Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it's "severe denial" to fail to have contemplated that your child might shoot up a school. Especially in 1999, when it wasn't nearly so common as it is now. Acknowledging that your child is very troubled, sure, but mass murder is quite a few steps beyond that.
My heart breaks for the Klebolds. And I know there has been less sympathy for Eric Harris' parents because they haven't been open with their apologies and grief like the Klebolds, but I almost feel even worse for them because unlike Dylan's severe depression, I'm really not sure what they could have done for Eric. He was a psychopath and a narcissist and unfortunately mental health treatment does not really have anything in the arsenal to deal effectively with those conditions aside from advising those close to the person to run away so they don't get hurt. Psychopathy is largely an accident of genetics, and researchers have found that therapy and treatment just make it worse because it trains the person to better manipulate and lie in order to trick the therapist, which it appears happened with Eric. Psychopaths are very good at charming and pulling the wool over people's eyes--it's part of the disorder, and I can't blame Eric's parents for falling for it. He was going to do something truly horrible eventually and I don't think they could have done anything except postpone it a bit. He was almost an adult, almost out of their house, and this isn't the movie "Minority Report" where we can lock up budding criminals before they've actually committed the act.
I agree. And from all accounts his parents were not bad parents who raised him poorly or something. He was born wrong and there was nothing they could do. As a parent, that has to be devastating to come
To terms with - that your child is just evil.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think the Harris family has ever publicly spoke about it, at all. Does anyone know otherwise? Harris was probably a psychopath. Klebold was the follower, those two together became a time bomb.
It would be interesting to hear from the parents of Eric Harris.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I think I remember reading that, actually, now that I've just (re?) read it. What I remember is feeling dissatisfied. It doesn't actually say anything except I had no idea. She writes of some vignettes - holding his face in her hands, talking to him about how much he is loved. But can you really really miss 2+ years of depression and suicidal thoughts? (My kids are younger, so I've not faced teenagers). Can you really miss every single warning sign? Can there really be no warning signs?
It's speculated Klebold was the follower, right? And Harris the more dominant personality?
I think everyone, after something senseless happens, wants to know why. And just hearing that people are mentally ill isn't enough. That's not why. There have to be reasons why. Because of there are reasons why, then we can work backwards and figure out how to stop this from happening again. We have to stop this from happening again. We can't accept these things just happen.
Hdn't they been bullied by the "in" crowd? The star athletes, cheerleaders, etc.
This is a contested issue. A friend of the boys said that they were bullied. A reporter who investigated the issue found that they weren't bullied, but that Harris was prone to bullying himself. Harris was a sociopath. Klebold was depressed. Harris had a severe case of megolomania and wanted to prove his superiority to the whole world. He was deeply angry that no one recognized that he was God-like and better than everyone else. Klebold got sucked in to the fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it's "severe denial" to fail to have contemplated that your child might shoot up a school. Especially in 1999, when it wasn't nearly so common as it is now. Acknowledging that your child is very troubled, sure, but mass murder is quite a few steps beyond that.
My heart breaks for the Klebolds. And I know there has been less sympathy for Eric Harris' parents because they haven't been open with their apologies and grief like the Klebolds, but I almost feel even worse for them because unlike Dylan's severe depression, I'm really not sure what they could have done for Eric. He was a psychopath and a narcissist and unfortunately mental health treatment does not really have anything in the arsenal to deal effectively with those conditions aside from advising those close to the person to run away so they don't get hurt. Psychopathy is largely an accident of genetics, and researchers have found that therapy and treatment just make it worse because it trains the person to better manipulate and lie in order to trick the therapist, which it appears happened with Eric. Psychopaths are very good at charming and pulling the wool over people's eyes--it's part of the disorder, and I can't blame Eric's parents for falling for it. He was going to do something truly horrible eventually and I don't think they could have done anything except postpone it a bit. He was almost an adult, almost out of their house, and this isn't the movie "Minority Report" where we can lock up budding criminals before they've actually committed the act.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I think I remember reading that, actually, now that I've just (re?) read it. What I remember is feeling dissatisfied. It doesn't actually say anything except I had no idea. She writes of some vignettes - holding his face in her hands, talking to him about how much he is loved. But can you really really miss 2+ years of depression and suicidal thoughts? (My kids are younger, so I've not faced teenagers). Can you really miss every single warning sign? Can there really be no warning signs?
It's speculated Klebold was the follower, right? And Harris the more dominant personality?
I think everyone, after something senseless happens, wants to know why. And just hearing that people are mentally ill isn't enough. That's not why. There have to be reasons why. Because of there are reasons why, then we can work backwards and figure out how to stop this from happening again. We have to stop this from happening again. We can't accept these things just happen.
Hdn't they been bullied by the "in" crowd? The star athletes, cheerleaders, etc.
This is a contested issue. A friend of the boys said that they were bullied. A reporter who investigated the issue found that they weren't bullied, but that Harris was prone to bullying himself. Harris was a sociopath. Klebold was depressed. Harris had a severe case of megolomania and wanted to prove his superiority to the whole world. He was deeply angry that no one recognized that he was God-like and better than everyone else. Klebold got sucked in to the fantasy.[/quote]
Hint: Look around.
