The recent slew of horrific events with the Las Vegas Shooting have really got me thinking about how to end world tragedy. And so this heartfelt post really hit home.
Want to End World Tragedy? It Begins at Home
It feels like a constant cycle of heartbreak. How many more cities do I have to pray for? How many more donations can I make? How many more tragic events can our country endure before change happens – REAL change? It’s not enough anymore to feel sorry, sad, depressed for our hurting world. It’s not enough to try and explain a never-ending string of horrific acts to a child. Empathetic parenting is not enough anymore.
I am a parent basically screaming at the top of my lungs – “What else can I do?!”
We as parents can’t sit on the sidelines if we expect tragedy to stop. Ending World Tragedy Begins at Home – now, right now. Here’s what I’m doing to break the cycle. Here’s what you can do too.
Let me start this post by saying, I’m not here on my political soapbox. I’m not here to start an argument or try to fuel the fire. It’s tense right now. Emotions flaring, words spewing faster than our brains can catch up, people forcing divisions and lines and sides. We are on the edge of losing it. Instead, I hope you’ll read this with reflection as you picture the most important people in your world – your family, your kids – standing right in front of you. That’s where the heart wrenching pull, that motivation to change is going to occur. That’s what writing this post has done for me. Ready now? Deep breath.
Love So Hard, It Hurts
Parents, we all know that love is the essential foundation of our very being. We love our kids; I don’t deny that. But we also get angry. We lose our tempers often. We neglect needs. We are broken, non-perfect people. I’m tired; I know you are too. But I’m also tired of seeing so much violence, hate and anger in the world. If we as parents could love just a little more, hug just a little more often (yes, even in public), kiss our kids longer, tell them that love is answer and conquers all. What if we show our kids how to love just a little better? What if we love our kids so hard that it hurts – as in hurts to do anything else? What if we loved our kids so hard – hate never even crosses their minds? With so much love in our lives, there’s NO ROOM for hate. I imagine a world such as this.
Never Stop the Conversation
We have this tendency of pushing our kids in front of technology when we’re tired and burnt out. We are missing opportunities to talk to our kids about real issues. Pain. Grief. Depression. Sorrow. These are real and can happen to us and our kids at any time. But internalizing these feelings isn’t enough. Shielding our kids from this side of the world isn’t enough. Empathizing isn’t enough. Allow your kids to express their feelings and keep them from bottling up inside. Don’t let that inner turmoil and anger boil over. We need to let our kids know that they are NOT alone. Talk to your kids – and never stop the open conversations with them.
Fix You
Self-absorbed. Entitled. Full of judgement. Thriving on negativity. In love with tragedy. I don’t know about you, but when I scroll social media these days, all I see is unhappiness. Pictures of kids growing up and families having fun are being replaced with hot-headed rants and political warfare. A place where I used to come and escape my own little world for a dose of happy updates is now a place that I dread – people against people. What happened to us, parents?
We are programmed now to live in a world that’s hurting. And we love to feel hurt and take things personally. But if we get at the core of you and me – we are people desperate for community, friendship and love. I know that I have to fix me. I can’t let the world suck me in – but I need to lead with the heart to change and be changed. LEAD, parents. We need to lead with a different mindset. We need to hit the switch and change the way we react to situations. We need to change the way we respond to people. We need to know that deep inside every single one of us is a soul, a person that is in need of desperate love. We are HUMAN – full of mistakes, broken and desperate – but we are beautiful and adaptable to change. I am working desperately to fix me – by getting off social media, by interacting with real people, by loving even when it seems unlovable. I don’t need to be like the world. I’m better than that and I need to be better for my family.
Be Their Heroes
Action, parents. It’s more than talking. It’s more than hoping. It’s doing. It’s being. It IS. Those values we want our kids to hold? Those central core morals we want to pass down? Those beliefs that grip our hearts? What if we as parents were shining examples of the people we want our kids to be? Our kids follow by example. Our kids imitate their heroes. We need to be those heroes. No more complaining, bashing, gossiping, judging, angering…you get the picture. Parents, we need to be our kids’ super heroes.
Start a Chain Reaction
Maybe these endless chains of horrific events won’t end this generation – but maybe it will with our next generation. But it’s our job as parents to be there for our kids. Change begins right here, right now at home. It begins with us and it ends with them. Start that chain reaction – with us being the heroes we need to be for our kids, with our kids imitating our good examples, with our kids shining love and light into the world instead of hate.
I won’t stop praying for our cities and our country and our world. I won’t stop hoping for a better tomorrow. I won’t stop empathizing with the world filled with hurting people. I won’t stop donating, giving and trying to make the world a better place. But I do believe that if we can get to the very core of violence – HUMANITY – and make an impact on the direct humans in our lives (aka our kids), that’s when the shootings will stop, terrorism will end, racism will cease and love with overpower everything. I believe that ending world tragedy begins right here in our homes, in our hearts. But we need to be willing to do something about it.
Is your heart breaking for our world too? How can we end world tragedy and really make an impact for change?
*Please note BEFORE you leave a comment, this is not a place to come with your political agendas and passive aggressive anger. This is a safe place for you to admit your fears, encourage other parents and hopefully bring about change. We are in this together.
Be sure to follow Raising Whasians via Facebook, Twitter, Google, Instagram, Pinterest and YouTube for more of our family moments, recipes, crafts, and travel.
Christie, this is beautiful! I 100% agree it has to start at home. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you for sharing. Family is the most important social structure. It’s where our children learn about love and other important core values like respect and truth. And it is through love-based conversations that we can teach our children to be kind and how to cope with tragic events.
Keep spreading the love!
Thank you. The world needs to hear this. We parents get to be reminded that we are heroes, because some days we forget. We get to be reminded to breathe, to stay positive and to be the demonstration of peace and love. Thank you for sharing vulnerably the way that you do. And most of all, thank you for being my best friends wife. I couldn’t have dreamed of someone as awesome as you to be by his side.
Absolutely beautiful! I agree with you my friend in so many levels! Love Love Love!!
I think everyone’s heart is breaking for our world. You’re right on the money when you say we can end it by starting at home. Kids growing up in broken homes turn into broken adults. Broken adults are hurting, and they want others to hurt.
These are good and challenging thoughts. If each and every person tried to think what can he or she do to help end this craziness, perhaps things would start to change. It doesn’t always have to be a mass murder, there is so much violence and hatred that has taken root all over our country, that we can have an impact to effect how we live our own lives. I agree. Some of these horrible mass murders, the parents are good parents, so we don’t always know the reasons, there is much for psychologists and sociologists to study.
I think you are more optimistic than I am. I agree with you that everything begins at the family level, but we can’t count on everyone to come from a loving family unless there are major structural changes.