Wednesday, March 24, 2010

We are the Six Sigma initiative to reduce global human defect.

Yesterday afternoon a car stalled in the road in front of me. A young girl waved us all ahead since she knew she was stuck; they wove around her like fire ants shaking their heads in disgust.

I pulled over and with the help of another passerby, we pushed her to the side of the rode.

"Do you have a phone?" I asked her.

"Yes."

"Do you have someone to call?"

"Yes, I'm calling my friend now. Thank you for your help."

Her smile was genuine relief and gratitude.

It could've been Beatrice. I only hope someone will be there to help her someday.

Cars are expendable. Our children are not.

Fall back to Saturday morning. As we sat watching Good Morning America's weekend edition, a story came on about text rage and the teenager with steel-toed boots with almost killed 8th grader Josie Lou Ratley.

The GMA report said teenage violence was on the decline, but I found other sources that say otherwise.

For example:

  • An average of 15 young people are killed each day in the U.S., and over 80 percent of those are killed with guns.
  • In 2004, 750,000 young people were treated in hospitals for violence-related injuries.
  • One third of high school students reported being involved a fight at school in 2004, and 17 percent reported bringing a weapon to school in the month preceding the 2004 survey.
  • 1 in 12 teens in high school are injured or threatened with a weapon each year.
  • 30 percent of junior and senior high school students are involved in bullying each year as the victim, bully, or both.
  • According to a report by the U.S. Secret Service, in the previous decade, the odds of a high school student being injured or threatened with a weapon were about 1 in 14, and the odds of a teen being in a physical fight were 1 in 7.

Then in the adult world on Sunday, just hours before the historic healthcare legislation passing, it was disturbing to see the democratic senators spit on and called derogatory names.

The hate was palatable.

I understand the internal heat shields slip sometimes and we can be reactively caustic when disagreeing or when wronged, but we're still responsible for how we respond and any carnage we leave.

And for the wildfires we feed.

Fear, uncertainty and misinformation are tantamount today, but we can cope and help each other through it, regardless if we agree on "it" or not. We can elevate without fueling hate, anger and violence -- and we can and should start with our babies and children -- globally and cross-culturally.

If there's a problem beyond rational responsive control, like a physical or mental disability or criminal activity, then those of us who are capable of restraint are responsible.

Yes, we are, whether it be in the forms of counseling, education, medication, incarceration, rehabilitation or institutionalization.

We are the Six Sigma initiative to reduce global human defect. Not God nor the media nor celebrities nor politicians nor captains of industry.

As parents, we can make the next generational difference. We have to.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for stopping and helping that young woman. I hope someone like you would stop and help my daughters if they ever needed it. As for teenaged violence, it saddens me and leaves me filled with so many questions. Why is the first and foremost in my mind? How were these kids raised is the second one. The list goes on and on. I hope I made a positive difference with the way I raised my now teenaged daughters. I also hope they make a positive impact on their fellow teens and in the future.

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  2. Happened on your six sigma parenting related article when trying to track down the image source for my own- Glad I did- I agree with you- We have to impact what we can impact in our small family sphere. Maybe our kids will grow up to be the difference.

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