When I woke up this morning, the world felt broken.
A plane carrying 298 people had been shot out of the sky, children lay dead on a beach in Gaza, and an Australian suicide bomber had taken lives.
It felt like the morning of 9/11: significant and heavy, like we should remember where we were when a Malaysian Airlines plane carrying innocent civilians was gunned down over East Ukraine on its way to Kuala Lumpur. When four young boys were blown up on a beach in a war that shouldn’t have touched them. When a terrorist was identified as Australian.
As journalists, we watched rolling coverage of the news all day, covering every detail comprehensively ourselves. A pall hung over our office, like it surely did in every household and school. And throughout the day, things only got worse. The death toll rose, victims were named, and politicians got involved.
We tried to balance out the sadness by playing upbeat music (‘Africa’ by Toto, ‘Dancing in the Moonlight’ by Toploader) but nothing could shift the mood. “What a fucking awful series of tragedies,” we said. “What a fucker of a day for humanity.”
It’s a weird kind of grief though, isn’t it? Like it doesn’t properly belong to us. We didn’t get a call from DFAT to say a family member was on that plane. We haven’t lost anyone we loved – not even anyone we knew. So do we have any right to mourn the deaths of strangers 14,000km away?
I think we do. It’s not just normal; it’s important.
“Of course you’re going to feel emotionally depleted today,” says psychotherapist Sally Tayler.
Top Comments
What happened to those poor souls on the plane is terrible but the world is no more or dangerous at the moment than it has pretty much ever been. This might even be a relatively peaceful time overall - compared to of course the world wars and even the 90s with genicide in Rwanda civil war in former Yugoslavia the gulf war even the columbine massacre. Or does it only count when the victims are western? If the most tragic events you can think of in recent memory are the 9/11 and the plane being shit down while going over a freaken known war zone then I would say then I would say yes. And to go back to my original point- the world is no more broken than it's ever been although our media would love for us to believe it is
or even closer to home - let our Government know there is a boat full of people, legally in their care, who have 'disappeared, and we want to know how those children, women and men are coping...