Anonymous wrote:I see a lot of post about Adams mother but little on Adams father. Why does it fall all on the mother he had this child also. I believe he did not live local. lots of fathers are running from there emotional obligation to raise these children leaving it to all fall on the mother.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think the mother intentionally trained him to kill... she probably thought (wrongly) that guns would be a great hobby for her child. But... with a child exhibiting serious mental health issues (anxiety, disordered thinking, isolation), this was the absolute worst hobby to encourage.
She should have followed expert guidance and had him medicated while he was still a minor and... kept him in some kind of school... seems from the outside at least, like they had enough money to go private if public wasn't working!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
You might want that semi-automatic if you're a single parent and you're in a home invasion situation with multiple criminals.
You don't need an SUV or really a car either, but our country is one that is based on liberty.
Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meet stigma head-on. People on the spectrum are much more likely to be the targets of harassment and violence than the other way around.
Or to put it another way, if everyone with ASD was a gun-crazed murderer there would be nobody left on the planet.
This is truly a tragedy on multiple levels for this family and their community.
But it is not proof of some kind of link between ASD or mental health challenges and the rates of gun deaths in the US.
Every single kid who does a mass shooting is also medicated for things like anxiety, depression, etc.
I think the issue is the pharmaceutical drugs and side effects on young men in particular, that are being glossed over that are the true cause of these mass shootings.
I don't know. Cho (VT shooter) was apparently not being treated for his psychiatric problems. Adam Lanza's mom may not have been able to manage his medication - I read somewhere that he had retreated to his bedroom, blacked out his windows and was communicating with his mom via the internet.
I think that some of this is due to the fact that these are normal, regular parents trying to handle severe psychiatric illnesses all by themselves with no training, no support, little guidance.
My response earlier isn't intended to say that these drugs don't help people- I have friends who have said that anti-depressants have literally save their lives-- but I think you are spot on that these parents are trying to manage mental illness without enough support. I *cannot* imagine leaving a gun unsecured with kids or teens in the house, period. Or leaving a gun unsecured, period- you never know who may pop by for a visit as a few grandparents have tragically discovered.
Maybe the parents who are careless like that are overwhelmed, depressed, somewhat suicidal themselves.
I certainly wondered about that with Nancy Lanza, if she just gave up, and this family in NJ--the mom sounded very depressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
I don't see a lot of insight in that article. Of course the father wishes that none of this had ever happened even if that means wishing that Adam had never been born.
What I don't see is how this father had no choice but to allow himself to be complete cut off from a kid who he knew was spending hours a day crying in a dark room, completely isolated with his overwrought mother pulling her hair out and feeling completely helpless.
Is there seriously NOTHING that these parents could have done? How exactly did either one of them expect this situation with their son to end?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
I don't see a lot of insight in that article. Of course the father wishes that none of this had ever happened even if that means wishing that Adam had never been born.
What I don't see is how this father had no choice but to allow himself to be complete cut off from a kid who he knew was spending hours a day crying in a dark room, completely isolated with his overwrought mother pulling her hair out and feeling completely helpless.
Is there seriously NOTHING that these parents could have done? How exactly did either one of them expect this situation with their son to end?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
I don't see a lot of insight in that article. Of course the father wishes that none of this had ever happened even if that means wishing that Adam had never been born.
What I don't see is how this father had no choice but to allow himself to be complete cut off from a kid who he knew was spending hours a day crying in a dark room, completely isolated with his overwrought mother pulling her hair out and feeling completely helpless.
Is there seriously NOTHING that these parents could have done? How exactly did either one of them expect this situation with their son to end?
http://www.ct.gov/oca/lib/oca/sandyhook11212014.pdf
Read the Connecticut State Report, it spells out how the parents failed Adam, particularly his mother. I can say this as a parent of an ASD child myself. It was sheer neglect. There were many danger signs along the way. They did not recognize the seriousness of his disorder and failed to provide treatment. The school went along with this because we all know if the parents don't push it, schools usually won't do what they should.
When he was in middle school, they took him to the Yale Child Center, one of the country's leading autism centers. Yale said he significant social deficits, and that he was being shielding him from the need to interact with others. They recommended that he join a social group at Yale, that the IEP be rewritten to provide social supports, and that he be medicated. In particular, they predicted:
"Having the emphasis on adapting the world to AL, rather than helping him to adapt to the world, is a recipe for him to be a homebound recluse, unable to attend
college or work productively into his twenties and thirties and beyond with mother becoming increasingly isolated and burdened."
That's exactly what happened by the time he was 20. But instead of being alarmed by this prediction and doing whatever was necessary to turn things around, Nancy Lanza responded with "Thank you for taking the time to meet with AL yesterday . . . . I wanted to let you know that the options you presented are not going to work at this time."
The father at least wanted to follow Yale's recommendations, but his mother had primary custody, so she just continued down the dangerous path, and he didn't know how to turn it around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.
I don't see a lot of insight in that article. Of course the father wishes that none of this had ever happened even if that means wishing that Adam had never been born.
What I don't see is how this father had no choice but to allow himself to be complete cut off from a kid who he knew was spending hours a day crying in a dark room, completely isolated with his overwrought mother pulling her hair out and feeling completely helpless.
Is there seriously NOTHING that these parents could have done? How exactly did either one of them expect this situation with their son to end?
Anonymous wrote:I have a huge amount of sympathy for Nancy Lanza. Hindsight is 20/20, but when you've been living in a situation like that, it can feel impossible. I came across this interview with the writer who told Adam's father's story to The New Yorker. Really good: https://www.npr.org/2014/03/13/289815818/6-interviews-1-reckoning-sandy-hook-killers-dad-breaks-silence
But apart from that, IMHO, we don't really need automatic and semi-automatic weapons for civilian use. They are designed to kill in volume.