Hello, Dave,
I think your post is meant to be light-hearted, perhaps, but for me "fear" is very real. If it were not the 2nd anniversary of when I might have lost my 2 youngest daughters and their step-sister, I might not have replied, but the fear and dread I feel daily is heightened this month...
I fear losing one of my children or grandchildren (and soon great-grandchildren) to gun violence; not due to their neighborhood, their ethnicity, or lifestyle.
Every time I wake I have to check for texts, calls or broadcast news of someone using an automatic weapon in my country, the United States of America, against other citizens with the intent to cause harm and death for reasons only they know.
On 1-October-2017 someone decided he was more important than my daughters and 20,000 other human beings, aimed his automatic weapons at them and murdered 58, wounded uncountable others and scared the hearts and souls of anyone related to this forever...
During the early morning hours of the next morning, I stood on my porch listening to First Responders throughout our valley, awaiting updates from son-in-law as ex drove to rescue the girls. Nothing in my life has ever paralyzed me to the point of wanting to die at that moment; nothing, aside from the Oceanside earthquake in the 90s, has dropped me to my knees on learning the girls were safe.
At that moment, I knew for me there would never be peace again; there would never be a higher entity, there would never be safety for anyone...
I apologize for the ugliness some may think my reply has but it is my reality, my daily life, my sadness, my hope...
...that eventually someone who can make it different does make it different. I don't want to, but often think of my eldest granddaughter at my age, going through this same experience; I so don't want that for her but based on our recent history...
#VegasStrong
#VegasStrong
Phil Harris, actor and showman, to John Fogerty of CCR: “If I’d known I’d live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself.”