Dylan Klebold being Dylan Klebold
This took me so long and I’m so tired so hopefully it was worth it sksksk
Epic Dylanisms. Love it! especially the ‘penguin waddle’ and fidgety knuckle cracking.
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.
Dylan Klebold being Dylan Klebold
This took me so long and I’m so tired so hopefully it was worth it sksksk
Epic Dylanisms. Love it! especially the ‘penguin waddle’ and fidgety knuckle cracking.
A recent podcast with a more mellow recently turned 38-year-old Brooks Brown (his birthday was last month, July 14th). You can tell the therapy he’s been undergoing has been beneficial but he’s still very bitter about how people only see him as forever linked to the tragedy. Brooks even alludes to how fucked up, alone, and depressed he was a few years back when everything began to crash and burn including his first marriage when then made a sudden move from the SF Bay Area down to LA, met his second wife-to-be, and began some serious therapy. I’m glad to see that he’s really beginning to address/work through everything that had damaged him since that day. Thanks to the anon that gave me the heads up about this interview. 🙂 I spent the last couple of days typing up some highlights from the podcast. A lot of Stanhope’s interjections just grated on my nerves and quite frankly. I personally don’t understand what Brooks sees in the guy! He’s not very funny at all. I found myself mentally telling him to shut it because I wanted to hear the rest of the thought Brooks was trying to finish saying. Grrr! It was also rather annoying how unfussed and philosophically kind Brooks is about Cullen’s book even in his admission that the dude denied that his friends had been bullied and it played a part in the tragedy. I know that Brooks’ dad Randy cannot stand Dave Cullen.
“It’s High school bullshit basically. If you remove all the shootings and murders of children..it’s normal high school bullshit. Again, it’s normal high school shit sort of brought to life with this other side that people didn’t think about at the time. Columbine wasn’t the thing that normally happened. School shootings were still weird. It wasn’t a thing that happened in America every week that we kind of went “oh there was another twelve kids that died this week. Okay, cool. So, what’s playing in the movie theater?” It was a different world. “ “…They changed the world back then. I sit there and I go ‘you know Eric and Dylan talked about it openly, very openly, about how they wanted to set this trend. About how they wanted to create this and have all these people kill people and do this.”
“Dylan and I never really had a falling out. It was stress because Eric was this dude in the middle who hated me – friends with Dylan and all that.”
“He knew how the story was going for him. He was kind of like “that’s fine. The story is going to end with me murdering a lot of people. I’m perfectly fine with making friends with you for the time being..or something, I have no idea. (Eric) He was cool, and Dylan was cool and they were relaxed about pretty much.. everything. It’s terrifying. Looking back and not seeing the faces of anger and rage. If I could see that shit, like I’d be like ‘okay, cool this comes from a place of pure anger, pure rage, pure hatred, like this shit that we see in movies, like Thanos level of hatred that you see in Avengers, like epic. No. No, no. This comes from this place of ‘yeah, no, I’m ready to murder a lot of people and I’m kinda okay with that and this is the way it’s going to go and it’s a little methodical, a little cold, with a scary side but you know? Psychopath?”
“Until I got home – my family had already – we had a home with a lot of TVs like we were a tv family. In the late nineties didn’t mean Netflix but having a lot of TVs. And we had a lot of TVs going with every channel, like in different rooms. And we were watching the live broadcast. Which was one of the most fucked up experiences of my life of the whole thing. And that’s when they displayed the names and faces of Eric and Dylan, we knew. My mom was already there. We knew. I was like “Eric did it, therefore, Dylan’s involved. This is the way it goes.” My mom was already with the Klebolds. And it became this downward “who are we going to be able to see that’s alive.” We watched the news.”
