Workshop aims to answer tough questions
Greg Risling
COSTA MESA -- Touting an impressive list of speakers who have either been
a victim of violence or have dealt with it firsthand, a three-day
workshop took aim at answering some of the issue’s most perplexing
questions.
The sessions, 14 in all, attracted more than 1,000 students who packed
the Student Center Lounge on the OCC campus. The student-run workshop is
held annually and tackles a variety of social issues. This year,
organizers felt it was necessary to address random violence, calling the
series, “Victory Over Violence.”
“People have talked about the problems and now it’s time to find the
solutions,” said Eddie Hooes, one of the students who planned the event.
“If we can get people to spread the word, maybe we might get things
solved. If we don’t get involved, nothing will get done.”
Speakers came from all walks of life, ranging from law enforcement
officers, educators or social workers. The first was Tanya Brown, the
younger sister of Nicole Brown Simpson, who was brutally murdered outside
her Brentwood apartment in 1995.
Another speaker, who shares Brown’s pain of losing a loved one, was Cindy
Soto. The Costa Mesa resident talked on Wednesday about her 4-year-old
daughter, Sierra, who was killed in May along with 3-year-old Brandon
Wiener. The tots were frolicking in a child care center’s playground when
an oncoming car plowed into them. The driver has been charged with
murder, allegedly making statements that he was out to “kill innocent
children.”
The last six months have been a time for healing for Soto, who has spent
much of her time creating a foundation in her daughter’s name. Soto hopes
the foundation can facilitate change and provide better safety at day
care centers and possibly public schools. The playground where her
daughter was playing was protected only by a chain-link fence.
Soto gave an emotional 35-minute presentation that dealt with the
foundation’s objectives and her viewpoints on random violence.
Stating she has been given a crash course in coping with the issue, she
supports the college’s efforts to address the problem.
“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see there is a problem with
violence,” she said. “We have to work together to stop this.
“Living in the aftermath of a situation that involved violence, it’s
important to talk with an audience who are our future. Speaking helps
purge my emotions into something positive.”
Although no definitive answers were given as to how to eliminate the
heinous acts that have captured headlines, some presenters spoke about
warning signs.
Probably the most animated speaker, the only one to give a presentation
twice, was Emma LaMer, an OCC professor. LaMer delved into the male
psyche and tackled the question of “Why Males Kill.”
In at least five shootings this year, the perpetrator has been a man.
LaMer said men have a “code of masculinity,” where they are only able to
show two of seven emotions: joy and anger. The other emotions -- fear,
sadness, shame, guilt and loneliness -- are repressed at an early age and
can lead to anger.
“Every time you are lonely, it turns into anger,” she said. “Every time
you are shamed, it turns into anger. Eventually, it turns into rage and
at the end of that is violence.”
LaMer noted boys ages 12 to 19 are 400 times more likely to kill than
women. But she believes violent behavior in men can be curbed if the code
is broken.
“If you took every emotion away from women except joy and anger, you
would have women committing these shootings,” she added. “When you
disconnect from your emotions, then you don’t care about yourself and
don’t have empathy for others. When you lose your emotions, you become
violent.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.