Texarkana Gazette

Bereaved parents hurt all over again

- Jeanne Phillips Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

Dear Abby: My son was murdered four years ago by a supposed friend. Despite a 10-year sentence, the murderer was released from prison this month.

The perpetrato­r and my son had some mutual friends. When I go onto the convicted manslaught­erer’s Facebook page, he has many people congratula­ting and welcoming him home.

The murderer has not once apologized or shown remorse. He was on home incarcerat­ion for six months before he was sentenced for manslaught­er, and during that time, he impregnate­d his girlfriend instead of thinking about the devastatio­n he’s caused my family. My son will NEVER have a family.

I cannot believe that murderers and rapists receive respect and congratula­tions once they re-enter society. Do people not recognize the devastatio­n that has been caused to surviving family members of the victim? — Hurt Again In Kentucky

Dear Hurt Again: Nothing can take away the pain of losing a child. The family and friends of the person who killed your son appear to have lost sight of the reason for his incarcerat­ion. But they are happy to have their loved one back with them, which is why they are posting welcome messages.

A resource that might help you is the National Organizati­on of Parents of Murdered Children Inc. You can find it by going to pomc.com. I hope you will give it a try.

Dear Abby: Recently we needed to use the local ATM. When we drove by, we could see it was being filled by an armored truck. My husband said I should get in line. I looked around and saw other people waiting in their cars, so I thought I would do the same. My husband repeated that I should get out and get in line. Faced with the choice of standing in line or being nagged by my husband, I chose the former and was the first person to form a line.

After 20 minutes standing there, the ATM guards seemed to be finished. That’s when a woman approached me and said she had been waiting longer than me, albeit in her car, and I would have to go to the end of the line. I ignored her.

As I was making my withdrawal, I could hear the woman say to the others now lined up behind her that I had jumped the line and she called me an expletive, which two others in line repeated. Was I wrong to have stood my ground? — Waiting In Texas

Dear Waiting: If you were the first person to stand at the ATM while others chose to wait in the comfort of their vehicles, you owed no one an apology. The person who was out of line (literally) was the woman who called you an expletive, and you were right to ignore her.

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