Preface: It's been a while since I've blogged or written anything for that matter, but this weekend, like so many people, I was consumed by the horrors in the school corridors of Sandy Hook Elementary and this piece wrote itself.
Elegy in a
Connecticut Corridor
December 15, 2012
Jake Miller
December 15, 2012
Jake Miller
Thomas
Gray walked a nearby English cemetery following the loss of a good friend,
trying to make sense of the seamlessly toppling world about him. Gray’s life
had been wanton with woe in 1742, as most of his family and friends had been
taken from him, and he lived a rather unsuccessful, underwhelming life as a
failed poet. Yet after walking these hallowed grounds, he looked around to
reflect on the average men and women buried there. He composed his poem “Elegy
Written in a Country Courtyard” pondering that, in another life, those buried
there could have been the next leaders, celebrities, and heroes. Gray closes
his elegy by thanking God for taking everyone there into His arms.
The
problem with Friday’s tragic events in Newtown, Connecticut, is that the
majority of the individuals slain there were very different from those buried
in Gray’s courtyard. Tragically, 20 of the 28 victims were elementary students.
Instead a long-life lived to reflect, we are now put in the uncomfortable
circumstance to ponder who they could have been. President Obama stated that
“they had their entire lives ahead of them: birthdays, graduations, weddings…
kids of their own.”
As of Saturday morning, with the
investigation still pending, the names of these young men and women are still
unknown to the public. However, according to Twitter posts from the media on
the ground in Newtown, the children’s were identified through a “process of
elimination,” etching the horrendousness of this shooting into the social
fabric of our nation. Most are believed to be in Kindergarten and first grade.
Some of the victims that are known,
however, are a few of the adults. School psychologist Mary Sherlach, 56, was retiring
at the end of the school year. She was described by members of the community as
someone “who loved her job” and was “excellent” at it.
Teacher Vicki Soto, 27, was a Sandy
Hook teacher “who absolutely loved her job,” her cousin stated. She was
frantically trying to usher her students into a closet and, in doing so, put
herself between the gunman and her students.
Principal Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung,
47, was in her third year as the principal. She was described as a “hero” to
the school and someone who cared about every student there, said many parents.
She put the school in lockdown mode via an announcement and then decided to enter
the hallways and save any stray students—a decision that cost her life.
The shooter, Adam Lanza, and his
mother, a substitute at the school, are added to the list of lives lost. Like
the 20 young children, the identities of the other 3 adults remain undisclosed.
Like a mysterious, shattered
tombstone in Gray’s courtyard, we sit bewildered, befuddled, and beside
ourselves as to what could have been and, for many of these young children and
the heroes who tried to save them, what never was.
As a teacher, I often think to who
could have saved these children from Lanza. There are many people disturbed
young individuals who may follow his path. This thought promulgates a need to
discuss mental illness in America, because it is sure to factor in why and how
such sinister and vitriolic acts of violence occur. Treatment and understanding
alone may only prevent future atrocities such as the one we’re mourning in
western Connecticut; for the sake of our national elegy, we need to secure the
resources to help prevent disturbed people from transforming into malicious
murderers and keep children entering schools, not interring in graves.
Lastly, we as a nation need to find
a way to help those grieving. The loss of life for every parent is
insurmountable and irreplaceable. Thinking about it makes any parents’ stomachs
churn and tough to swallow the deep despair. Our nation must help those heal
the wounds. There are bound to be many, and they’ll be most exposed when anyone
walks that cemetery not far from Sandy Hook Elementary School. Long be the days
for those that read the names on the tombstones, seeing how short a chance they
had at this world to become the next leaders, celebrities, and heroes – before taken
into God’s arms.