Monday, December 31, 2007

2007 recap

The week between Christmas and New Years is my favorite. I don't have to work! So typically I spend time lounging around the house, working on little projects, reading, and thinking. Lots of time to think about New Years resolutions - many of which I've already started on. (Two pounds already, yeah!)

But first I don't want to leave 2007 without looking at it as another past year in my life; history.

It was a good year.

I started the year wanting (again) to spend more quality time with my family, and I think I did that. This year, even more.

Here's some highlights from my 2007:

- Motorcycle trip to Rocky Mountains. This was spectacular. It's always nice to get away with Steve and not worry about work and other stuff, but when we can go someplace beautiful and have the freedom of the road and explore, that's what we love. Hopefully another trip next year. I'm dreaming about the Grand Canyon.

- Individual accomplishment: Lacey's graduation. I'm so proud of my daughter who worked her butt off earning her massage therapy degree. Lacey is such a joyful person and a gift to everyone. It's wonderful to have seen her set and accomplish her goal and now it's fun to see her begin her career.

- My web site. When I chose my fall semester class I really wanted to do something different to challenge myself and go into an area that I had no experience. "Hey, if they can do it, why not?" Wow, it was really hard and I don't ever want to have to do web sites but at least I know kind of how to put things together. It wasn't fun but I feel like I really accomplished something.

Lots of other cool things happened in 2007 but on to 2008. I'm excited about the upcoming year and hope you are too.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

OK last-minute shoppers

I love music, as many of you know.

Every year I add a couple new Christmas music CDs to my collection. I wanted to list my favorites, in case you're out there shopping for someone and aren't quite sure what's good. It's such a disappointment to buy a CD and have it turn out to be lame. These selections are definitely not lame, and a must for any holiday collection.

1) "A Charlie Brown Christmas," Vince Guaraldi Trio. Maybe it's a generational thing, but the sweet voices and the jazzy instrumentals that evoke memories of the Charlie Brown Christmas classic really make me grin. This is my favorite.

2) "Home for Christmas," Amy Grant. Amy's "Breath of Heaven" is heavenly, and the other songs are nicely arranged. With her gentle and not-overpowering voice, it's really easy to listen to every song on the album.

3) "The Christmas Song," Nat King Cole. This Capitol Records classic is remastered, dated 1986 and the sounds and instrumentation are timeless. It wouldn't be Christmas without Nat's rendition of "The Christmas Song."

4) "The Gift," Collin Raye. OK, Collin is country, but the sounds on this album aren't. Collin has a gorgeous voice and each song is well done. My favorite is "It Could Happen Again," a ballad about soldiers in World War II putting down their arms on Christmas Eve and celebrating together Christ's birth.

5) "Christmas in the Aire," Mannheim Steamroller. I know some people don't like Mannheim, but Chip's Christmas arrangements are really amazing to listen to, and Christmas would be missing something without any Mannheim Steamroller playing in the background.

6) "The Nutcracker," Tchaikovsky, performed by the Berlin Symphony Orchestra.

7) "Christmas with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

8) "Classical Christmas Collection," performed by Berlin Symphony Orchestra, including Handel's "Messiah" (selections).

9) "Miracles," Kenny G. Whatever. I like it. Slow instrumentals, playing in the background, are my favorite Christmas sounds.

10) "A Christmas to Remember," Amy Grant. Not as good as her earlier Christmas album, but the title track and several other original or new selections make this one worth getting.

I'm always interested in new suggestions so let me know what you like. Especially classic and traditional compilations.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Grief, apologies from mom

It seems everyone is trying to figure out what was going on in Robert Hawkins' mind when he decided to shoot a bunch of innocent people at Westroads. It's obvious he was seriously troubled. Maybe mentally ill.

Fact is, we'll never know his mental state. Was it mental illness or was it just flat-out poor character and immaturity that led to his action? Did he have a breakdown or was he just rotten?

