Showing posts with label Faces for Change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Faces for Change. Show all posts

Thursday, October 10, 2013

My Heart Is Broken: Joe Bell Died Last Night

I first wrote about Jadin Bell back in January, 2013. He was 'Another One;' one of our LGBT youth that was bullied and terrorized so horribly that he took his own life rather than endure one more day of torture. See that post HERE.

In April 2013, I posted about Jadin's father, Joe Bell, who was undertaking a walk across America to both honor his son and to raise money for anti-bullying campaigns and awareness of the bullying epidemic in this country. See that post HEREIt was like a ray of light; maybe I wouldn't have to do 'Another One.'

Jadin Bell
In July 2013, I posted again [see that post HERE] about Joe Bell's walk, and the people he'd met and the stories he'd heard; and the struggles he was having on the walk due to having had two knee surgeries, and having two artificial knees. But he would walk in memory of Jadin.
Joe founded an organization, Faces For Change, for money and education and awareness. He was doing all he could to use his own tragedy for something good, to try and make sure no other parent had to hear the news that their child had committed suicide because of bullying.

And now ... this:

Joe Bell was killed last night along U.S. Highway 40 in Cheyenne County, Colorado, when a semi-truck driver reportedly fell asleep at the wheel and hit him. The driver, Kenneth Raven, who was not injured, was cited with careless driving resulting in death.
The walk is over. A post on the Faces For Change Facebook page announced Bell's death Thursday morning:
"Thank you so much for all of your continued support. He loved everyone he came into contact with, and was so appreciative of all your support. … He will continue his journey now with Jadin. Please keep his family in your prayers and thoughts." 
He's Another One, now.

My heart breaks for his family.


RIP Joe Bell, for you were an amazing father while you were with us.

Tuesday, July 09, 2013

UPDATE; Joe Bell's Walk To Stop Homophobia, Bullying and Suicide

Far from his home in Oregon, Joe Bell is sitting at a booth at Lucky Slice in Ogden, Utah, looking at a picture on his phone. On the left is Joe’s 13-year-old son, Joseph, who has his arm around one of Joe’s other sons, Jadin. It has been just more than four months since Jadin committed suicide. [read my post HERE]

After a few seconds, Joe Bell puts the phone back in his pocket, steps outside and heads east, starting the 49th day of his walk across the country to honor his son—who was literally bullied to death—and to raise awareness about bullying and youth suicide.

The night before, Joe spoke to a group of strangers in the basement of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Ogden. He was there as a guest of the OUTreach Resource Center, a community center and support group for LGBT teens and young adults, to share Jadin’s story.

When Joe finished speaking at the OUTreach gathering, some of the students in the room shared their own stories of being bullied at school and at home. One spoke of being beaten and verbally abused by family members when he came out. As he finished his story, Joe offered what consolation he could.

“You’re a good man,” Joe told him. “Know inside yourself that it’s gonna be OK.”

That moment was just one that was repeated throughout the evening. Eighty percent of the people who come to OUTreach don’t have a supportive adult like Joe at home. Which may explain why, in this country, suicide is the third-leading cause of death among teens and young adults. In Utah, it is the second-leading cause.

Joe and his wife raised three sons and a daughter in La Grande, Oregon, and it was just last year that Jadin, his middle son, came out as gay; Jadin was a freshman in high school at the time.
“I knew he was different at a very young age. We love our children, and we raised our children to love who they are.”—Joe Bell
And while Joe raised his kids with a passion for the activities he enjoyed, like hunting, after coming out to his father, Jadin then announced that he wanted to start cheerleading.

“I just about fell out of my chair,” Joe said, though his support of his son, and what his son wanted to do, never wavered. But it was when Jadin began cheerleading that things got worse for him. Joe, watching his son from the stands, saw the harassment Jadin endured, and he knew it was much worse when he wasn’t at the games.

“I just watched him deteriorate,” Joe said. Jadin began to see a counselor to deal with depression, made worse by the harassment and bullying he suffered, and for a while he seemed better, even if his situation at school didn’t improve. “Our school and administration do not know how to deal with the bullying problem,” Joe said.

On January 19, 15-year-old Jadin tried to hang himself on a school play structure; some passersby noticed his body and called for help. He was taken across the state to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital where he stayed for two weeks. When it became clear that he would not recover, Jadin was taken off life support and died on February 3rd.

Jadin's story is just one of many stories of LGBTQ youth that are being bullied in schools by students, teachers, administrators and other parents, and Joe Bell, having lost his son, wants it to stop.

