l have to say something about the Virginia Tech. shootings. My oldest son, D is just finishing his first year in the residence halls (engineering of all things) and my daughter, M leaves this September to do her first year at university too. This tragedy has hit close to home for me- it’s been all over the news and l am having such a hard time getting my head around it all- doubt l ever will. These students, still so young, leaving home to make something of themselves- and you think your children are safe- especially on campus!
Everyone is talking about forgiveness for this young man but all l seem to feel is anger. Anger not at him- but at what was done - but for the damage done that spawns such monstrous atrocities to emerge in our youth. How could he, why??? I saw a brief picture of his room. l think of my son’s cramped shoebox of a room and how he manages. What happened to this kid- why do these killers model themselves on film/game characters? It’s madness- all of it. The way l see it is that this lad wanted to commit suicide and he wasn’t going alone. How can it be so easy for a our young to become armed with the knife and the gun and to use them with cynical indifference or psychopathic madness. What kind of society have we created to so fester the minds of a young generation? Bred on a diet that makes them assume that what they want they have - and now - without effort or thanks, we increasingly see the streets of our towns and cities the battleground for marauding gangs of young people with little hope or sense of opportunity. Enticed into drink and drugs with a fragile sense of values, their reality becomes at odds with the rest of society and increasing alienation leads the extremes into little better than a feral lifestyle. The ASBO is worn as some ‘red badge of courage’. We have engendered a dependence culture that encourages young people to assume that there is always a safety net, always a handout and responsibility is someone else’s problem. I read on the news of a 12 year old boy performing a filmed beheading, teenagers brainwashed into becoming suicide bombers, a gang beating and knifing a lone teenager to death and a young American student cold bloodedly shooting fellow students. Nourished by a childhood of violent television and computer games, music that parades sex and violence cheaply, and a news representation of the world that revels in the violent and the corrupt, is it little surprise that some speak of this generation of teenagers as ‘the lost generation’. Civilization we would boast – by what definition?? Tragedy the Virginia shootings were for sure but, even greater is the tragedy of what we are doing to our youth. I would not be a teenager in these days, fear for my own and thank God they are surviving it. I’m rambling here but still feel angry and so utterly heartbroken for the families who lost their loved ones.
I know it’s not a simple matter of events but am just so shocked.
1 comment:
Horizon, I absolutely agree with you, as you so aptly wrote. Our world has lost all value for human life and the good of mankind....or so it seems..
Unless young people have values instilled in them from toddlers on through teenage years by a stable home life and parents who have morals and faith in God, I don't think they stand much of a chance.
I fear for my grandchildren and what they are and will face. Our oldest grandson begins his freshman year at University of Georgia in the fall. We have twin granddaughters who will be 16 in June and 5 younger grandchildren.
We just have to have faith that the God who saw us through trying times is the same God who will be with them. Teenagers really increase our prayer life. One of my favorite Bible verses is First Peter 5:7..."Casting all your care upon Him, for He careth for you."
I like your drive and wall. The slide show is great. I don't think I have the ability to create one...........
Post a Comment