“It was a few years later that I found a couple of friends who stuck with me through the whole thing. A woman who I ended up marrying – my first wife, who was wonderful – through the whole thing. School shootings was a thing I searched often. Like I was just, because I was curious because it just started happening after Columbine. Eric and Dylan won – like, as far as people want to talk about 9/11 people won – the terrorists won, people won, they won. Eric and Dylan won. Shits happening all the time, and we are living in a fairly perpetual state of fear. But the realty is, the shootings are done not against the kids, they’re not done against any particular person – much as I’d love to say cause they were based in bullying and hatred of the system at all that -they weren’t against any particular person. They were against the system. There’s a reason they went into the library. They shot the computers and the librarian’s desk and all these symbolic bullshit things. There’s a great book by Mark Ames, fantastic. Ames writes an amazing book (“Going Postal”) on general rage shooters, and he calls them “rage shooters” for a reason. And it’s – there is ‘postal shooters’, “workplace shooters” and “school shooters” and they aren’t shooting up a person, they aren’t shooting up a thing. They’re shooting up existence. And it’s a fantastic really smart read that I think gets closer to the reason Columbine happened more than anything else. Even my own book, which I was proud of when I wrote – and I’m still proud of it because it’s my own words and all that fun stuff called “No Easy Answers”. And my co-writer – I have to give him credit – Rob Merritt – a wonderful guy who helped me figure out what the fuck I was going to write because I could literally chat for hours about it. I wrote the book 3 years after. You know Rob came out for a long time – I ended up going to Iowa where Rob lived to write it. It took a long time tp write because I didn’t know what I wanted to say. It took me 2-3 years to figure out what I even thought about things. The book was ultimately – not to talk shit about my own book you should buy it please cause I like .65 cents for every copy. The reality is – it was the reality in the moment, at 22 years old – coming out with ‘here’s what I think happened, here’s how I felt about it’ and all this – but at 38 years old, I have a whole different fucking mentality about it. I’m a dad now, I’m married to my second wife, I have a different job, I have a different world. Everything’s different; obviously, my place in the world is different.”
“But you know I look at these different books that have been written – such as Dave Cullens book which you mentioned – I have read it. Everyone has different opinions about what happened. It’s not a bad read. I don’t discourage people from reading it. It’s a different perspective on all the facts. Jeff Kass – wonderful book as well on Columbine that’s much more factual, much more reportedly. Ralph Larkin wrote a book on it. There’s been a lot of books written about it. (He admits at one point that he’s read all of them) And they all come from different perspectives and I think the reality is to find the truth – you kind of read all of them? But there are sides to it that people miss out cause the Dave Cullen one – that I think drives me nuts – is that bullying wasn’t a factor. And he says that very explicitly: that Eric and Dylan were the bullies. And I don’t know if I were to ever believe that? I can’t imagine how bullies would go out shooting people. Like, if you’re a bully, you live on the high, you’re at the top, you’re beating the shit out of people on an everyday basis – why would you fucking want to check out? Like, your life is like that of treating other people as shit and being above them. You don’t need to shoot them up. That’s not – if you read Eric’s writing and all that – Bullies enjoy the low-level celebrity that comes with being a bully. If you go into the aftermath of Columbine and you read the articles, you read the quotes in Time Magazine or Newsweek where people talk about ‘they were faggots and we treated them like shit.’ Of course. But like Dave Cullen and Jeff Kass – who I may disagree on a number of things, the reality is that they aren’t like shitty reporters. It’s not like they went into it like an agenda (?!?!) ‘here’s what we’re gonna to’. They have their opinions; they use their facts. And I find it interesting because the reality is my life is just my perspective – I don’t know if it’s fucking reality.”
“There is a point in your life where – and I hit it a few years ago – really hard – where your life has been defined when you meet people. Like I met you, I went on Napster and I searched “school shooting. Like I love The Onion, and The Onion had a great article after Columbine that said “Jocks Allowed to Safely Return to Bullying” and it had a literal photo of the front of our high school and the actual campus officer we were assigned, Neal (Gardner) and that was fucking brilliant. Too real for a lot of people. No, it’s real, but it’s a joke in that this is the reality. Like I stand outside of a funeral for one of the students who was killed and the brother of one of the guys (Dusty Hoffschneider) who was absolutely one of the most brutal of fucking bullies (Rocky Hoffschneider) that we had says “I know what caused this; I’m sorry.” Like holy shit that’s like a whole level of real where it hits you at a core level – there’s no way to defend it. There’s no way you can have a symbology or a religion or a way of beliefs that allows you to defeat whatever that person said – that’s so fucking simply true.”
