Santa Cruz Sentinel

Hurt people hurt people: Reducing mass shootings

- By Don Eggleston Don Eggleston is an Aptos resident.

For seven years in the 1970s I taught elementary school at Hall District School in Las Lomas. My students were virtually identical to those massacred in Uvalde, Texas. Apparently, “my” children watched for almost an hour while their teachers and friends were being blown to unrecogniz­able pieces, waiting in terror for their turn. I've been crying a lot, and like almost everyone, I am looking for solutions.

Of course, we must have much stricter gun control and absolutely no assault rifles owned by civilians, but there is an additional solution that is seldom mentioned:

After teaching elementary school, I taught some 25 years in “at-risk student” high schools here in Watsonvill­e, and I got to know the families pretty well. These students are a very diverse group, but generally, the more dysfunctio­nal students shared these characteri­stics: Chaotic home life.

• Neglect.

• Lack of positive male role models.

• History of domestic violence.

With the help of a female counselor who was a victim of incest, I learned that roughly half of our girls and at least

20% of our boys were victims of sexual abuse by someone that was supposed to protect them. Sexual abuse produces profound emotional issues. My unscientif­ic opinion is that most school shootings are committed by victims of sexual abuse. In boys, sexual abuse creates unmitigate­d rage.

Additional­ly, when neighborho­ods are not safe, children who are unhappy at home often fall in with the criminals who control their neighborho­ods.

(BTW, in my experience, poverty is not a major cause of unproducti­ve and antisocial teen behavior. Occasional­ly, there were single parents that had to work two full-time jobs to pay the rent and this resulted in neglect of their kids, but this was uncommon. In addition to lowincome students, I also taught the children of doctors and lawyers in continuati­on schools.)

These factors (dysfunctio­nal homes and neighborho­ods controlled by thugs) can actually produce destructiv­e teens and if the resulting emotional issues are not dealt with, they often become self-destructiv­e, antisocial adults.

So, students with a propensity toward violence (some of them future mass murderers) are in our schools today, and the high school years are the last real time our community will be able to help them to deal with their issues and thus protect us all. Remember that the original purpose of public education is to educate children to become productive members of society. Correcting anti-social behavior is clearly within the mandate of public schools.

“Hurt people hurt people” — our society has to do a better job at protecting children and when the they have experience­d trauma, giving them a better opportunit­y to heal or they will pass their hurt on to others.

Here are my suggested solutions to reduce mass shootings: • Stop early child abuse.

Years ago PVUSD had a program where two counselors did a puppet show for kindergart­en classes about child abuse. Afterwards, students who wanted to talk to the counselors went outside the classroom, and many abusive situations were interrupte­d.

This may seem like an intrusion on family sovereignt­y, but the early years are profoundly important in child developmen­t, and if we want to raise healthy adults, child abuse must stop. In many jurisdicti­ons, it is nearly impossible for Child Protective Services to remove a child from their abusive home, and the foster home system has long been a major source of child abuse. The state has to do more to protect small children, because they are all our children.

• Violence-prone teens should be given early intensive therapy.

Once the damage is done to innocent children through emotional, physical and sexual abuse, the resulting violencepr­one students must have an opportunit­y to work out their issues with effective therapy.

Students exhibiting violent behavior are often on probation and in most jurisdicti­ons this means just being locked up. Fortunatel­y, here in Santa Cruz County, the Probation Department is a national leader in “wraparound support” and restorativ­e justice. “Wraparound support” means that instead of just locking kids up with criminals, they are mandated to spend most of their after-school time in group meetings and counseling. Their families are also involved in counseling, which is especially important, so the siblings do not follow the same self-destructiv­e path. Additional­ly, continuati­on high schools should retool to recognize that their mandate is more than getting students a diploma, and starts with helping students recognize and change their bad habits so they can become productive members of society.

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