The closest spot is the Clement Park parking lot. 😉
Can you refute Cullen’s argument for me? He wrote: “When we published this book, I naively thought the bully-motive theory would fade. But so many kids are invested in the avenging angels myth. Columbiners are industrious cherry-pickers, pouncing on any quarrel or even sadness in the killers’ lives as evidence of bullies. Eric and Dylan had some bad days, to be sure. They probably got in a food fight that left them covered in ketchup. The details are murky” (384). Yeah… they had lack of abuse.
Well, first off, the details aren’t “murky” as he’d easily have us believe with a wave of his arrogant hand. Cullen’s tactic is to dismiss the bullying by simply minimizing it as relatively harmless in severity (compared to others) so as to negate it and push his ‘bullying myth debunked’ agenda to the masses. But it’s obvious just by your quote of him above, that Cullen never investigated too deeply about it nor bothered to interview students who spoke of instances or spoke with Eric and Dylan’s manager at Blackjack Pizza to really get to the bottom of it and find out exactly went on –or didn’t go on- as he would blankly claim. No, Cullen, just glosses over the subject altogether and expects everyone reading will just nod their heads in agreement with him that no significant bullying occurred because he totally side-steps it in the book. Ralph Larkin, on the other hand, wrote an excellent article to refute the anti-bullying bullshit rhetoric in Cullen’s book. He was well qualified to do so too since his book, Comprehending Columbine, spent a fair amount of time discussing the bullying that occurred regularly at the school based off his own investigating.
Nate said Dylan wanted to wait but if Dylan crush had come up and asked him out do you think he would’ve turned her down?
Well, I think Nate was just guessing at why Dylan hadn’t dated yet so he concluded that Dylan was the type that probably preferred waiting until after high school to get involved in a relationship. Let’s face it, dude friends aren’t the most intuitive when it comes to figuring out their fellow dude friends motives. I don’t think guys really open up to one another as to why they’re not dating anyone just yet when most of their friends have already had a taste of what it’s like. So, in actuality, had Dylan’s crush asked him out, of course, Dylan would’ve gone out with her..and in a heartbeat. Dylan was definitely not waiting until after high school to date. He simply couldn’t find someone that wanted to date him. But it’s not like he was going to announce this to Nate, you know..
i’m sorry if it sounds non sense, but i love when you explain something using expressions or “difficult” words cause it help me to improve my english
Oh, how lovely to hear. Thank you. 🙂 I’m glad I don’t just read like a perplexing mouthful and for no good reason. haha. If it’s helping you stretch with your English skills, that’s great. 🙂
Thank you for the response about Nate, I couldn’t remember the context of what he said it!
You’re welcome. 🙂
Do you remember the story I think from Nate saying that Dylan told him he didn’t want to start any relationship in high school? Who was he trying to set Dylan up with?
Nate Dykeman has another opinion on why Dylan didn’t date.
“Dylan wanted to wait,” he said. “He didn’t want to get into anything in high school.”
This statement does not imply that Nate ever tried to set Dylan up with anyone. It was his thoughts on why Dylan wasn’t making any concerted effort to date or have a girlfriend in high school.
was dylan a good employee?
Yes, he and Eric, were considered good employees. Punctual, courteous, dependable and reliable.
Did Devon, Zach, or any other friends of Dylan read his journal since it was released?
I’m sure they did. I mean, how could they not? They would’ve had the need to make sense as to what internally was happening to their friend that they thought they knew well.
What Sue’s opinion on Eric? Did she like him?
Sue’s opinion of Eric from A Mother’s Reckoning:
“Eric was the fourth member of the crew. Dylan and Eric had also met in junior high school. Eric’s dad had been in the military, and he’d retired to the Denver area; the family was still quite new there when Eric and Dylan met. We met the Harrises when the boys started hanging out, and we liked them, although we didn’t see them socially. At the end of eighth grade, Dylan and Eric were both recognized for their achievement in math. When they walked up to the stage to
accept their awards, I whispered to Tom that they looked like two peas in a pod. (This was before Dylan’s growth spurt.)
In junior high, Dylan and Eric watched tons of movies together, and loved to go bowling. One time, they built a contraption to launch potatoes from one side of a pocket park to another. As they grew older, they added to their interests an attraction to girls, computer games, and music, as well as baseball games and concerts. In high school, Eric remained small and relatively slight, while Dylan shot up in height. Eric was older, and got his license before Dylan.