People move to get away from people like this, who fit this description. There are dangerous adults like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If Dylan's parents had uprooted themselves and moved far away, do you think that Eric Harris would have still done the Columbine mass killing?
NOT blaming anyone for not seeing this coming btw. I do not think anyone saw that coming...
But people are saying that Harris is the one who did this and that Klebold was more or less suicidal and along for the ride. And I think his role was much bigger than that. I also question whether Harris would have done this all by himself.
Maybe not. But with someone wired like Eric, if it wasn't Columbine, it would have been something else. Maybe in a few months, maybe in a few years. Maybe with Dylan, maybe with someone else, maybe alone. But he was going to end up killing people one way or another. A psychopath with NPD who believes the rest of the world to be crud on his shoe? The only question was when, not if.
As far as stopping Dylan from spending time with Eric, well, they were 18 and almost 18. At some point, you start losing control over your kids' actions and associates as they turn into young adults. If they had been 13 or 14, then I'd put more blame on the parents for not watching more closely, but kids grow up, become more independent, and develop more ways of sneaking around and doing what they want. And what parent would reasonably suspect that when their kids are hanging out with a "bad influence," they're plotting a massacre, rather than something more innocuous like stealing from the liquor cabinet?
Anonymous wrote:If Dylan's parents had uprooted themselves and moved far away, do you think that Eric Harris would have still done the Columbine mass killing?
NOT blaming anyone for not seeing this coming btw. I do not think anyone saw that coming...
But people are saying that Harris is the one who did this and that Klebold was more or less suicidal and along for the ride. And I think his role was much bigger than that. I also question whether Harris would have done this all by himself.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it's "severe denial" to fail to have contemplated that your child might shoot up a school. Especially in 1999, when it wasn't nearly so common as it is now. Acknowledging that your child is very troubled, sure, but mass murder is quite a few steps beyond that.
My heart breaks for the Klebolds. And I know there has been less sympathy for Eric Harris' parents because they haven't been open with their apologies and grief like the Klebolds, but I almost feel even worse for them because unlike Dylan's severe depression, I'm really not sure what they could have done for Eric. He was a psychopath and a narcissist and unfortunately mental health treatment does not really have anything in the arsenal to deal effectively with those conditions aside from advising those close to the person to run away so they don't get hurt. Psychopathy is largely an accident of genetics, and researchers have found that therapy and treatment just make it worse because it trains the person to better manipulate and lie in order to trick the therapist, which it appears happened with Eric. Psychopaths are very good at charming and pulling the wool over people's eyes--it's part of the disorder, and I can't blame Eric's parents for falling for it. He was going to do something truly horrible eventually and I don't think they could have done anything except postpone it a bit. He was almost an adult, almost out of their house, and this isn't the movie "Minority Report" where we can lock up budding criminals before they've actually committed the act.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it's "severe denial" to fail to have contemplated that your child might shoot up a school. Especially in 1999, when it wasn't nearly so common as it is now. Acknowledging that your child is very troubled, sure, but mass murder is quite a few steps beyond that.
My heart breaks for the Klebolds. And I know there has been less sympathy for Eric Harris' parents because they haven't been open with their apologies and grief like the Klebolds, but I almost feel even worse for them because unlike Dylan's severe depression, I'm really not sure what they could have done for Eric. He was a psychopath and a narcissist and unfortunately mental health treatment does not really have anything in the arsenal to deal effectively with those conditions aside from advising those close to the person to run away so they don't get hurt. Psychopathy is largely an accident of genetics, and researchers have found that therapy and treatment just make it worse because it trains the person to better manipulate and lie in order to trick the therapist, which it appears happened with Eric. Psychopaths are very good at charming and pulling the wool over people's eyes--it's part of the disorder, and I can't blame Eric's parents for falling for it. He was going to do something truly horrible eventually and I don't think they could have done anything except postpone it a bit. He was almost an adult, almost out of their house, and this isn't the movie "Minority Report" where we can lock up budding criminals before they've actually committed the act.
Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter who is 19.
She has depression and anxiety at a deep level.
Refuses to go to psych. We have a talked to the psych and he cannot legally talk to us.
Before she turned 18 we could force her to go to the therapist office, but could not force her to talk. We can't shove meds down her throat.
I believe strongly she is a threat to herself. Her dad does too.
We beg and beg her to get help. Nothing we can do. Most helpless feeling in the world. My life is anxiety and insomnia and endless worry.
I don't think we are bad parents. We have two boys who are excellent students and are mentally healthy. Our daughter was a good student too ( she is taking classes at community college now). We did not do anything differently with any of the kids. I feel strongly that genetically our daughter just has a different makeup.
As a parent of a kid with mental illness I think it's an extraordinarily complex world that someone without a kid with a mental illness would never understand. And as a country we do not have any systems in place to help parents of young adults who they are worried about. Insurance does not cover anything but medicating these kids. Talk therapy is extraordinarily expensive and therapists for young adults are incredibly hard to find with long wait lists. Therapists who tale insurance are almost nonexistent and those wait lists are even longer.
In my opinion this is a major emergency in our country. Just not on any political agenda.