My heart feels as if it’s in a
vice grip. My stomach is in knots and I
feel nauseous. My head aches and
throbs. My eyes are washed out, blurry
and puffy. I wake up nightly every hour with
feelings of anxiety and sadness. I know
I will never be the same after Friday, December 14th, 2012. Chances are, neither will you.
All around me is NOISE.
Chatter.
Yelling. Sadness. Tears.
More chatter and more arguments.
Some are screaming, “Ban the
guns!”
Others are chanting, “Help our
mentally ill!”
Fingers of blame are flying
incessantly, like a pack of mosquitos on an overly warm summer night. Words of ill-intent are dive-bombing
everything from a cold-blooded killer’s mother, to national funding (or lack
thereof), to the purported latency of gun ownership and the very words of our
Constitution.
The quagmire of human emotions
has been deeply uprooted from our very core, by a creature capable of great
evil. The circumstances surrounding this
horrific event remain undetermined and at best, a multitude of theories
smooshed together to try and make some sense as to the why(s). Sometimes, however, there are no explanations
and any of the proffered reasons of blame do not fit into the
puzzle.
The only way I can turn the noise
off, albeit momentarily, is to snuggle into my little four year old love
bunch. My ears hear the giggles
emerging from her innards as I rub my face into her belly, into her neck, and as I “Eskimo
Kiss” her nose with my nose. The crushing vice
grip around my ticker loosens every so slightly with every warm teeny breath my
littlest blows on me. My body begins to
overflow and surge with her magic and innocent life force.
I cry a-g-a-i-n, for each and
every child lost on that dreadful day and for every adult who died trying to
protect these little youngsters; my heart continues to break into another fragmented and
jaded piece. How can there be such evil
in our world? What has happened to our civilization? What can we do to STOP this?
(Shhhhhhhhhh, please. No noise.)
I know countless others who feel
this way: broken-hearted, utterly sad,
in shock and disbelief that someone could commit such an incorrigible act on sacred school ground. Despite being a neighboring state from where
this badness occurred, it hit home for all of us – smack dab in the middle of
our chests.
I have hugged each of my children
at least twenty times over each day since Friday. “I love you” has escaped my lips more than
just at the morning drop-off and at bedtime.
I have gone and read the twenty
names of Newtown’s children daily. I
weep for their parents. I weep for their
community. I weep for our nation.
However, I am confident that my
children remain safe at school. I remain
assured that goodness will prevail and it will outweigh the badness in the
world. I believe in the power of
love.
Never forget. 12-14-12
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