Their friendship didn’t seem any more intense than Dylan’s relationships with other boys; if anything, I would have said that Dylan was closer to Nate. It did seem more private, somehow. I never felt as close to Eric as I did to Nate and Zack, although he was always respectful and perfectly polite when he was around Tom and me. I don’t remember him asking me any questions, or volunteering ridiculous stories about Dylan, the way Zack and Nate did, but he was clearly smart, friendly, and funny.”
Which of the boys said this?: “we may not be around in 20 years, but everyone will sure know who we are”
Neither said it. It’s a song lyric that’s been retweaked for the boys. Google search ‘we may not be around in 20 years’ to find out what song/artist.
i’m reading the 11k & on page 11,562 it says Eric had a “bag/historical documents of Dylan & mail to Dylan”. what does this mean / what could these documents be?
That’s because the items on that page, as well as the 3 pages after it, were taken from Dylan’s house. The bag of historical documents and mail of Dylan will forever be unknown.
“Jester” aka Brandon Martine – Part 1 of 2
On 04/29/99, Northglenn Police Department was contacted regarding lead DN1796. Detective Steve Hipp provided a transcript of the interview with Brandon Martine (bd:12/31/81) of Northglenn High School that lives in Westminster, CO. Martine claimed to know Eric Harris from the Internet. The interview details communications between them and the use of computer games involving school simulations. The interview does not indicate any knowledge on Martine’s part that Eric Harris or his friends were planning to commit crimes or possessed weapons or explosives.
Martine nervously stutters a whole heck of a lot in his awkward q/a conversation with the investigators. The detectives often pressed him and tried to elicit their desired response but Martine never admits to anything out of the ordinary, dangerous or sketchy, in his mostly, online gaming friendship with Eric (well, other than the Duke Nukem school level replication). There are a few interesting tidbits about Eric and Dylan’s friendship as witnessed from Martine’s casual friendship subjective perspective. His vantage point also indicates that Dylan could be quietly elusive to those he was unfamiliar with. The excerpt highlights below have been cleaned-up and edited and sometimes paraphrased to make for easier reading. Part 2 of this interview to follow..
BRANDON MARTINE: “I talked to him (Eric Harris) about uh, his philosophy class, he was in a philosophy class. He said he really liked it and was getting along in it and stuff and uh, I told him I was going to do a philosophy class next year and he really, we went off a little bit about our philosophies and they were similar. He was talking to me about how uh, he liked Aristotle’s stuff and, and how he, he just liked the, the concept of, of talking to each other .”
“Doom II, um, Duke Nukem 3D, uh, Quake and I tried talking about Quake II with him but he said he didn’t get into that ‘cause it was, his computer wasn’t fast enough and stuff. There was one particular one though, it was a Duke Nukem 3D that uh, I remember, he said he replicated it in his school. He created a level personalized to his school and it was the first time that, that he ever personally like gave me a file to play like that and uh, we played against each other, privately, modem to modem, just me and him on it and uh, we played the level. I played him on it.”
“He told me that he liked women a lot, uh, he had problems with girls sometimes and stuff and I had problems with them as well and we always talked it through each other. Uh, one night, I came back from a place called Rock Island and uh, I told him I wasn’t feeling very good and we just were talking and he said, you know, he got dumped down by a girl too and uh, and I did as well and, and, I was talking to him and he said that um, he was helping me through it. He was telling me all this stuff like saying, you know, it’s okay, and stuff and um, I tried tell’, saying the same back to him and told him that I wanted to get together with him, you know, to talk things out and work things with him. I wanted him to come down and uh, he said that he couldn’t, all the times that I talked to him, he always said that he couldn’t ’cause he had, he was really busy and stuff because he worked and he went to school and, and we live pretty far apart from each other.”
“We did talk about jocks though and uh, he, I remember us, getting a little bit mad about it but we didn’t um, he said he played baseball one time and, and I told him I played baseball my freshman year and uh, he, he related something to that but he wasn’t, he never told me that he was like really mad at ’em. He had the same opinion as me, like when uh, you like join a team or something, it’s all favoritism, you know, you get on it and they don’t care about uh, if you get to play or not, it’s all about winning and stuff and we talked about that but that was all.”
“Uh, he did wear pants that had a lot of pockets on ’em, never, I’ve never seen him in a trench coat, um, He always, no, he never wore, I never saw him as a Gothic person, he, he wore a hat always though, I remember him always wearing a hat. The other kid though that hung out with him, um, he seemed a little bit Gothic to me, uh, for some reason. He wasn’t very talkative, he, they, they sounded like they were best friends though and um, he just didn’t seem like the, that’s why I don’t know him as well and didn’t like talking to him because I just didn’t feel that he was a comfortable person.”
