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Mother of Columbine shooter Dylan Klebold breaks silence
Mother of Columbine shooter Dylan Klebold breaks silence
The mother of one of the two perpetrators of the one of the worst school shootings in United States history is breaking her 17-year silence, saying she has been wracked with pain and guilt since the incident.
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The interview on a special edition of 20/20 came three days before the Monday release of Klebolds book, A Mothers Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy.
"The one thing that I want to say is I am so sorry for what my son did, yet I know that saying Im sorry is an inadequate response to all this suffering," a tearful Klebold, 66, said during the interview. "There is never a day that goes by that I dont think of the people that Dylan harmed."
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Sue Klebold said there were small signs that her son was troubled but she wrote them off to teen growing pains and angst. "I remember asking him, Are you OK? Are you sure youre OK?' "
But she said she could have never imagined that the boy she once thought of as her "happy, precocious, brilliant little child" could overnight become a "hate-crazed gunman."
The proceeds from her book will go toward research and foundations focused on mental illness.
I feel very sorry for her. I bet there isn't a day that goes by where she doesn't think of all the hurt her son caused, and if she had maybe asked him more about what was happening in his life then it might've not happened but I don't think so. I think people are just hardwired that way.
I'm not surprised by the divorce. As someone said, it tends to happen after a tragedy.
Although I would never do something like what he did, I was a bit like him as a teenager. I was a bit different, had a hard time at school, was a bit anti-social and got bullied. I do understand the (massive) difference in our situations but I get what he was going through to some extent. You don't want your parents to worry about you so you keep things to yourself, especially when you're an introvert. Obviously I didn't shoot up a school but I'm pretty sure I had depression and hid that, and I think that was another thing he hid. He hid a lot of things from her. In addition to that, he was hiding his homicidal fantasies which most people don't have. It could also be because he didn't want his parents thinking he's "weird" for having these fantasies, like his classmates do and making one of his few support systems "turn against him". But honestly, I think it's just because he didn't want to cause his parents worry, so I feel bad for the way she feels as I really don't think there was anything she could've done to stop it (except literally forcing him to stay home). There are even still things I haven't told my parents about that time and it's 10 years later and I really can't explain why. Sometimes you just keep things hidden. You'd be surprised at the kind of deep secrets teenagers keep hidden. It is not a parenting fault and I wouldn't call her a bad parent as his siblings turned out fine. If there was an issue with parenting we'd most likely see it emerge with her other children.
I think Eric and him fed off each other and that mixed with the torment caused by bullying caused this tragedy. I don't believe either one's parents played a role and I certainly don't believe the video games they played influenced them.