Mom Shares Powerful Messages To Help Save Lives and Protect Our Children from Gun Violence
The title of these words is “AFTERNOONS”:
These words are about what happens when a small boy comes home to be alone after school and finds his Dad’s guns and there’s an accident.
“School has ended
Now what should I do?
Dad is working
Mom is too
It’s the afternoon
The days are hot
I could stay in the streets
or maybe not.
I’ll go home
TV’s got tunes
but it’s really boring
All these afternoon
Maybe I’ll play with Daddy’s gun
That will be exciting
That will be fun
I know, I’ll share
this fun with my friend
But I never expected
how the day would end
The gun went off
my friend is dead
It was an accident
I shot him in the head
The days seem long
The streets are hot
Should I go home?
Maybe yes,
Maybe not.
All across America there are parents working hard to support their families and there are untold number of children, who should be supervised, but they are alone. The tragic accidents that happen often happen so fast and often cause irreparable, life changing, family altering problems. We must take action to protect our children. My heart is broken for the families who are faced with the horrors and results of gun violence and something must be done. We cannot sit by and watch more lives ruined and families destroyed.
We have no idea how many weapons are accessible in households across America that should be locked up or not there. We do not know how many children each year get their hands on these weapons and injure themselves or others. We don’t know how many lives are lost that should never have been placed at risk. What’s it going to take for you to take a stand and protect our precious children? How many more children will die before we do something.
I have written educational content for television shows since 1991 and created the educational television show for children and families called Kid’s TV. It was picked up by 100 US. Independent television networks and aired five days a week to 18 million homes. Some television networks said it wouldn’t succeed to just give kids non-violent television shows because there were no characters to market or toys to sell.
As a parent, I have advocated for providing the right direction for our children with non-violent programs that promote family values and literacy. Now, more than thirty years ago, we need to set an example for our children to educate them and to make their safety a priority. Making child safety a priority will take a huge effort by many people but it must be done. We cannot keep waking up to stories of violence destroying our families, our schools and our communities.