“Um, on his website it was black and it had like red stripes and stuff on it. It was mostly related to the game Quake, which was a new, and Doom II, he had uh, stuff on there that you can download. Um, he put my name down on the bottom with some other people that we knew that would put like special things to these people, you know, for creating the page and stuff and he had a private page to it in the back room and you had to enter a password on the bottom and it was something like 4tequila something. I can’t remember exactly because I had it written down and, and he took the site down a while ago, and I never got to see, uh, I never went to it as much ’cause it didn’t have anything that really interests me.”
“On the private section he had Mama jokes I guess you would consider ’em, they we-, uh they were just jokes. He had a big long uh, text tiling on there but I wasn’t interested on reading it a lot of it, he had files you could download. He mentioned something about clan and clans related on the internet are different from like gangs and cliques or whatever. Clans on the internet are a group of people that play the game are teams, and they play a team versus a team, and he wanted me to, actually, we’re on a clan together and uh, we, we had our friends on it as well and we’d play this game and against other people and uh, he then said that the clan would he said that the clan broke down and it went away and he said that now it was just his personal clan with him and Vodka, which was his friend, uh, that he hung out with. I really can’t remember. I just remember before it was like RB [RC – Rebel Clan] or something like that. “*
*this was after Eric ousted Zack Heckler/Kibbz from their threesome clan, Reb-VoDkA-Kibbz
“His friend Vodka, was this tall guy that I think was the picture of his of uh, gunman. Eric was the only person that I knew that hung out with, you know – had a real good best friend or something and that would be considered him. Uh, he came to the net parties with us once in a while, he never, he never really talked a lot to us about like him playing. I never saw him (VoDkA) online a lot, he just hung out with him a lot is what I remember. “
“I never really got to talk to him (Eric) about. I never knew his parents, I called his house and his parents would answer the phone but I asked if he was there and they would just get him for me. I remember him talking about his brother, he said he had an older brother but he really didn’t talk about his family life that much.”
“Dykeman also told authorities he once saw Klebold slip several $20 bills to Blackjack co-worker Phil Duran, and thought at first that he’d witnessed a drug transaction. But Klebold later told Dykeman that the money had bought a shotgun, and that Duran had earlier sold him a semiautomatic pistol.” [Source]
(the purchase with Phil Duran was for the Tec-9 specifically, btw. It was for the remaining installment)
why do you think Dylan kept the purchase as a secret from Eric?
No, you’re misunderstanding me. Okay, you know that Eric and Dylan purchased their guns together, right? It was a secret purchase in the beginning and the only third party that knew was Robyn, obviously, because she helped make their purchase possible since she could prove she was of legal age. But, like I said, in the beginning, no one else could know their little secret. Dylan ended up showing Nate his gun/s because Nate suspected something was up with Dylan (i.e. he saw the cash purchase transaction with Dylan and Phil Duran behind Blackjack). Dylan decided to show Nate in secret with the stipulation that he could not tell Eric that he was in the know, that he’s seen Dylan’s guns, that he now knew about their guns. Why? Likely because he didn’t want Eric getting bent out of shape that he told someone else.
so Nate knew? he knew Dylan bought a gun?
Oh yeah, he knew. He’d seen Dylan giving cash to Phil Duran behind Blackjack and confronted Dylan at the time thinking that he was dealing drugs and Dylan finally confessed it was for a gun. I’m sure that Dylan probably showed Nate his double-barreled shotgun. What was interesting to me here was that Dylan told Nate not to tell Eric that he was showing him his gun. It was in secret and he obviously didn’t want the repercussions of Eric finding out. Eventually, in the last couple of months, Nate had also seen Eric editing his Rampart Range video in video production class on his own free time. By then, the cat was out of the bag. Eric was liking that classmates could see that they had guns.
Interview with Sue Klebold
A few interesting tidbits I highlighted from this newsletter which was published last year.
Drs. Scott Poland and Douglas Flemons had the opportunity to interview Sue Klebold, author of A Mother’s Reckoning, via telephone in July, 2017.
