWII vet and asking for likes/shares will pop up in my Facebook feed. More often than not, this elderly man is white. The fact that I’m noticing his skin color is, in my mind, a terrible reflection of one of the problems in today’s society. The fact that it is more likely to be a man than a woman is also troubling. There were black and Hispanic men fighting for our country. There have been women fighting for our country. ALL of these people deserve our gratitude. ALL of these people have made great sacrifices. We should celebrate our black veterans, our Hispanic veterans, and our female veterans just as much as our white male veterans.

As I mentioned in my Veteran’s Day post last year, I actively appreciate our veterans, especially our Vietnam War veterans, all year long. And I truly believe that we do not do enough to support our veterans. We also do not verbalize our gratitude to them, except when we are reminded or it is a popular day to do so. The BLM, PLM, and ALM movements have grown in popularity over the past year. And some of the people in each of these groups have a valid point about their particular group’s goals. I’m going to add another one here: MVLM. Military Veteran’s Lives Matter. These people should not be ignored for most of the year, only trotted out on Veteran’s Day to be remembered and thanked. I would never encourage anyone not to thank or celebrate a veteran; however, I also would never condone saying or doing something to/for a veteran only on this one day of the year. It doesn’t matter if the veteran is leading a successful life or living in a cardboard box under the local bridge. He or she has sacrificed greatly for my country. For YOUR country.


Please thank the veterans you know or cross paths with. Please acknowledge and appreciate their service to this country, even if you don’t agree with the politics or the war. NEVER miss an opportunity to express your gratitude for the veteran’s contributions to and sacrifices for our society. But please make sure you do it all year long, not *JUST* on this one day of the year. Make your appreciation of them meaningful. Make it sincere. And make it real. 

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

First, Do No Harm

"First, do no harm." This statement is the first concept I learned in my 1991 EMT class. The point behind it was to teach the importance of not making a patient’s injury or illness worse through the treatment given. For example, if a patient has an injured leg, don’t move him until the leg has been immobilized so that it cannot be further injured, possibly turning a temporary injury into a permanent disability. However, this idea can be applied to many aspects of life.

One of these aspects of life involves what we say to others. It has long been known that words do cause pain and heartbreak. Children have been taught for many years to be careful of what they say, lest their words come back to haunt them later in life. Kids have been bullied verbally to the point of committing suicide. Words can be used in the workplace to keep employees not only from furthering their careers, but also to keep them from realizing their potential in their current positions. Words can be used at home to keep an abused spouse or child from leaving. As one of my friends pointed out, words are used to cut people with opposing political views to the quick. Words are being used to end friendships and alienate family members—over a difference of political opinions.

I have, for many years, incorporated the concept of “First, do no harm” into all areas of my own life. I have treated others gently. I consider how my actions may affect another’s life. I will choose to remove myself from someone’s presence if I am causing them angst. I have learned to choose my words carefully, and will walk away from someone rather than say something rash in the heat of the moment that I may regret later. I make it a point to share my thoughts and opinions when invited to do so, but I do not attempt to sway the other person to my political or religious views. I may attempt to convince another that my way of completing a task is right, but I am more likely to complete the task myself rather than impose my way of doing things on others.

In her Facebook post, a friend noted the extent of vitriol spewed over opposing political views. She reminded those who read her posts that we all have differing opinions, and issued a heartfelt plea to those who read her post to take care that they remember to love each other, and not divide themselves over political ideals. My friend has a valid point. The upcoming election will determine who becomes our next President, but the division over the election will continue on for longer than the new President’s term in office. Families are being torn apart, friendships forever destroyed—over an election that will soon be no more than an event in American history. Does the outcome of this election have the potential to cause America more problems in the long run? Yes, absolutely. Does it have the power to bring about change that can improve the American way of life? Again, the answer is an overwhelming yes. There will likely be good and bad repercussions of this election no matter who becomes President. The problems that come about from this election will eventually be solved, in some form or another. However, the broken families and friendships will remain so for years, if not lifetimes to come.


