September 30, 2019
CBS Pittsburgh Exclusive Interview With Sue Klebold
September 30, 2019
Yes, the Ever-lasting contrast. Since existence has known, the 'fight' between good & evil has continued. Obviously, this fight can never end. Good things turn bad, bad things become good. My fav. contrasting symbol, because it is so true & means so much – the battle between good & bad never ends… Here we ponder on the tragedy of Dylan Klebold.
Wunderley Gymnasium
Penn State Greater Allegheny
4000 University Drive
McKeesport, PA 15132
Registration is free
Staunton Farm Foundation
Sue Klebold is the mother of Dylan Klebold, one of the two gunmen responsible for the Columbine High School shootings of April 20, 1999 in Littleton, Colorado. Dylan and his friend killed twelve students and a teacher, and wounded more than twenty others before taking their own lives.
In the aftermath of the tragedy, Ms. Klebold remained out of the public eye while struggling with devastating grief and humiliation. Her search for understanding would span over fifteen years during which she volunteered for suicide prevention organizations, questioned experts, talked with fellow survivors of loss, and examined the crucial intersection between mental health problems and violence. As a result of her exploration, Sue emerged a passionate advocate, dedicated to the advancement of mental health awareness and intervention.
From her memoir, A Mother’s Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy (Crown, 2016), Sue is donating all author profits to organizations that promote mental wellness, brain research and suicide prevention. She is a member of the National Loss and Healing Council of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP), and is a member of the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Consumer-Survivor Subcommittee. She has participated in presentations, co-chaired conferences at the state and national levels, and written about the experience of surviving a loved one’s murder-suicide. Sue has a Master of Arts degree in Education from Cardinal Stritch College. She was an instructor and administrator in the Colorado Community College System for over twenty years.
16-19 September 2019
Dallas, Texas
Sue Klebold is the mother of Dylan Klebold, one of the two gunmen responsible for the Columbine High School shootings of April 20, 1999, in Littleton, Colorado. Dylan and his friend killed twelve students and a teacher and wounded more than twenty others before taking their own lives.
In the aftermath of the tragedy, Ms. Klebold remained out of the public eye while struggling with devastating grief and humiliation. Her search for understanding would span over fifteen years during which she volunteered for suicide prevention organizations, questioned experts, talked with fellow survivors of loss, and examined the crucial intersection between mental health problems and violence. As a result of her exploration, Sue emerged a passionate advocate, dedicated to the advancement of mental health awareness and intervention.
From her memoir, A Mother’s Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy (Crown, 2016), Sue is donating all author profits to organizations that promote mental wellness, brain research and suicide prevention. She is a member of the National Loss and Healing Council of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) and is a member of the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Consumer-Survivor Subcommittee. She has participated in presentations, co-chaired conferences at the state and national levels, and written about the experience of surviving a loved one’s murder-suicide. Sue has a Master of Arts degree in Education from Cardinal Stritch College. She was an instructor and administrator in the Colorado Community College System for over twenty years. [Bio]
This is a member only event and Registration is now closed.
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)
Sue Klebold continues to be an inspiration by virtue of her strength and her commitment to helping others. On Saturday, November 18 – the day after the Columbine episode of Active Shooter: America Under Fire aired and after a particularly difficult two weeks that saw two more mass shootings take place in the US – she spoke at a Survivor Day event in Colorado Springs, hosted by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
“His death was a terrible, terrible event and a terrible tragedy, but in my own heart, he is still my own child and I can not let that define him for me.”
❤
Helping others through loss: Mother of Columbine gunman speaks out
Sue spoke today, Tuesday July 11, 2017 at the Symposium of Hope, a half-day event at the Cedar Rapids Marriott meant to raise awareness about suicide and prevention.
Hopefully, photos and some videos of her presentation will surface in the coming days.. And as always, we hold a prayer circle for any new Dylan photos, and new anecdotes, she may decide to share with the audience as part of her speech.
Full article under the cut
Jul 11, 2017 at 8:53 pm |
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CEDAR RAPIDS — Sue Klebold, mother of Dylan Klebold, one of the assailants in the 1999 Columbine High School shooting, wants Eastern Iowans to know what she didn’t about suicidal warning signs, intervention and misperceptions of mental health crises.
Klebold spoke Tuesday at the Symposium of Hope, a half-day event at the Cedar Rapids Marriott meant to raise awareness about suicide and prevention put on by Foundation 2, Tanager Place and Young Parents Network.
Klebold said she knew her son as a gentle, quiet and brilliant person. Even when he was a young teen, there were few signs that something troubled him, she said.
In high school, at Columbine High in Littleton, Colo., Dylan became friends with Eric Harris. During their junior year, the two were arrested after breaking into and stealing from a vehicle. About the same time, Klebold said her son got in trouble at school for the first time after scratching some lockers.
The two were put into a diversion program, similar to counseling.
“I remember asking, ‘Does this mean something? Is something wrong with him that I’m not aware of?’” Klebold recalled. “The diversion counselor turned to Dylan and said, ‘What do you think? Do you think you need to go to counseling?’ And I bet everybody in here will know the answer to that question. He said, ‘No, I’m fine.’”
Klebold said the boys graduated from the diversion program and her family went to visit some of the four colleges that had accepted Dylan. He went to a prom. All seemed well with him.
But on the morning of April 20, 1999, she said she remembers hearing her son rush down the stairs and out the door far earlier than usual. She asked her husband to talk to Dylan later that day because it seemed that something was bothering him.
“I had not a clue that this was a life-and-death situation,” she said.
