"I Don't Feel Safe Anywhere": People Express A New Kind Of Anxiety Living In America After El Paso And Dayton Mass Shootings

Residents across the US are expressing a new kind of anxiety and fear after two back-to-back mass shootings took place over the weekend.
On Saturday, at least 20 people were killed and 26 were injured in El Paso, Texas, in an apparent act of terrorism. On Sunday morning, nine people were killed and 27 more were injured in Dayton, Ohio.
Americans who went to bed with news alerts of the first mass shooting, then woke up to alerts of a second mass shooting, are posting online that they "don't feel safe anywhere." They said they feel like they have to be constantly prepared to be confronted with a gunman whenever they leave the house.
Steve Reveles, an 18-year-old from Oregon who tweeted these exact feelings on Sunday, told BuzzFeed News these anxious thoughts are "just getting worse" for him.
"I’ve kinda had this fear for a while but it’s just getting worse because they're happening more frequently and who knows where the next mass shooting is going to happen or how many are going to happen?" said Reveles. "Am I safe anywhere?"

Other Americans are worried they need to have an escape plan anytime they're in a public space.
Jes Karakashian, 43, of Rochester, New York, told BuzzFeed News she sees a therapist for this type of fear. She wants to keep speaking about it so that "others... know they're not overreacting," she said.
She put her fears in context by listing the mass tragedies that she's had to confront on a scary personal level:
"In 1992 a student shot a teacher in the face at my high school. I was in class two doors down. When I lived in Denver, I watched Columbine happen in real-time on the news. The Aurora Century theater is a theater I frequented years before the shooting there. Several months after Sandy Hook — which was 20 years to the day of the shooting at my high school, by the way — I sent my eldest to kindergarten, where on the first day of school there was a lockout because the police were looking for a man who had shot his girlfriend in Rochester the day before.
"I've never been more terrified in my life for my child's safety," she said.
Karakashian is far from the only one openly talking about the psychological effects mass shootings have had on them and their day-to-day lives.
People say they don't want they try not to think about it, but they find themselves constantly worrying about how to escape a potential active shooting scenario.
One person wrote they left a movie theater because it was packed.
Pro wrestler Brandi Rhodes tweeted that she's designated a spot to sit every Sunday at church because it's her "best route to exits in case someone comes in and opens fire."
She added that she tries to not normalize these thoughts and behaviors, but the frequency of mass shootings makes it difficult.
Many Americans say the string of tragedies that happened hours apart from each other have caused them to feel they truly "don't feel safe going anywhere in public."

On Sunday, even Dayton's mayor, Nan Whaley, said in a press conference that she understands these sad new realities.
"These senseless acts of violence that occur have been happening anyplace, and I don’t mean to scare people, but frankly we’re at a situation now in our country that — these are so random, there’s no place that you can say, 'Oh I just don’t want to ever go anywhere,'" she said.
Reveles said he does not think or want these pervasive thoughts to become "normal." He wants lawmakers to protect him and other US residents.
"I hope they can reform laws on gun control," he said.
"Do something instead of nothing at all," added Karakashian.
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