By Thomas Kies
I’ve been wrestling with the topic for this particular blog for a couple of days now. It’s not unusual for me to struggle from time to time for a subject, but this week is just felt harder than the others.
On Sunday morning, after Cindy and I finished breakfast and reading the Sunday New York Times, I told he that I had to go upstairs to my home office and work on this column and I had absolutely no idea what it would be about.
She mentioned that perhaps I should write about how difficult it is to write on demand, especially when events happening in the world are so disturbing. So, yes…Cindy…you’re right, as usual.
The day that this blog will appear is Memorial Day. Unofficially, this is the first day of summer. We’re gathering our families, going to the beach, having backyard BBQs, taking the boat out on the water for the first time this year, or going camping. We’re looking forward to sunshine, warm weather, and vacations.
Officially, it’s the day we honor those who have died in active military service of this country. We thank them for their ultimate sacrifice. They gave their lives for what they believed in, the greater good of our country and its people.
But what of the other deaths we’ve seen take place lately? The headline in today’s New York Times is “1,500 Dead Since 2009; Can U.S. Do Something About Mass Shootings?”
According to the Times, just this year alone, there have been 214 instances of mass shootings where four or more people have died or been injured. Most recently, ten people murdered in a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, and nineteen children and two of their teachers in Uvalde, Texas.
Both of those massacres occurred after two men, each just eighteen, managed to legally obtain semi-automatic weapons and an inordinate amount of ammunition. Just a passing note, neither were old enough to buy beer. Those men killed 31 innocent people for no good reason.
Writers are subjects of extreme imagination. It’s both a blessing and a curse. In our minds, we put ourselves (our characters really) in all sorts of situations. In many times, terrifying…really terrifying… scenarios.
But I’ve never written anything like what happened a few days ago in an elementary school in Texas.
In my mind, I visualize classroom of ten-year-old children, all of them watching as a stranger enters the room, wearing combat gear, holding a long gun, and telling them, “You’re going to die.” Children, who only moments ago were watching an animated Disney movie, Lilo and Stitch. Children, who were looking forward to their summer vacation of sunshine, BBQs, and family.
Those children didn’t die for the greater good of our country and its people.
Last year, I released SHADOW HILL. In it, there’s mention of school shootings. One of which was foiled because the perps had telegraphed what they were going to do (shoot up their high school) on social media and one of their schoolmates alerted the police. The cops arrested kids before they got to the school. I wrote that scene with a happy ending.
If only there were more happy endings in real life.
So, no, this blog won’t be about character development or story arcs. This blog is about my inability to write a blog about writing because I’m distracted and distraught.
My wife is right. Sometimes, you just can’t write on demand.
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