Sue Klebold is the mother of Dylan Klebold, one of two high-school students who killed 13 people (and wounded 21 others) at Columbine High School in April, 1999. After shooting the others, the two perpetrators took their own lives, using their guns to die by suicide. Since the tragedy, Sue Klebold been active in the suicide prevention community and has worked tirelessly to educate others about the warning signs and risk factors of suicide. She also promotes mental health treatment to ensure that other families do not have to suffer similar tragedies. She is donating 100% of the profits from her book to research and charitable foundations devoted to treating mental health issues.
Douglas Flemons [DF]: Good morning, Sue. Thank you so much for doing this.
Sue Klebold: Oh, it’s my pleasure.
Dr. Scott Poland [SP]: And on behalf of both of us, we are very sorry for the loss of your son and all the complications and everything about the entire tragedy.
Thank you! I appreciate that.
DF: I was particularly struck by your metaphor of origami, the way that you use that so effectively, to talk about, really, the process that you went through in trying to make sense of the complexity and the horror of everything. Yes. DF: It seemed like such a perfect way of characterizing what you went through in the writing of this book.
Sue Klebold: Well, I guess what I was thinking—of course, it was a reference to Dylan himself quite literally because he loved origami and that was something that he was just so into when he was a little boy. It was so fun. But I think also of this process of recovery, or, rather, integration—I think the way we integrate a life experience as difficult as that was is a lot like an origami process. You undergo one step and it changes where you were and another fold occurs and it changes your perspective and your life view. It was very similar to the way an origami object evolves and passes through phases. Sometimes it’s one thing on the way to becoming something else. That’s very much what time allows us to do after a loss, an extreme and a severe loss: We see it differently as time progresses. It’s all part of this integration process. Another way I think of it is like a Rubik’s cube. We twist it and turn it and look at it from all sides until we kind of become what that thing is, and we know it inside and out and it becomes part of us.
DF: You took a foray into understanding Dylan in one way, and then you came back to the flat piece of paper and then folded it all into another shape, another understanding. I was really heartened by the fact that you didn’t avoid going into very, very difficult places. You strode into them.
Sue Klebold: I felt that I had to do that. Of course, you know, each one of us will process our losses differently, according to who we are and what feels right to us. And, I don’t know, for me that was the only choice I had because I love Dylan, and I wanted to know everything about him. I wanted to know what his internal journey was that took him to the place where he ended his life so horribly and hurt and killed so many other people. And I just felt that even if it was difficult, I had to connect with the entire experience. Once you get to that place and the experience is so painful, you can revisit that experience and it becomes, over time, less painful. You’re kind of desensitized to all of the things that hurt so much. And I think that’s what I was doing for myself. It was a process of trying to desensitize to things that were just so painful, I couldn’t live with them.
SP: I would like to thank you for all your service with suicide prevention organizations—the American Association of Suicidology, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and, more locally for you, the Suicide Prevention Coalition of Colorado. As you know, much of suicide prevention is driven by survivors. I lost my father to suicide and Douglas lost three friends growing up.
Sue Klebold: Oh, I’m sorry. But, yes, I think those are the things that drive us to understand. And the more we understand, I think the more passionate we feel about the cause of suicide prevention, recognizing that suicide is preventable and wanting others to learn this so people don’t lose any more loved ones than we already have. The survivor movement, it’s a wonderful thing. I think it’s driving so much of the good work that’s happened.
DF: You, of course, made a significant step from volunteering to help out to being an outspoken spokesperson. In your book you quote a letter by Tom Mauser, the father of Daniel, one of the victims. And you don’t actually comment on the letter but it sure rings through the following pages as a very critical, a very pointed request for you to be a spokesperson. I was wondering the degree to which that letter became a motivator for you to find your voice.
Sue Klebold: Actually, the letter did not affect me in that way because I was already doing all those things by the time I received the letter. The letter was something I received fairly recently. It was not early on in the process. But what I had done, you know I had sort of laid low. I had not been a public person. I had done all these things, and people knew me in the suicide loss community, but I did not, you know, make that known to anyone else. So in the eyes of the community and all the victims of the tragedy, they had no idea where I was or what I was doing. They—and Mr. Mauser’s letter made this clear—they were certainly, and rightfully so, wondering why I hadn’t done anything. But I had been doing things all along; I just hadn’t made it known.
SP: Sue, you’re such a great example of resilience, but what has been the key for you getting the support that you needed?