Words are being used to do irreparable harm. It is time to stop using words as knives. It is time to consider how our words affect others. It is possible to share viewpoints without verbally assaulting each other. Debating classes and clubs have existed for years to teach students how to convince others of their own positions. None of these debates have included using words to hurt others. Students can learn to thoroughly research their positions and back up their opinions with such research. When arguing with others, insulting people is more likely to cause further division than to convince them of one’s own point. It is more likely to hurt feelings than to sway the other person’s opinion. It’s time for us to fall back on the tenet I first learned in my EMT class: “First, Do No Harm.”

Sunday, July 17, 2016

My Heart is Heavy with the News



He's a Black man! #BlackLivesMatter He's a cop! #PoliceLivesMatter


This man's life matters. Whether he's Black or a police officer or (as is the case) both, he has a family that loves him and wants him to go home safely each night. Yes, there are people in this country who are keeping racism a problem. Yes, there are people in this country who are exhibiting reverse racism. But we are ONE NATION. We should not be continuing the division among classes/groups that is currently going on. I try not to force my views on others, but this country will fall apart if we allow such division to continue. Honestly, if I had seen this man's picture without knowing he was injured by the Dallas shooter, I wouldn't have looked at it and thought, "oh, he's Black." I would have looked at the picture and thought, "Oh, the poor man! I hope he's ok!" I'm not "color blind." I can see that he is Black. But the person he is, whoever he is, has more meaning to me than what color his skin is. Politically, I'm a registered Republican. My morals and values are more conservative than not. I think, however, that we need to reunite as a country to fight the detrimental forces within our country, not break further apart like ice floes in the Arctic Ocean. At one point, the Democratic Party was meant to bring the country together. Now, the Democratic Party seems to encourage divisiveness. I'm pretty sure I could do some extremely superficial, brief research and find examples of the Republican Party doing the same thing. This is not an attack on either party. Or an attack on any of the .....LivesMatter movements. But we can't focus on one specific group. We have to work together. We have to appreciate our Black people, our White people, our Native Americans, our Latino/a people, our Asian people, our emergency personnel, our military, our ... The list goes on and on.  




Officer Montrell Jackson. Also a police officer. Also a Black man. Brutally murdered on the job. HIS life mattered. To his baby. To his family. To his friends. To his coworkers on the Baton Rouge police force. We cannot keep killing each other like this. Officer Jackson’s life mattered AT LEAST as much as Alton Sterling’s or Philando Castile’s lives mattered. We cannot keep turning against and killing each other. Forget BlackLivesMatter, PoliceLivesMatter, or even AllLivesMatter. It’s time to consider these people as individuals. Fathers, brothers, sons, friends…and so much more. My heart breaks for Officer Jackson. Not just because he was a police officer or a Black man, but because he will not be able to enjoy his child growing up. He will not be able to see this child’s milestones, or what this child grows up to be. Because he will not be able to barbecue with friends and family. He will not be able to bring joy to those around him. He will not be able to do any more good in his community. My heart breaks for his family, his friends, his baby.







Photo of Deputy Clopton taken from Police Officers Facebook page 
https://www.facebook.com/PoliceOfficersUS/photos/a.1201662653206628.1073741828.1199323963440497/1275207315852161/?type=3&theater

Photo of Officer Jackson taken from US Weekly website
http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/baton-rouge-shooting-three-police-officer-victims-identified-w429559