Klebold later learned her son, 17, and Eric Harris, 18, shot and killed 12 students and a teacher in the school, and injured 21 others, before killing themselves.
Klebold said she wishes she knew of her son’s suicidal ideology. She said if she had known, she believes treatment could have prevented it.
“We want to believe that we can see what is going on in someone’s head, we want to believe we can see evil,” she said. “When Dylan was feeling suicidal, Eric was feeling homicidal. Somehow these two people were connected.”
There were other warning signs Klebold said she learned only later, and there were multiple possible points of intervention, Klebold said. Dylan had seen a physician a few months earlier, and had written a school paper in which he described a murder.
“More than anything I regret my own failures as a parent. When I (read Dylan’s journal), I could see my son was suffering. By the time he was 15 years old, he was talking about being alone, that he wished that he could get a gun and kill himself. He wrote that he was cutting himself. I never saw any cuts on him. I wish I had said to him, ‘Tell me something about yourself that no one else understands that causes you pain.’”
Klebold said she wanted the audience to understand those who are suffering can be adept at putting up a facade.
Not only is it important to understand suicide warning signs, she said, but it’s important to ask bluntly if someone has suicidal thoughts.
“Preventing suicide is a community issue,” Klebold said. “I had the assumption that love was enough, that my children could come to me. There are many steps between hearing that someone is suicidal and taking action. I want people to know not to freak out and shut down the conversation.”
Most of all, Klebold said in an interview, she hopes Tuesday’s audience knows there is hope and others are learning that suicidal ideology is a medical condition.
“When those thoughts are persistent and taking up more and more of one’s time, they’re making a plan, it’s a progression.” she said. “They’re reaching a Stage 4 life-and-death situation.”
Okpara Rice, chief executive of Tanager Place, said he hopes the symposium encourages people to learn about suicide prevention.
“I hope they understand that this isn’t someone else’s issue,” he said.
Resources:
— National Suicide Prevention Hotline, available 24 hours a day: 1-800-273-8255
— ASIST classes: Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training is a 16-hour training that focuses on recognizing the signs of suicide, intervening and helping the person create a safety plan. More information is available at Foundation 2: (319) 362-1170 or www.foundation2.org
Well, how lucky are we?
Sue revealed NEW Dylan photos at her presentation at the AAS Conference 2017 in Phoenix, AZ.
1) Cherubic baby Dyl with sunshine golden blonde hair
2) On his first bike ride (Sue talks about this in her presentation. Check out the amount of padding on the boy. Yikes! Yet, no helmet..)
3) A new larger photo of Dylan playing baseball with much enthusiasm
4) Flash forward a few years, a you can see a reticent Dylan in his NIN Downward Spiral shirt. The God of Sadness is looming in his expression.
Sue’s presentation can be found here in this video 30 minutes in.
We are so lucky to have Sue presenting around the country. The possibility of new photos is so favorable. Enjoy! 🙂
Funny you should ask.. 😉
Sue will be presenting as Keynote Speaker next month!
Annual Pastoral Care Conference MetroHealth Medical Center Scott Auditorium
May 18 and 19, 2017 Cleveland, Ohio 44109 (her old state!, Columbus, OH to be exact. I bet she’ll be visiting relatives while there.)

Sue presents May 19th from 2:30 – 4:00 pm
Rejection, Ostracism and Social Exclusion: Causes and Consequences
May 18-19, 2017MetroHealth Medical Center |
Scott Auditorium
2500 MetroHealth Drive
Cleveland, Ohio 44109
Registration Fee (after May 5, 2017)
$175
$160 Discounted Rate for MH employees
Conference fee includes parking, refreshments, lunch and materials.
Registration deadline is May 12, 2017.
This conference is for social workers, nurses, marriage and family therapists, psychologists, counselors, clergy, physicians, chemical dependency professionals, funeral directors and educators.
Keynote Speakers |
C. Nathan DeWall, PhD
Louise Hawkley, PhD
Sue Klebold, MA
Ethan Kross, PhD
Kipling D. Williams, PhD
Conference participants will be able to:
The event, “Steps Toward a Safer Tennessee,” will be April 19 2017 at Trevecca Community Church, 335 Murfreesboro Pike in Nashville.
Breakout sessions on safety planning and violence prevention are also planned.
This is the day before Columbine. Traveling and speaking to others will probably help keep her mind from dwelling too heavily on 18 years ago. 😦
Hey guys, I’ve found a new picture of Susan Klebold.
She’s now working as a AFSP Colorado Board Secretary. Since Dylan’s death, Sue has worked to raise suicide awareness and support prevention efforts. She has participated in presentations and written about the experience of surviving a loved one’s murder-suicide. She is a member of the Survivor Council of AFSP and a Board Member of the Suicide Prevention Coalition of Colorado.
His mom has brown eyes. Interesting..
Thanks for the find. 🙂
Sue Klebold, AFSP Colorado Board Secretary
Sue was an instructor and administrator in the Colorado Community College System for more than 20 years, and a project specialist for the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment for five years, before retiring in 2010. Sue has a Masters degree in education and is a survivor of her son’s suicide. She is the mother of Dylan Klebold, one of two gunmen in the Columbine High School shootings of April 20, 1999 in Littleton, Colorado. Since Dylan’s death, Sue has worked to raise suicide awareness and support prevention efforts. She has participated in presentations and written about the experience of surviving a loved one’s murder-suicide. She is a member of the Survivor Council of AFSP and a Board Member of the Suicide Prevention Coalition of Colorado.