After Jadin’s death, Joe was lost; he’d seen, first hand, the harassment his son endured, and he began to feel as though he’d failed as a father. He began thinking a lot about Jadin, reflecting on an eighth-grade trip Jadin had taken to New York City. For Jadin, that trip was the highlight of his all-too-short life; he began to dream of going to college in New York.

Sadly, that dream was never realized.

But, for Joe, he realized the trip to New York City could be made again, this time in Jadin’s honor, and to talk with schools and churches about bullying, and homophobia, and the loss of so many young people in this country.
“It was either give up or fight back. I’m a fighter.”—Joe Bell
So Joe began training for his cross-country walk; it was during this training, and through the help of family friend, Bud Hill, that Joe Bell found Faces for Change, an organization which seeks to educate others about harassment and bullying; Faces For Change is supporting Joe throughout the walk.

For Joe, the walk is a time to remember his son, but it is also a way to start a dialogue about bullying and suicide. And while Joe has received all kinds of support along the way—his shoes are donated and he had a book filled with all sorts of encouragement from people he’s methe has also come across some anger.

North of Tremonton, Utah, a Catholic bishop stopped to offer Joe a ride and, after hearing Joe’s story, the bishop dropped him off with a pamphlet on “the sin” of the gay lifestyle.

That kind of talk is especially hurtful to Joe, who prides himself on being a proud Christian, travelling with a notebook filled with Bible verses on every page. And yet, when Faces for Change was trying to find a place to hold the send-off party, three churches turned down the organization’s request.

I guess the idea of children being bullied to death is of no concern’ or maybe it’s just the LGBTQ children they don’t care about.

But, this kind of homophobia, and ignorance, doesn’t stop Joe Bell. He has made it a point to stop and speak in any town where he’s been warned that he might experience some intolerance.

After leaving Ogden, Joe will head to Salt Lake City, where his family will meet him, and he can relax for a couple of days. Then he goes on to Denver, then Kansas, then New York.


New York; for Jadin. And to make us aware that his son, like the sons and daughters of so many, have been bullied to death and we need to make it stop.
Jadin Bell

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Joe Bell Is Taking A Walk In Memory Of His Son

Jadin Bell, an Oregon teenager, was another one of those kids, targeted for being gay or perhaps just seeming to be gay—whatever that means—until he got to a point where he could no longer take it. One day, he went to the playground at an elementary school, climbed to the top of a jungle gym, and hanged himself. A passerby saw his body and tried rescuing him; Jadin was taken to Doernbecher Children's Hospital where he was put on life support. After several days, and still no brain activity, his family decided to let him go. [See post HERE]

Another one.

Shortly afterwards Jadin’s father, Joe Bell, made a decision. He could have been angry, he could have been distraught, he could have been a lot of things, but he decided, after burying his young son, that he would just go for a walk.

And Joe Bell is walking all across the United States to help spread the message against bullying. He says it'll take two years to walk the 5,000 miles—at a rate of 15-25 miles a day—and make it to the East Coast; Joe Bell resigned from his job to take that walk, and he’ll be doing it on two artificial knees; he had replacement surgery in 2010.
"I needed a break. I was ready, I was looking for something different. I just wish, however, that I was doing this under different circumstances."—Joe Bell
And as he walks from one coast to the other, he’ll stop to speak at schools and other venues about bullying, about the need to report it if it happens to you, or if you see it happening to anyone. He has even set up a foundation, Faces for Change [HERE] to promote anti-bullying programs.

See, Joe Bell understands that we don’t need another suicide, like that of  Jadin Bell, or Lance Lundsten, Tiffani Maxwell, Eric James Borges, Teddy Molina, Jamey Rodemeyer, Josh Pacheco,  David Hernandez Barros, Brandon Elizares, Joel Morales, Zachery Gray, Jay 'Corey' Jones, Jack Reese, Kenneth Weishuhn, Rafael Morelos, Phillip Parker, Jacob Rogers, Nicholas Kelo Jr., Brandon Bitner, Tyler Clementi, Asher Brown, Billy Lucas, Phoebe Price, Jaheem Herrera, Jeremiah Lasater, Megan Meier, Eric Mohat, Carl Joseph Walker Hoover …. Those are just the ones I’ve talked about on this blog, but there are so many, many more.

Joe’s walk will take him through Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana, before he moves north through Pennsylvania, New York and his destination of the Delaware coastline. He’s most looking forward to the New York stop because that was where Jadin wanted to live one day.

If, by chance, Joe Bell walks through your town, why not go out and meet him, and thank him for not only honoring his son’s memory, but for getting up and doing something about bullying. And, if he doesn’t pass your way, why not stop in at Faces forChange and see what you can do to help.

Before we have “Another One”.