“It meant a lot that you reached me because I would put very few people in this campus of liked people who reached me because it went for years where I was a dark, self-hating, angry person who felt very alone – genuinely. I had awful depression that I ended up having to get therapy with. I ended up going through a divorce – awful. Awful life. This very much led on from the trauma and the sadness and the awfulness that still follows me a lifetime later. More of a life time than I had before the shootings still follows me to this day. I go to have conversations with people today – and I do this one piece for Tribeca film festival – and it’s not a small thing to win Tribeca – it’s an amazing thing in New York. We had people go through it and said it was the most power VR experience they’d been through in their lives. But that is not what I’m googled for. That’s not how it works. That’s not how life works. No matter what I fucking do this is the thing. This is my life, this trauma, this awful shit is the life I’m going to lead. It’s the story I have no choice but to tell every day. My advice for David Hogg is to keep fighting. It’s a different time. When I was going through it and trying there wasn’t social media, there wasn’t people behind it, there was nobody fighting for it. It just didn’t exist. The truth of the matter is that guns caused this – whatever your stance on guns – guns are a factor. Mental Health is a factor. All of these things – there’s factors. We can rank them however you want to rank them – let’s start solving them. Keep fighting for them. Keep pushing because David Hogg – whoever comes next – he’s been pushed no he’s launched himself into the spotlight. But the reality is, your life 18-19 years – and I can say this – is going to be by your most google-able moments. As fucked up as the internet is. That’s the way the internet works. It’s not how I want it to work.; it’s not how anyone wants it to work. We want our proudest moments to be on display but that’s not how it goes.
“But if I was sitting across from David Hogg, I would look at him and I would go “Look, you do what you believe is right. You’ll be paying for it for the rest of your life. That’s it. Be ready for that, every moment of your life, you’re going to be paying for whatever you believe is right as a teenager, as a twentysomething, as an idealist, whatever you may be, you’re going to be paying for that forever. You’re that guy.” I did shit. I did it proudly I’m not ashamed of it and my life has become more than that but.. it’s not. It is whatever the world sees it as. We are only as powerful as the world sees us thanks to Google and wonderful social media as it is.”
Sue Klebold’s Thursday, August 2nd Keynote speech at 18CHS, The 2018 Colorado Health Symposium Achieving Equity in Behavioral Health.
The Symposium, which took place August 1 – 3, 2018 at the Keynote Conference Center in Keystone, Colorado, is a national health conference, is a unique chance to interact with cross-sector experts and dedicated professionals who are leading the way in addressing health equity. This year’s theme, Achieving Equity in Behavioral Health, focuses on the complex ecosystem of behavioral health and the role that inequity plays, from prevention to recovery. From a worsening opioid epidemic to pervasive issues with access to care, Coloradans are facing tough barriers that keep health out of reach.
All videos from the event, including this one of Sue, are here.
We ❤ Sue.
Sue Klebold talking about angsty, pre-teen Dylan is the best thing ever, do not @ me
“Don’t say my name.. in front of my friends!” 😂 Classic Dyl.
Existence… . what a strange word. He set out by determination & curiosity, knows no existence, knows nothing relevant to himself. The petty declarations of others & everything on this world, in this world, he knows the answers to. Yet they have no purpose to him.
He seeks knowledge of the unthinkable, of the undefineable, of the unknown. He explores the everything … using his mind, the most powerful tool known to him. Not a physical barrier blocking the limits of exploration, time thru thought thru dimensions … the everything is his realm. Yet, the more he thinks, hoping to find answers to his questions, the more come up. Amazingly, the petty things mean much to him at this time, how he wants to be normal, not this transceiver of the everything. Then occurring to him, the answer. How everything is connected yet separate.”

The infamous Morning Ritual! The music is from the Pulp Fiction soundtrack and is playing in the original video.
Beautiful! You should to do a side-by-side comparison with TMR vid. 😉
Time changes everything yet in some ways, nothing has changed. *chills*
Dylan behind Blackjack. Enjoy. 🙂
And the lip reading search continues..
This is a song I wrote about Dylan||
it’s not finished but here’s this part. And before anyone starts saying I copied Nicole Dollanganger, I was in fact inspired by her to write this so yeah. Hope you enjoy! 🙂 ♡
Lyrics:
you could see it on his face
the second that you said
he would never find love
you could see the pain
but by then you knew he was dead
he never felt good enough
all he could think about was ending his life,
how bad he wanted to die…
he’s gone
–
he’d come home and cry and not understand why
he was such a no one
that’s when he decided
if nothing good will come my way
I might as well go out in a way
they will remember my name
…remember my namechorus:
he grabs his gun
he’s on his way
to take some lives including his
you’d better run
he’s not okay
combat boots black
trench coat
backwards Red Sox hat
fight this warend his pain
-audio clip of Dylan from “Hitmen for hire”
A perfect, precious little gem. 💔
This? This is a must-see. This is exactly what I’ve been speaking about on my blog for all these years. This is the message I carry with me, always, and the message I most wish to put out there. This goes beyond diagnosis, beyond external causes, beyond everything we hear as “reasons why”.. to land at the feet of something that may be very familiar to you, if you’re an avid reader of my blog.
