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Raising A Boy Today -- A Mother's Fears
By Katherine Cowy Kim
Date: 03-08-01
The epidemic of school shootings nationwide leaves copious
amounts of victims in its wake. With much of the attention focused on
details of bullet wounds and gun calibers, lost in the shuffle are our
nation's fear-stricken parents. And PNS editor Catherine Cowy Kim wonders
who's looking out for them. Kim, 29, is mother of a 3-year-old boy and
co-editor of YO! Youth Outlook, a publication by and about Bay Area teens
published by Pacific News Service.
I fear Charles Andrew Williams, "Andy", the sweet-faced, scrawny boy who
shot his classmates in Santee, California. As a mother, I see in him my
worst nightmares -- that he will shoot my boy and leave him bleeding in a
corridor. Or less dramatically, that my son may end up suffering like
this boy-shooter -- angry and scowling, mocked and miserable.
I grew up with these tormented boys (who didn't?). I went to public
elementary, middle and high school with them. There was the boy across
the street who poured gasoline on neighbors' lawns and lit them on fire
-- the "Pyro Freak" who was later put on Ritalin. There was "Fat Albert,"
who in retrospect, was not fat at all, just not lithe and agile enough.
And then the German boy, brilliant and introspective, whose only
unfortunate mistake was arriving in the middle of a school year. He was
forever dubbed "The New Boy."
Ridicule and school go hand in hand. Where there is a campus, there is no
denying there will be cruelty among the cliques, popular kids and freaks.
Sixty years ago, in a dusty schoolyard in Seoul, Korea, my father was
both perpetrator and victim of beatings. "Over what?" I asked him.
"Whatever," he replied. As a child, I remember aching walks home from the
bus stop beside my bruised brother, who was hit by public school boys for
being a "Chink." When my parents whisked him off to boarding school (to
be among more enlightened and civilized boys), he was hazed incessantly.
Why? Because the stripes on his Oxford shirt were the wrong width.
More than three years ago, I started editing a youth newspaper. In the
first days on the new job, the office was abuzz with a school shooting in
Pearl, MS. Sixteen-year-old Luke Woodham stabbed his mother, then went
down to his school and shot nine students. Two months later, in West
Padukah, KY, three students were killed by a 14-year-old gunman. Three
months after that, two boys, only 13 and 11 years old, killed four
classmates in Jonesboro, AR. School shootings became common. Columbine
was epochal.
Back in the day, the greatest fear was that these losers would hang
themselves, slit their wrists, sit in the garage with Daddy's car
running. Now they're running around schools with assault rifles, black
.22-calibers, and bombs. Columbine highlighted the change from angst to
rage.
Boys have more rage than girls. I see teenage boys -- doesn't matter what
race --brimming with anger, itching to fight, needing to prove. I listen
to them talk tough about sluts and ball and six-packs. I used to think it
was the rage that I feared, because it was visceral and physical, brought
blood and pain. But when rage mixed with boredom, there was a much
greater evil at bay.
"I don't know why you guys care," a 20-year-old writer commented the day
after the Santana High School shootings. "I'm so desensitized."
There was something different about the Columbine boys. They were smart,
swift and methodical. They were also very dark, with spectres of Neo-Nazi
propaganda and hatred towards their tormentors. I was curious to see the
picture of the latest shooter -- was he an evil soul?
He was a boy.
He had just broken up with a girlfriend. He had just brought a water gun
filled with piss on school grounds. He had just been beaten up at the
skate park.
I'm sure he harbored rage this past week. Probably also played a video
game, drank a Coke, kicked around on his board. Watched TV and smoked
some weed.
Sadder than his anger, more important than being jaded, he was simply an
afterthought of a kid -- a dork who was never taken seriously, even after
telling people he was going to shoot his classmates. He was called "the
butt of all jokes."
I watch my son in his schoolyard, urging him in my head, from my seat on
the bench, to "hit back," or "get the ball, get the ball." I wonder who
-- the teachers, his friends, the girls -- likes him. I can kiss him on
the lips, have quiet-time talks and let him wear pink, but it won't make
a difference as to how other kids treat him.
"Awkward" and "pathetic" is how Charles Andrew William's is described. An
invisible child, every mother's fear.

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