Valentine’s Day started out on a happy note for Camas resident Swati Wilson. Like so many others, the Camas mother thought about spending time with her loved ones that day. But the Feb. 14 holiday quickly took a dark turn, after reports of a mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida started filtering out on social media sites and news stations. Wilson, whose son attends Camas High, said the news that 17 Florida high schoolers had been slaughtered by a 19-year-old armed with an assault rifle, hit her just as hard as the Sandy Hook shooting did in 2012, when 20 first-graders and six adults lost their lives inside another U.S. school.
As a parent, Wilson said, she immediately empathized with Florida parents who had lost children in the Feb. 14 Parkland shooting, and started to imagine these teens she had never met.
“I’m not a crier, but you just get to where you want to cry,” Wilson said of her reaction to hearing about the Feb. 14 school shooting. “Your heart races and you get so anxious and at the very same time, you’re also now thinking of your kid.”
In the days following the shooting, Wilson said she has felt heightened anxiety and even rearranged her schedule to talk to other local parents and the Camas School District superintendent about her concerns.
The Camas mom wants to prevent something like the Parkland shooting from happening here.
“It just feels like we spin our wheels, because of the stuff that we seemingly can’t do anything about,” Wilson said. “So, I’m saying, ‘Why don’t we do anything about the things that we really can and narrow it down to our schools, to what can we do to deter (a shooting)?'”