Shooting Spree Too Close

A coworker just came to my cube to ask me if I knew about a murder spree in my part of the Maryland suburbs. I didn’t but work to hear the details she imparts while deciding whether I should call my wife or my youngest daughter’s daycare first. I am listening to our news radio station via the Web and reloading the Washington Post site for the latest updates.

It began last night at a large grocery store nearby and continued throughout this morning. A man loading groceries into his car. A man mowing his lawn. A woman vacuuming her car. A man pumping gas. A woman sitting on a bench next to a post office. Five people are now dead. Police are looking for a white small van and two men. All schools in Montgomery County, DC and Prince George’s County are in a lockdown, that is, no one is allowed in or out without permission.

All of us are very aware of our personal safety, given the events of 9/11. We live our normal lives and try to maintain a sense of “rational paranoia,” an oxymoronic expression I use to describe a typical urban existence these days.

But the seemingly random shootings add to one’s angst. And once again this is hitting too close to home. I am struggling with my rationally paranoid thoughts.

Jeff
jeffgates@outlook.com
2 Comments
  • Donna
    Posted at 15:40h, 03 October

    Random violence is probably the most frightening… esp. when it’s just in the course of normal, mundane tasks.
    A woman was killed in her front yard a street over in a neighborhood that probably never has had a murder ever. There was never any explanation.
    I wonder how long it took before people were warned in your neighborhood? I mean after the first two, others should have been warned.

  • Jeff
    Posted at 15:55h, 03 October

    If you didn’t have your TV or radio on, you might not have known. It wasn’t in this morning’s Post.
    Neighborly word of mouth? Not likely on a workday. My wife first found out when I called and told her.