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Valentine's Day

Complaints about the commercialism of Christmas are all too common. People complain about others “taking the Christ out of Christmas.” Bumper stickers, Facebook posts, and television shows talk about the commercialization of the holiday. This is an annual complaint that has gone on for years. However, there is another holiday that has been completely commercialized, and much more effectively than Christmas—Valentine’s Day.
When one thinks about Valentine’s Day, flowers, romantic dinners at expensive restaurants, and jewelry are what come to mind. It is expected that the husband/boyfriend will provide these and other material gifts to the wife/girlfriend. If flowers, heart-shaped boxes of chocolates, expensive jewelry, and other gifts are not provided along with a candle-lit dinner at a favorite restaurant, the couple will be extremely unhappy. It is popular to ask the question, “What are you doing for Valentine’s Day?” and to expect a response with the name of the person’s favorite restaurant.
Many people, myself included, really don’t like Valentine’s Day. In my opinion, it is so overcommercialized that the original meaning has been lost in the mists of yesteryear. Not many people, it seems, even know who St. Valentine was, never mind that the holiday was created in his name. David Kithcart, the 700 Club Features Director, quotes Father Frank O'Gara of Whitefriars Street Church in Dublin, Ireland as saying of St. Valentine that “he was a Roman Priest at a time when there was an emperor called Claudias who persecuted the church at that particular time” (2016, as cited by David Kithcart). According to David Kithcart’s article, Father O’Gara states that the emperor had issued an edict prohibiting soldiers from marrying, and that St. Valentine had secretly married couples to discourage polygamy in spite of this edict.
Another significant, yet unrecognized, event that occurred on Valentine’s Day is the St. Valentine’s Day massacre. On February 14, 1929, seven men were gunned down in a garage, an event that was ordered by Al Capone ("The St. Valentine's Day Massacre", n.d.). Despite the fact that this was a gang killing, and the seven men killed surely were not innocent of wrongdoing, the massacre was an event that has made its way into the pages of history.
Today’s Valentine’s Day celebrations do nothing to commemorate either the creation of Valentine’s Day or the massacre now associated with February 14th. Instead, stores and commercials focus on selling boxes of candy, stuffed animals, flowers, and greeting cards to consumers. The items for sale are usually set up on display during the early part of January; advertisements are seen and heard almost constantly beginning around the end of January. If we as a group are concerned about the commercialization of holidays such as Christmas, should we not also go back to the roots of St. Valentine’s Day? 


References
Kithcart, D. (2016). St. Valentine, the real story. Retrieved from http://www1.cbn.com/st-valentine-real-story

The St. Valentine's Day massacre. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.myalcaponemuseum.com/id27.htm