Blame doesn't help heal. But figuring out why this kid went off can help us prevent future events. That's I guess why I'm curious, interested and reading stories about this kid's story.

I'm troubled by accounts of his upbringing and his family life and was struck by the parents' attitudes that they did the best they could. As a parent of children who have gone through their own troubled times, I understand the response, "I did the best I could." I've thought and said that often. But to be brutally honest, it's a cop-out. There's always something we parents could have done differently, and I know we can't go back and change those things now, but by deflecting the honest examination of what "we did" doesn't help any of the rest of us realize what we can do to treat the symptoms of illness and troubled actions that are plaguing others, and figure out how to prevent horrible painful tragedies like these in the future.

Robert Hawkins' parents had difficulties and many of us do. But, hopefully most of us respond to our difficulties without fleeing or abandoning our problems, without using drugs, without blaming others. Robert Hawkins' mother used drugs in front of him. I won't even go into how messed up that is and what it did to Robert. She and others in Robert's life also encouraged him to use guns, made guns available to him, taught him that guns and violence are appropriate.

That's doing the best they could?

I really don't think that blame will help anyone here, but scrutiny and examining people's actions and responses and excuses and attitudes is actually appropriate and I hope we can all learn something from it. Hopefully, people will learn that raising children in a home with drugs and guns is dangerous and irresponsible - and that the rest of us who don't raise our families that way aren't accepting it.

Yes, we're sorry for Robert's mother's grief and we feel her sorrow. I just can't help but wish she and others in Robert's life would have tried a little harder - and made some better decisions. I hope and pray all these families find some peace and healing and resolve to make the world a more peaceful place.


Omaha World Herald
Published Friday | December 14, 2007
'He was my baby boy,' mother says in apologizing for rampage
BY PAUL HAMMEL
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

The mother of Robert Hawkins issued a tearful apology on Thursday for her son's deadly rampage at Westroads Mall, saying "these beautiful people need to see for themselves that I love them."

"This is devastation, absolute devastation," said Maribel "Molly" Rodriguez of Bellevue. "It wasn't just eight people who died, it was eight families."

"There's a piece of every one of those families that is gone. . . . I know that, because I'm experiencing that, too."

Sobs punctuated the telephone interview Rodriguez gave The World-Herald from New York City. She had flown there to appear on the "Good Morning America" show Thursday.

Rodriguez, who was divorced from Hawkins' biological father in 1991, said in the phone interview that she was apologizing — in the interview and on the TV show — because no one else in the family had stepped forward.

"He was my baby boy," Rodriguez said. "These beautiful people need to see for themselves that I love them, and to give them the best apology I possibly knew how."

"You tell me," she added, "how do you deliver an apology for eight families?"

In her television appearance, Rodriguez, 41, said she last heard from her son in a voice mail message he left her on the day of the shootings.

The night before, Hawkins had eaten dinner with his mother and his two half sisters at the home of his former stepfather, Mark Dotson, Rodriguez's former husband. Dotson has said the 19-year-old took the AK-47-style rifle used in the slayings when Rodriguez and her daughters left Hawkins alone for an hour while they went shopping.

Dotson was in Thailand at the time.

"Good Morning America" played a phone message from Hawkins to his mother in which a crying and sniffling Hawkins is heard saying, "Hi, Mom. It's me. I just wanted to let you know that I love you. I'm sorry for everything. I'll see you later. Goodbye."

Rodriguez described her son as "without hope," "without faith" and "without courage."

"Because you don't do that to other people. You just don't do that to other people," she said.

Rodriguez told The World-Herald that she has not always been in Hawkins' life. She said, however, that her son — who had been staying with a Bellevue area family for more than a year — had visited her apartment regularly in recent weeks. When she and Hawkins' father, Ronald Hawkins, divorced, the father was awarded custody of Hawkins and his older sister.

Hawkins had moved in with the other family after reportedly being told he no longer could live with his father's family in La Vista.

Rodriguez said her son did not live with her because he "wasn't ready" to live by the rules she had laid down for that to happen.

