I was working on a
band review. That may go up tomorrow. As it is, I have been thinking a lot
about the Clackamas shooting, and having random thoughts on that. I wrote a lot
on it last night, but I will see if I can come up with something coherent here.
I noticed an
interesting thing in connection with the shooting. People in other locations
wanted to know about Oregon friends and family. They were worried. Here in
Oregon, it never occurred to me that anyone I know would be in danger.
Statistically it is
much more likely that I would know someone who is affected. I am only
twenty-five miles away, and I have been there before, though not often. Even
stranger, a while back when I heard someone had been shot at the Thriftway
where I have shopped many times, and that is just over a mile away, it still
never occurred to me that it would be anyone I knew. I used to run into people
I knew all of the time there. As it is, I knew someone who knew the family, and
I only knew that because of Facebook.
I think there are a
few things going on here. One possible thing is that to have people you care
about be far away is scarier, because you can’t really intervene if something
does come up. In reality, you can be nearby and not be able to help, but maybe
having people near feels safer.
The other thing, and
maybe it correlates, is that it is easier to think about the unlikely fears
than the likely fears. I am more likely to die in a car crash than a plane
crash, but I never think about the car crashing when I get into one, and I do
think about plane crashes pretty much every time I board. It’s not an
overpowering fear, but I think about it.
Maybe that’s okay,
because I don’t fly that often. I get in cars pretty frequently. At the same
time, I always wear my seatbelt, and mentally I know that the reason I do that
is because of car crashes, but I’m not thinking about that. It’s just a habit,
that could potentially protect me someday. The funny thing looking at that is
that I am very against doing things mindlessly, and I always want to study
things and understand the reasoning behind them and yes, overanalyze them. But
it can be so paralyzing to be too aware.
We do need to think
about things. The sheriff was talking today about some of the things that
helped reduce the death toll. One is that the mall had lockdown procedures in
place that worked well. Another is that the police have realized that in a
situation like this they cannot wait for SWAT, so they have procedures in
place, and they responded very quickly, cutting off free movement for the
shooter. Also, other cities helped, and people were good to each other in terms
of making good decisions on their own about getting to safety, but also helping
others who may have been impaired. I’m glad to hear that.
So this advance
planning is important, where you think about things that could happen, and what
would mitigate, and you get prepared. I am all about that. Then you need to let
it migrate to the back of your mind and live without fear. I’m probably not
saying that right, but I’m not even sure if that can be fully explained. Some
parts of living you only get with practice.
There’s something that’s making me irritable too,
though, so I think tomorrow I’m going to have to write about talking about
guns.
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