Closure on the word “Closure”

May 2, 2011

I’m watching the news coverage this morning regarding the killing by U.S. forces of  al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden. His death is welcome news to anyone who mourns those murdered on 9/11 and all the other victims of  al-Qaeda related brutality.

It’s maddening to hear journalist after journalist this morning bandy about the word “closure.” It brings to mind what Dr. William Petit, whose entire family was slaughtered in a horrific home invasion, said: “I don’t think there’s ever closure. I think whoever came up with that concept is an imbecile, whoever they are.” Anyone who has lost a loved one, particularly in a brutal act of terrorism, knows that the idea of closure is something manufactured by the Dr. Phil-ization of our collective national psyche.

Please, fellow journalists, save the word “closure” for traffic reports.

-Barbara

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One Response to “Closure on the word “Closure””

  1. figmentofcogitation said

    Thank you for voicing my sentiments about the pop-psych lingo that keeps cropping up in news coverage. In grief, there is no closure, possibly because it’s a meaningless term. Eventually we move on because life demands it, but nothing closes. I do love the word “imbecile,” though.

    Michelle

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