And, yes, she’s New Age-y. Yes, there might be elements in this video that don’t jive with you. Yes, she promotes two of her other works within it. Tell you what: watch it anyway. Watch it. Think about it.
Let it exist. Please.
It’s important.
This is excellent.^^ Well articulated in a concise, easy-to-understand manner.
“Pain that is not properly addressed either becomes directed externally or internally or both. In a worst case, this means suicide, murder, or both. The real reason that these attacks are being carried out is because a human being feels an insatiable need to connect, to feel empowered, and to feel significant. And yet, due to the conditions of their life, they have no other way of creating it other than to create terror in other people. I know this is difficult for us to swallow but if we’re going to solve this issue in our society, it’s a pill we’re going to have to swallow. School Shooting is not a problem with an individual; it’s a problem created by society itself.
We fail to connect to one another and really see, feel, hear, and understand each other and because of this emotional distance between each other, we feel the world is unsafe and renders us powerless. And because of our unconscious psychology, when we’re put in this position, there are only two roles to identify with: a winner or a loser, the strong or the weak, a victim or a perpetrator. Because of our collective psychology, we are sending a massive, mixed-signal, a mixed message to all of us, including our children, who are the most susceptible. The rift that exists today between the “bad guy” and the “good guy” is a rift that separates us all. It’s a rift that causes loneliness, isolation and also powerlessness to one another. And it’s also a rift that has to end. So, end it in yourself today.”
DALSON CHEN, WINDSOR STAR 05.02.2018

The mother of one of the teenage killers in the infamous Columbine High School massacre says it took a tragedy for her to have any awareness of mental health issues.
“I was an infant,” said Susan Klebold, mother of Dylan Klebold, on Tuesday. “I had no concept of any of this stuff … My perspective now is very, very different.”
It’s been 19 years since that bloody day in Columbine, Colo., that shocked students, parents, and teachers across North America.
On April 20, 1999, Columbine High School students Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold carried out a shooting spree that resulted in the deaths of 12 fellow students and one teacher, and wounded another 24 people.
The armed rampage ended with the two murderers both committing suicide.
“At the time, I was not aware that there were signs,” said Susan Klebold at the St. Clair College Centre for the Arts. “This is one of the reasons I speak … No one put the pieces together.”
Klebold visited Windsor as the featured guest at a Breakfast of Champions event held by the Windsor-Essex County branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association.
Before an audience of hundreds, Klebold described her reaction to the massacre, including months of denial, attempts to reach out to the families of the victims, being hated and blamed by her community, being named in dozens of lawsuits, and — eventually — education on mental health issues.
“I think it’s helpful for people to hear a personal story rather than read about these terrible events in the newspaper or see them on TV,” Klebold said.
“As a parent, I did everything I knew how to do to raise somebody who was a morally responsible, caring, loving person. What I was not aware of was that Dylan was struggling. He was wearing a mask.”
Klebold said it can be very difficult to distinguish between normal adolescent behaviour and pathological behaviour. “The thing we have to do, as parents, is learn to ask and learn to listen. Those were skills I thought I had — but I see now that I did not have them to the degree they were needed.”
As a former teacher, Klebold said she feels a need to learn from what happened, and a responsibility to pass on what she has learned.
Klebold said the Columbine massacre and her son’s part in it are things she lives with every day. “I’ve looked at this for almost 20 years. Like a Rubik’s cube, turning it every which way. Now, I am more analytical … I look for data.”
One idea that Klebold does not consider an answer is guns for teachers — as U.S. President Donald Trump suggested in the wake of the high school shooting massacre that took place in Parkland, Fla., in February.
“I don’t believe that arming teachers is going to make schools safer. I believe that that’s going to make schools more dangerous,” Klebold told the audience on Tuesday.
Klebold pointed out that members of law enforcement are regularly trained in use of firearms, and there are still wrongful fatal shootings by officers.
She argued that it’s naive to assume school staff would be able to use weapons in a responsible manner, in the right context and state of mind. “I think it’s a frightening idea.”

Sue Klebold, mother of Columbine killer Dylan Klebold, sits in silhouette at the Breakfast of Champions held by the Windsor-Essex County branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association at the St. Clair College Centre for the Arts on May 1, 2018. [Source]
I watched Zero Hour and surprisingly found myself sobbing hysterically at the very ending where they showed clips of the boys that made them look horrible but those same clips were taken from these dorky videos. I just felt they should be shown in a human light as well so I compiled this.