Sue Klebold: Well, just like everything, I don’t think there’s one key. I think it’s just a combination of many things. First of all, I’m somewhat extroverted. I like people. I like having people around me. I value tremendously the value and support of friends and family. But I also knew from the beginning that if I was going to survive, I needed expert care. And so probably the one thing that stands out as being the most significant for me was that I worked very hard to find a good therapist—a highly qualified therapist who had a grief specialty. I saw this therapist for years. I went back again and again over time. And I will give her the credit for holding me together through all of this. I won’t give her all the credit because of course family and friends helped tremendously, but I think having, finding someone who really understood what I needed was critical. I tell people who have had complicated losses that when someone you love does something horrible—like hurts other people—the work you have to do is to focus on your love for that person and what your loss is. Otherwise, you can get derailed by thinking about the manner of their death and forget who the human being was. For me, the important recovery work was allowing myself to love Dylan with all of my heart and to connect to that love. That helped me sort everything else out.
DF: You described having to start grief over after seeing “The Basement Tapes” . As you said, “I think I was grieving for somebody I didn’t know.” How many times do you think you went, because you talk about all these identity shifts also that you went through in your process. Do you have a sense of how many times your grieving had to kind of go back to zero? Back to square one?
Sue Klebold: Seeing the Basement Tapes and really learning that Dylan was there because of his—I’m going to use air quotes—“choice” (because to what extent does one have choice when one’s thought processes are deteriorating?—I don’t know). But, I had believed up until that point that Dylan’s involvement was somehow accidental, that it was not something that he had chosen to do. I was still holding the model of him as the innocent victim who somehow got sucked into something. And I had to back up and say, “No, somehow he was there.” He made plans. He thought about this ahead of time. He chose to be there. He had guns. He killed and hurt people. I had to really rethink that whole piece. But, this rebuilding of my understanding of him (back to the origami image again) happened hundreds of times—every time I would hear something that someone had observed at the scene, or something that Dylan had said in a classroom that stuck with them. I was rediscovering who Dylan was again and again and again. And it still happens today, 18 years later, when someone will say, “I wanted you to know that…” this particular incident happened, or “I got a pizza and he helped me on the phone and he said this,” or “I ran out of gas and he drove and got me a can of gas.” And I think every time I hear something I didn’t know about him before, I have the opportunity to rebuild his wholeness from that and to know some other aspect of him that I didn’t know. And that allows me to reset the image I have, so it’s never static.
SP: You talk a lot about mental illness in the book and obviously you’re very focused on suicide prevention. What do you think are the biggest messages you’re trying to get out there about promoting prevention and mental health?
Sue Klebold: Well, for one, I believe that Columbine didn’t have to happen, that others didn’t have to die, and that Dylan didn’t have to die. This level of deterioration, this sort of stage-four mental condition, is a progression, and if we are able to stop this progression, we can save people. I try to explain to people what I saw, what I didn’t see, how I responded, and how I might have responded differently—how I might have listened better, how I might have been more mindful. And I encourage people not to make the same mistakes I did. One of my mistakes was that I held a wrong assumption. I always assumed that my son was okay because I loved him, and I believed that my love was protective. I think a lot of people tend to believe that. But when someone’s thoughts are deteriorating, when they are struggling, when they are in pain and suffering, we have to understand the extent to which they are not the person that we knew. They are morphing—they have become someone else. And just because we tell someone we love them and we hug them and we support them, it doesn’t mean that that’s what their inner experience is. I think I believed that because I hugged Dylan and told him I loved him, then he knew I was there for him. Our loved ones’ internal experience may be very different from what we perceive it to be, and somehow we have to open up and allow their internal experience to be shared so that they feel safe enough doing that. We have a responsibility to listen, to share, to not be intimidated by or horrified by what someone’s thoughts are, because sometimes people have horrifying thoughts. Allowing them to express those thoughts might save lives.
DF: In our suicide prevention efforts, we see a lot of family members, but also administrators in school systems and so on, thinking that they’re going to make things better if they basically reassure a suicidal person that there’s no need for them to think about themselves the way they are at the moment, and that they’re basically wrong for doing so. They give the message that the suicidal person should just adopt the parents’ or the administrators’ position and then it will all be fine. They espouse that all the suicidal person has to do is to get through it. But in response to such encouragement, the suicidal person ends up feeling less understood.
SP: I think I’m remembering that when Dylan was released from the diversion counseling that you questioned that and were actually even asking if he didn’t need more treatment.