"I told him, 'Go.' I know what 18-year-old boys like to do," she said. "They're entitled to be a little mischievous," Rodriguez added, mentioning "doing drugs" and sleeping with girls.

"All I told him was when you're ready to come back to mommy, come back to mommy and we'll work on your life," the mother said.

Private funeral services for Hawkins were held Tuesday morning. Rodriguez said in the phone interview that she had made the funeral arrangements from a psychiatric ward, where she checked herself in following the shootings.

About 20 people — mostly family members — attended the service, Rodriguez said.

She said she left two items in Hawkins' coffin: a photo of the two together and a note telling him that she loved him and that "everything I always told him about our Heavenly Father was correct."

When asked in the phone interview why her son did what he did, Rodriguez said that Hawkins was "very angry" and "totally confused" and that he "wasn't sure if he was evil or not."

"He had been told all of his life that something was wrong with him, that something was not right with him," Rodriguez said.

She said her son felt like the world was against him. Hawkins, she said, told her he had been fired from a McDonald's because his cash register had come up $17 short. He had even reached into his own pocket to give back $12, she said.

"He wasn't a horrible boy; he wasn't a bad boy," the mother said.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Let's try this

This situation with people shooting one another is just out of control.
I understand that some people may feel really strongly that they want a gun. They deserve a gun, need a gun. They have a right to a gun. I get that.

But is this "everybody-gotta-have-a-gun" attitude working?
Surely even those pro-gun people must, by now, realize that guns are getting into the hands of children, people with mental illness, impaired or disturbed. Surely even those pro-gun people must understand that there are TOO MANY GUNS?

So here's an idea: Just for one year, let's have everyone put their guns away. Nobody has to give their guns up, they just need to put them in a place where no one can get to them. We'll have a "gun-free" year. And just see what happens, like a big, universal experiment. We'll see if there are fewer shootings. If it's safer with the guns or without the guns. Maybe the pro-gun people will get used to not having their assault rifles and decide they don't need them. Maybe more days or weeks will go by without innocent people getting gunned down in malls, churches and schools. Maybe fewer drive-bys.

I like this idea because nobody has to really give up anything. Going without something for a year is easy. Look at the soldiers serving our country. Look at their families. They'd say they're making a small sacrifice for others. Can't the pro-gun people make a small sacrifice? It's only a year.

If at the end of the year there are no fewer massacres, drivebys and school shootings then all of us anti-gun people will realize that we were wrong and the guns really making us all safer, and the pro-gun people can have their guns back.

Who's with me on this?

Sunday, December 9, 2007

This is my blog

OK I admit it, I'm a blogvirgin.
Maybe there's another word that techies have created to describe me: blirgin? Vlogger?
This blog will, I hope, be a place for me to rant, share, meet and have fun.
As my profile says, I was an editorial writer and columnist in a former life.
Newspaper managing editors are expected to be opinionated and to generate thought-provoking, interesting and entertaining and enlightening opinion pieces, and that's what I did for several years while working in newspapers.
Now that I'm in public relations, nobody really wants to hear my opinions, they want me to communicate about their opinions. That's cool, I can do that.
But what about me?

I still like to talk and write about what I think. Hopefully my views are informed and reasoned.
I like to think I have an open mind. Since leaving news and entering academia where diversity is embraced and encouraged, I think my mind has become even more open to others' views and opinions. At least I like to think so. Universities' bases in academic freedom has given me opportunities, almost daily, to hear and experience other viewpoints. I love that about my job.

I still have core beliefs and opinions that I defend and speak to consistently: human life and human rights, the role of government and individual responsibility, parental responsibility, our educational system... as well as the desire and appreciation for excellent entertainment (Top Chef! Project Runway!) and the role of responsible news media (NOT FOX) and advertising and marketing communication because of my profession.

I adore my family and I hope I can share some photos and stories about my life and loved ones and loved-things and maybe I can meet some new friends.

Welcome to my blog!