I❣️this one enough to reblog. The boys just being the creative but goofy boys they were.
The families of some of the Columbine victims talk about Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. (13 Families, 2009)
This is my most favorite part of the 13 Families documentary.
“I’ve chosen not to view them as monsters. I’ve chosen not to view them as anything other than young men who made choices that led them down a dark path – and ended up taking their lives. Their parents suffered deeply just like we suffered. Occasionally somebody says “I can’t think of anything worse than what you experienced” – and I think there is something worse than what I’ve experienced – and that is if my son, my boys, had done what Eric and Dylan did. To me that would have been a lot worse. Because these parents lost their children and they lost any semblance of a good memory”. –-Darrel Scott
And Kim Blair Woodruff was a 17-year-old student at Columbine HS in 1999.
MK:You were at Columbine when the two shooters came in, you knew one of them. Did you see him the day of? Did you have a direct interaction with him?
Um, I was outside where it began. So, I saw them take the duffle bag up to the top of the hill, pull out the guns, nod to each other, and begin shooting everybody. I had my best friend shot up right next to me. Um, before she was shot, I, you know, made eye contact with the gunmen, he recognized me, he moved the gun and shot her. I have an identical twin as well, and she was a library kid. And in that moment for her, they looked under the table, and couldn’t tell if it was me or if it was her because we’re identical. Um, and I was always very nice to Dylan. And, uh, he moved to the next table.
MK: You think that he spared you for that reason? It’s the only thing I can hope for otherwise it just seems like chaos. And I tend to think that we’re more kind in our nature than we are evil. And I’m hoping that in just that brief moment, he remembered that piece of his humanity and all that kindness I gave him.
MK: Any survivors guilt? Not anymore. I’ve actually been able to find peace, I was able to find peace about the 10th year anniversary. I’ve been able to live in my peace since then.
Columbine survivor uses tai chi to aid healing at Aurora Strong center


Click here to read the full account plus the account of Kim’s identical twin sister Patti who was in the library.
Oddly, the way Kim’s 11K account reads, Suspect One and Two are backward and the opposite of what Kim relayed to Megan Kelly in being sure she made eye contact with Dylan who had spared her. But here, it sounds like she made eye contact with Eric as Suspect Two. It’s entirely possible that the investigative officer interviewing her got confused between Suspect One and Two as Kim was relaying her story and mixed it up. I would not at all be surprised since the investigators did an overall botch job of things. One amusing takeaway is that when Dylan first started shooting in an easterly direction he was apparently rapid fire shooting around at nothing in particular..”she could not be certain what the first suspect was shooting at” whereas Eric immediately started targeting kills, a group of boys, in particular.




Kim’s twin Patty crouched under a library table…




🌹Eric Harris
🌹Dave Sanders
🌹Daniel Mauser
🌹Kelly Fleming
🌹Isaiah Shoels
🌹Lauren Townsend
🌹Corey Depooter
🌹Steven Curnow
🌹Matthew Kechter
🌹Kyle Velasquez
🌹Rachel Joy Scott
🌹Cassie Bernall
🌹John Tomlin
🌹Daniel Rohrbough
🌹Dylan Klebold
Here is what Hitmen For Hire would’ve originally been like with the boys’ Hitmen’s ‘theme song’ edited in.
Eric obviously liked Rammstein’s Wilder Wein as he mentions it in the Basement Tapes and I believe he also had a t-shirt of it. I find it rather interesting that Eric chose a slow-paced, lamenting sort of song rather than some pounding industrial techno for the walk scenes. Says a lot about him in regards to the sort of moody piece he chose for his government economics class project. You can kind of hear a smidge of Wilder Wein in these two segments. As their dialog starts, the music fades out.. I would imagine that the authorities masked it out as they did not want Rammstein’s copyrighted music on the infamous shooters vids. I tried to get it as close to the timing of their queue of the song to their scenes but decided to leave in the smidge of where their music bit overlaps with my edit. It’s likely that they filmed two different versions of their walking scene but only picked one of the two for their final video production. On the other hand, they might have used both and Wilder Wein was just the theme song for the Hitmen. Enjoy. 🙂
Lyrics to Wilder Wein
April 9th 1999, 11 days before the massacre
Eric’s birthday
Dylan went to the store to buy Eric a present.
19 years ago today..