[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index] Re: [gradtalk] gradtalk
Michele, Don't be put out with your 7th graders. That age responds to this sort = of thing very badly. My 11-year-old niece was killed in a traffic = accident in 1997, and my 13-year-old son (a very loving, generous child) = could not deal with it so he turned off the emotions and acted callous = and cruel and disrespectful. Then, a few years after that, he suddenly = began to talk about her. (They'd spent nearly every day together as = children.) He told me that he felt she was his guardian angel, and that = he thought of her all the time. I myself was 12 when JFK was assassinated. I remember being curious and = realizing that something major had happened, but mostly I was just = ticked off that my favorite programs were cancelled in favor of the = funeral stuff. Now, at age 50, I know how profoundly my life was = affected by that one horrible event. One day these kids will also = realize the impact of this event, but right now, they're being asked to = deal with the kinds of emotions that even most adults can't deal with = very well. (In class, I cried today. But then, so did several of my = students. They're nontraditional people, mostly mid to late 20s.) All day yesterday, I felt like an extra in The Day the Earth Stood = Still. Sharon Robideaux
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