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Bullying

Bullying. It’s a hot topic today. It’s also something that’s gone on for many years. Today, bullying is separated into categories; there are childhood bullies, adult bullies, physical and psychological bullying. There’s cyber bullying, covert (hidden) bullying, physical bullying, and verbal bullying.  All of these types of bullying are harmful. If there is one type that is worse than the rest, I would have to say it is covert bullying. I know. Aside from dealing with child abuse, I suffered physical and verbal abuse from kids in my neighborhood; I also endured “covert” bullying at the hands of my classmates during my seventh grade year.
            I started junior high school at Wilbraham and Monson Academy. The kids at WMA quickly realized they could get away with bullying me, and did so quite viciously.  I spent about $500 on text books during the first semester, and spent the rest of the year carrying ALL of my books around with me throughout the day.  When I used my locker, some of the kids would break into it, steal and burn the contents, then put the ashes back into my locker for me to find. 
During art class one day, we were using small tools to burn designs into leather squares.  The teacher had stepped out of the room, and some boys in the class took the opportunity to grab my leather square and burn it so I could no longer work on my design.  I was so upset that I walked out of the room and refused to go back.  The teacher sent me to the Dean of Students, who told me I would have to be punished for my insubordination.  The punishment was for me to spend all day Saturday and Sunday the next weekend sitting in the main hall of the school; I was not allowed to listen to music, read, or do any other activity.  My mother spoke to the Dean of Students; when she pointed out my reason for walking out of class, the Dean threw up his hands and said, “boys will be boys!”
There are many more resources for bullied kids today than there were back in the 1980s. However, just as in days past, bullied kids still react predictably.  WebMD notes that bullied children are likely to be “sensitive, socially withdrawn…, anxious, passive…, and more likely to get depressed” (WebMD, 2005-2016). Some of these kids are acting out aggressively, even fatally. Some children act out by becoming bullies themselves or by shooting other kids at school. Many other children, however, turn inwards. They exhibit the signs listed by WebMD; they attempt suicide. Many children, unfortunately, succeed. Partway through the school year that I spent enduring the bullying I mentioned above, around the middle of January, I attempted suicide. Luckily, my mother caught me in time, and I am able to share my story today. I took some positive lessons away from that experience. Many children, however, are not able to do so.
The question is how can we stop bullying? Historically, kids who bully others were punished. They were told not to act so badly towards others. In his article written for the Science of Us (2016), Jesse Singal notes that peer pressure is more effective in encouraging or stopping bullying than lectures aimed at children are. Social norms in school that are dictated by the most influential children are most effective in determining whether or not bullying will occur, according to the study referenced in Singal’s article. This is certainly a positive step in the research on stopping bullying; however, more research needs to be done to determine how these influential children could be encouraged to create social mores in school that dictate an intolerance of bullying.
Children who have been bullied need to be noticed and given more individualized attention to aid them in building their own defenses against the bullies. If a child is more confident, he or she will be less likely to succumb to the effects of the bullies’ behavior. Therapy, whether provided by the school or by a therapist of the parents’ choosing, is certainly a good step. In conjunction with the therapy, however, the bullied child should be given tasks that will enable him or her to build confidence. These tasks need not (and probably should not) be pointed out to the other children in the school/classroom. If the child is allowed to quietly succeed at the tasks he or she is given, the self-confidence needed to combat the bullies’ messages will come from within. Such self-confidence is infinitely more effective than external, public recognition. Children who are depressed and withdrawn are more likely to dismiss praise and public acknowledgement as “not real” or insincere.
Another step to take in combatting bullying is to make sure that we as adults are not bullying others. Many people use intimidation tactics to get what they want. Some people use their size or willingness to use physical force as a weapon. Others attack and label the behaviors of the person they are bullying as bullying behavior. This, then, is taken as an excuse to use social or legal means to force the bullied person to get what they want.
M., a sixth grade student, reached a point at which she was fed up with being told that she had to “be friends” with a girl in her class who would cycle through specific behaviors: the other girl would act nicely toward M., then start telling other students that M. was bad  or flawed in some way. M. would react by walking away from and ignoring the other girl, who would then tell their teacher that M. was “being mean.” M. would be instructed by the teacher to “be friends” with the girl, and the cycle would begin again. After three or four years of this, M. took to social media on a Friday evening after she had gotten home from school. M. wrote, “*Girl’s name* is a bitch.” Within half an hour, M.’s mother had seen the post and it was deleted, after a discussion with M. about the post and the reason for it. On the following Monday, M. was brought into a meeting with her parents, the school principal, and the police officer assigned to the school. M.’s father, principal, and the police officer proceeded to tell M. that what she had done in making such a statement on social media was bullying, even illegal, and she could be arrested for such behavior. She was then suspended from school for the remainder of the week. Although she does have some emotional problems stemming from this and other incidents, however, M. was allowed to succeed at multiple tasks during her earliest years that, the successes combined with her naturally strong personality to give her the ability to overcome the behaviors of, and even ignore, those who would have bullied her.
The incident involving M. brings to light more covert bullying. The mother of the girl who M. was in conflict with used the school principal to “punish” M. for saying what she did in her post. In addressing only M.’s post, the other girl’s mother positively reinforced her own daughter’s bullying behavior. In only punishing M for her social media post, the school principal and police officer indicated to M. that bullies can get what they want if they act in a specific way, and that those who speak out are the ones who will be punished for their actions. In the meeting with her principal, the police officer, and her parents, M. was sitting with her back against the wall; her father, the police officer, and principal were all standing above and leaning toward her in what can only be described as an intimidating manner. Here again is an example of bullying from adults. Such behavior must be stopped if we are to lead children by our own example.
Researching ways in which we can encourage children to create social mores that restrict or even prevent bullying is an action that must be continued. More research will hopefully result in a reduction in bullying. In addition to such research, though, we adults must lead by example. We need to make sure that our own behaviors are not those of a bully, and we need to stop those adults who continue to use bullying behaviors, including intimidation tactics, themselves.

  



References
Singal, J. (2016, January). The key to stop bullying: Popular kids. Science of Us. Retrieved from http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/19/health/popular-kids-can-stop-bullying/index.html

WebMD. (2005-2016). Bullying-Characteristics of children who are bullied. Retrieved from http://www.webmd.com/parenting/tc/bullying-characteristics-of-children-who-are-bullied