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Guide
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A Better Man
A (Mostly Serious) Letter to My Son
Michael Ian Black
ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL 2020
For tomorrows boys
[I]t was with a little surprise, and a little shame, that I realized my eldest son was only a summer away from leaving home for college, and I hadnt taught him, or the other kids, how to cook.
Cal Peternell, Twelve Recipes
Macho, macho man
Ive got to be a macho man
Village People
Contents
Introduction
The Wilds of Connecticut
We moved to our little Connecticut town when you were two. Mom was pregnant with Ruthie, and wed outgrown our first home, a little Dutch Colonial in Peekskill, New York. We wanted a place with better schools, maybe a little more outdoor space. A friend had just moved here with his family, and he suggested we take a look. One bright autumn day as the holidays approached, we strapped you into your car seat and came to see for ourselves. The town seemed lovely and safe, the area schools all highly rated.
The thing that really got me, though, were the Christmas lights. Back in Peekskill, people decorated their homes like used car lots, gaudy red and green flashing lights wrapped in loose bunches around window frames and light posts. Inflatable Santas, plastic reindeer tipping drunkenly on roofs. I have always been a humbug when it comes to Christmas, and the rowdy Peekskill aesthetic only made me humbuggier. Here, in the demure Constitution State, it looked as if Martha Stewart had personally strung each homes holiday lights.
We bought a house and settled into it with our two-year-old son and new baby girl. We put some chairs on the front porch and watched the seasons change. I jokingly began calling our new town the wilds of Connecticut because, although we really do live in the woods, it felt like a Disney wilderness. The creatures, abundant though they may be, all seemed adorable: deer and foxes and wild turkeys and a lazy black bear the townsfolk nicknamed Bobbi. Sometimes though, late at night, we would hear an eerie music coming from the woods. A wild chorus of high-pitched keening. Coyotes after a kill. Mom and I would lie in bed and listen and, after a few minutes, it would stop.
One morning, several years after moving, I woke you guys up for school. It was December, the sun late to rise. By this point in your school careers, the routine felt automatic, familiar to every parent. Time to wake up. Mumbles. Breakfast cereal and orange juice. Shoes, jackets, backpacks. Lunches in lunchboxes. Peanut butter and jelly. Carrot sticks. An Oreo. Walk with you to the end of the driveway to wait for the bus, watch our breath in the cold morning air. Wave goodbye as the bus pulls away.
I came back into the house and sprawled on the living room couch. Mom was still in bed. I opened my laptop, did some work, glanced at Twitter, and there it was: gunshots at the elementary school next to ours. Sandy Hook.
The first reports didnt seem too bad, which sounds absurd even to say. One injury, a ricocheted bullet into the foot of a student. Police and ambulances arriving on the scene. I turned on the TV, flipped to the local news station. Nothing. Mom came down in her pajamas. I told her what Id seen online, but the TV networks werent covering it.
Maybe it was a false alarm? An Internet hoax?
A few minutes later, CNN broke into its morning programming: active shooter situation, teachers and children. Children. They may have given some initial, low estimate of the number of dead and wounded, I dont remember, but I do recall one of the reporters warning viewers that things were about to get much, much worse.
Did they already know about Classroom 8, where fourteen first graders and two teachers were killed?
Did they know yet about Classroom 10, where four children and two teachers lay dead? (A fifth child would later be pronounced dead at the hospital.) One of the teachers, Anne Marie Murphy, was found trying to shield a childs body with her own.
A few miles away, your school went into lockdown. Lockdown. When I was in school, that word didnt exist outside of prisons. School administrators activated the emergency phone system and sent out emails: Your children are safe.
We waited. We watched TV. State troopers and SWAT teams and kids being led from the building, hands on the shoulders of the child in front of them. Empty ambulances waiting for wounded that never came.
We got another email from your school explaining they werent going to tell the kids what had happened because parents may wish to explain it in their own way. How do you explain mass murder to children whose only experience with death was a dead hamster laid to rest, with proper funeral rites, in the backyard? How do you explain to your kids that a young man could march into their school with a Bushmaster .223-caliber semiautomatic rifle and start firing at will? The email didnt say.
Mom and I watched TV off and on until the school buses brought you both home. We went out to the end of the driveway to meet you and walked, hand in hand, back to the house. Was it really windy out today? Ruthie asked.
I dont think so, I said. Why?
They said we couldnt have recess outside today because it was too windy.
When we got inside, we gathered you both together and told you. I dont even know what we said: Something awful had happened. A bad man, but he was gone now. A lot of kids got hurt, but you didnt need to worry because you were both safe. Even as the words came out of my mouth, they felt like a lie. How could I promise your safety? I couldnt. My tongue felt slick, as if it were covered in gun oil.
When we finished, we asked if you understood. Yes, you both said. Did you have any questions? No. Were you okay? Yes, you were both okay. Could you go play now? Yes. You ran off separately, Ruthie to play with her American Girl dolls, you to finish the intricate wooden train track you were building in the playroom.
We had dinner. We put you to bed. We kept the TV off. Mom and I lay in bed and talked about keeping you home the next day, but decided against it. You would go to school tomorrow like always. We would place you back into the world and hope. That night, we listened to the woods and heard nothing.
When morning came, Mom and I got up together. Time for school, breakfast, packed lunches: turkey sandwiches, raisins. Extra Oreos. We walked you to the bus and waved goodbye.
Parents know they can only do so much to protect their kids. We strap you into car seats, give you swim lessons. We offer advice, bundle you against the cold. But we cant do everything. Every parent knows this and accepts it. We do what we can and hope for the best. But this felt different. It felt like a tornado touching down, mindless and cruel. But also predictable. Infuriatingly predictable.
Everybody knew something like this would happen. Here, in America, it happens regularly. Mass shootings are as common as sunsets. Three shot, one dead at an apartment complex parking lot in Tulsa. Four dead at a Waffle House in Nashville. One sailor murdering two others before killing himself near a military hospital in Portsmouth, Virginia. Domestic violence. Suicide. Stories that barely get a mention on the local news before the sports report. People getting shot just isnt much of a story in America. Were used to it. This time, though, was different. This was children, twenty of them, and six adults.