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Reason against the unreasonable

We must do better talking about, treating mental illness

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(MCT) — As a parent, the only photo I could bear to look at from that slaughter at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut on Friday was that picture of a little boy and a little girl.

The children were facing the school, their backs to a wooded lot nearby. There weren’t any dead in the picture, except perhaps the innocence that may have died inside the children.

The girl, who appeared older, had her arms around the little boy, comforting him, squeezing him close, her head down, long hair covering her face. The boy, in a plaid shirt, had his head up. He put his hands to his face, covering his nose and mouth. But he didn’t cover those brown eyes of his.

The eyes were wide open, and they stared at something off-frame, and he looked as if he’d spend his lifetime standing there, growing old, staring.

Whether he was staring at pain still unfolding or remembering terror as it happened, we can’t know. What we do know is that as news circulated that a gunman opened fire and the slaughter had begun that would claim the lives of 20 children and eight adults, the rest of us were doing what powerless grown-ups always do when we try to regain control.

We busily assigned blame, thinking we can use reason against the unreasonable.

It’s a natural human impulse, this desperate need to control what terrifies us, and we bring our personal politics to such things. Words and arguments often help us feel secure when, deep down, we must know that no argument can keep us safe.

But that didn’t stop us from lighting up the Twitterverse, some insisting there are too many guns in this country, others that there weren’t enough in the hands of the right people at a critical time, a nation talking of amendments, and restrictions, policies, rights.

But look at that boy’s eyes. He’s not arguing. He’s not employing reason. He’s not thinking of rights or policy. He can’t. What he has learned early in life is you can’t reason with madness. You can’t argue with evil.

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