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Wed, 17 Jan 1996 22:31:31 -0800 |
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You wrote: I received a direct e-mail from one of the museum-l readers
who indeed called the individual and tried to assess if he was ok and
in a safe surroundings. She decided he was safe and as ok as he could
be (as far as she could tell.) I am grateful that she did that and
will try to be as brave should such a distress call happen in the
future. How lucky for all of us that someone (without personal
fanfare) reached out to make sure a stranger on our list was safe. e--
>
>>Last week we all got a very long e-mail from a troubled human being
and
>>I have been troubled by it ever since. I did nothing about the
e:mail.
>> No reaching out to the individual, no calling for help for him by
>>caregivers who might have been better providers for him nor any
>>discussion with my museum-l neighbors until now.
>
>>What is our individual or collective responsibility when someone
>>appears on the screen who is in personal distress or (as in this
case)
>>so far away from the norms of human behavior? Do we have some
>>responsibility or since they write in such a way as not to invite
>>comment, do we ignore?
>
>>I remain troubled but without any helpful answers for my own personal
>>responsibility to this person and wonder what others thought, worried
>>about and maybe even did.
>
>>Please let us all know.
>
>>Elaine Heumann Gurian
>>[log in to unmask]
>
>
>Could be that many, including myself, glanced at the message and moved
on.
>Most of us have trained ourselves to move through our messages quickly
and
>immediately respond to them or stash only those pertinent to our
>professional and vocational needs. For me it's hard enough to read,
>evaluate, and prioritize messages every day when on any given morning
I
>might have well over a hundred waiting for me. I have to do the best
I
>can.
>
>Frankly, I don't even remember the particular message in question. It
>might seem insensitive on my part, but for all I know I could have
glanced
>at it and sent it right to the trash. It's no longer in my "in" box
>anyway. It apparently received a low priority. I usually don't read
>through lengthy messages unless I can somehow find the information
somewhat
>useful. With this in mind, it's easy to understand why few if any
>responded to the message.
>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>Henry B. Crawford v
>Curator of History v
>Museum of Texas Tech University v
>Box 43191 v
>Lubbock, TX 79409-3191 v
>806/742-2442 v
>FAX 742-1136 v
>[log in to unmask] V
>All opinions expressed are mine v
><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
>
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