August 3 Six Years Later

I wanted to repost this in honor of loved ones lost on 8/3/19 as well as in tribute to those families that suffered those losses.

Sadly, what I wrote 6 years ago has come to pass. No progress has been made with gun control and in fact it is easier than ever to purchase a weapon. Beyond that. we live in a time of morally questionable leaders who claim to be Christian.

But we have been here before. Politicians capitalizing on fear is not new. Television personalities being attacked by political leaders is not new. Presidents of questionable moral integrity is not new. I have to believe that there are still honorable leaders out there and that their voices will carry the day as happened during the very similar time known as McCarthyism. Heroes of that time included Senators such as Stuart Symington, lawyers such as Joseph Welch, and television personalities such as Edward R. Murrow. History has honored them for their courage.

So, yes, I continue to hope that such heroes are with us now and will continue to stand up and be counted. I hope, too, that the violence of a Walmart shooting will lead us all to examine our violence within and to embrace a true message of non-violence.

Since 2019 I came to know some people who were directly affected on that terrible day. Their own courage will inspire me the rest of my days.

So take a moment today and say a prayer for the victims of the Walmart mass shooting of 8/3/19 as well as their families. May their memories be a blessing.

El Paso

Posted on August 12, 2019 by richp45198

It has been a week since a young man entered a local Walmart and opened fire. El Paso is grieving. El Paso is angry. El Paso is struggling to answer the “Why?” question, not just psychologically but spiritually.

Racism, like war, has been with us always. From my perspective racism goes beyond skin color and reflects the attitude of hostility and persecution of anyone whom I consider “different”, whether that difference is due to skin color, sexual identity, disability, or the many other ways we are unique.

Yes, there has been much racist rhetoric of late. And yes it is unconscionable for a 19 year-old young man to be able to buy a semi-automatic weapon. But the problems go beyond politics and gun control. I remain convinced that, for there to be an end to any form of violence, I must first heal the violence and racism within my own heart and mind. I must be willing to confront within myself the ways in which I judge others not only as different than but as less than. Do I look down on the street corner beggar, the “unenlightened” person of another political party, the prostitute working his or her street corner, the red-haired child on the playground? If we are honest, we all can find some form of such racism within, motivating us to judge someone as “less than”. None of us are immune from such thinking although too many of us like to think we are above it. It is never easy to face that “enemy within”.

El Paso is my home and my home is hurting. But my immediate concern is that time will pass and so will the attention paid to this tragedy. And nothing will change. We do indeed need to find a way to hold our leaders accountable for inflammatory rhetoric. We do indeed need to acknowledge that little has been done after such tragedies so that guns are not so easy to obtain. That is my fear. A year from now people will gather outside Walmart and remember those who were murdered. But the lawmakers will have done little to ensure it won’t happen again.

I have little control over politicians. But I do have the power to face my own inner racism, to bring it to the light of day, and to heal it. In many ways, if more of us, whatever our ethnicity, sexual orientation, position in life, if we try to heal the violence and ugliness within, then perhaps, in a small but significant way, there won’t be another El Paso.

About richp45198

I am a clinical psychologist and have an abiding interest in matters spiritual.
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1 Response to August 3 Six Years Later

  1. Nancy Hagman says:

    Last night I was watching a movie which brought in a boy at camp with cancer. Afterward I shared with Rose the time I spent with you and your son at the cancer camp for kids. I recalled your comments to a young man afraid of getting on the horse. Your words to him inspired him to overcome his fear and take a ride. When I asked what you said…you replied something about his courage facing much more that a horse in his life.
    As I shared with Rose about events around you, I realized that I have always gained from your presence and wisdom…every time.
    Thank you for being an inspiration in my life.
    Nancy

    PS I have created a program “InCorporating Your Strengths” which is designed to help women CEO’s to leverage their strengths to build wildly successful businesses and team. The training utilizes the CliftonStrengths Assessment.
    I am also adding an adventure to be a Keynote speaker. “Healing with your Strengths”.

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