Sue Klebold: Actually, I asked that question in the beginning when he had gotten into the diversion program because he had never stolen anything before. And, you know, this was so out of character for him, so I didn’t know what to make of that. And now I tell people, if you see a dramatic change in behavior—someone has gotten into trouble either at school or with the law—that’s a risk factor for suicide. It tells you that something may be wrong. I remember asking a neighbor who was an attorney as well as the diversion counselor, “I don’t know what this means. Do you think he needs counseling?” The counselor asked him, “Dylan, do you think you need counseling?” And that’s when he dug in, “No, I don’t. You know, this was an impulsive thing. I don’t need counseling. I’ll prove to you I’m fine.” That’s what he did the last year of his life. He worked very hard to demonstrate to everybody that he was fine. He would say, “I’m fine.” However, what was happening internally was anything but that. It was a devastating struggle for him. He was not fine. But when he was released early from the diversion program, they said that rarely happened. It only happened in cases where kids were doing exceptionally well. So I was top of the world at that point. That was huge. I was thinking, “He is great! He got through this! He is fine after all. He didn’t need any counseling. Everything is wonderful. And he’s going to college. He’s going to go to prom.” I saw all of these things as indicators that he was just fine.
DF: And you didn’t see, of course, that he was riding the coattails of Eric [Harris], who had managed to manipulate the counselor into thinking that everything was fine.
Sue Klebold: No. I had no idea. That would take me years to really understand all that.
DF: In your book, you stress that for teenagers, their peers are much more important than family. You now recognize that Dylan was turning to Eric, not to you and your husband, when he was troubled. And that Eric was supplying him a vital way of feeling better about himself.
Sue Klebold: Right. What’s complicated especially about Dylan’s case is that Eric wasn’t Dylan’s only friend. He had other friends. The kid that I always thought was his best friend—Nate—knew that Dylan had purchased a gun. Dylan showed it to him and then told Nate not to tell Eric that he, Dylan, had done so. This is one of the important things we can do to keep our youth safer—offer peer coaching to help kids understand that if someone shows you that they have a gun or tells you that something bad is going to happen, then you have to take that terrible risk to tell someone—an adult—and to get help. I talked with Nate for years about this. He said that he said to Dylan, “Get rid of the gun. Don’t do this. I’m telling your family.” But he said he had no idea that Dylan would ever use it or that he felt suicidal. He said that Dylan wasn’t talking about suicide. It wasn’t even on Nate’s radar screen that this was a life-and-death situation. He didn’t understand that.
DF: People have criticized you, saying, with incredulity, “How could you not have seen your son’s hatred?” In your book, you suggest that Dylan was doing a very good job of hiding this hatred from you, and you don’t think that you could have seen through his dissembling. However, you realize now that there were subtle signs of depression that, with the proper training, you might have been able to recognize and attend to it.
Sue Klebold: Right. And, you know, I think that’s one of the things I try to emphasize, especially when I speak to school counselors or school nurses. Dylan showed signs of something going on. Fourteen months before his death, he was arrested; he got in trouble at school for scratching a locker; and, in the last weeks of his life, he wrote a dark paper at school. There were just these little sort of blips, and nobody put all of these pieces together. I think we have to be hypervigilant. If we see one thing, we need to pay attention, even if it’s not in the presence of other things, because those other things may exist beyond our field of vision. We have to look beyond what we see and try to put a big picture together. I believe Dylan was experiencing depression. I remember him sitting on a couch at the end of his life and just staring into space. He had that thousand-yard stare. I said, “Dylan, are you okay? What’s…you’re so quiet. Is something the matter?” And he stood up and said, “Oh, I just have a lot to do. I’ve got a lot of homework. I’m going to go to my room and do my homework and go to bed early.” So, what do I do as a mom? I say, “Oh, that’s a great idea!” I look back at that and I wonder, in that moment, what might have I done differently? What would have made it possible for me to say, “What’s going on? You know, I’m not leaving until you tell me. I’m here to listen. I’m not going to judge you.” I have had that conversation in my head a thousand times. Just what might have helped me get a bigger picture that I just wasn’t seeing?
[Source: Office of Suicide and Violence Prevention] (also includes an interesting few cautionary articles on 13 Reasons Why)
Did any adults see Erics writing in Dylan’s yearbook? Wouldn’t they get suspicious?? He wrote some pretty homicidal things
Nah, are you kidding? That’s all typical edgy stuff that teenagers scrawl in yearbooks. None of it looked dangerously threatening or screamed red flags. Also, what adults would be seeing their yearbooks anyway?
Was Eric’s signing in Dylan’s yearbook ever released?
Yes, Eric drew on one page of Dylan’s yearbook.










