Odyssey
-What an excellent idea. -On a local level the media can surely bring awareness and shine a light on Sylvia. Especially since there are no doubt people on Staten Island who have always lived there and remember life back then?
--This may be somewhat OT in relation to Sylvia specifically but perhaps there is a bigger story, here.
Since the media may be constrained as to where they can go with a specific story like this, maybe the New York Times with its investigative experience and vast resources would find merit in doing a broader story.
This is a period piece story, the classified run-aways during a time of cultural divide and change. From an investigative standpoint, how many families during this time were left with no support from law enforcement, LE hands may have been genuinely tied as to what they could do, or so lacking in resources, or tangled in corruption, too. What is the perspective through the eyes of law enforcement based on many cases they handled in all five boroughs of NYC? How did unknowing young women fall prey to criminals, or the underworld of Manhattan? There were some seriously fringe groups out there, as well. Given we were not micro-chipped with all our GPS tracking devices, back then , to vanish without a trace was entirely possible
Lost in the 70s - How many families were left with no resources at all, no ability to mount a search at the time of a loved ones disappearance? -Left with no answers and decades later, no closure. --Heartbreaking, for sure.
How many from this time (late 60s through the 70s) just walked away from their families without a trace and never looked back? -More than we know? What happened to others who disappeared? Were they able to reconcile or not? What are their stories? What impact did this cultural divide have on American life and families? I am reminded of the Vietnam vets who came home to no country. From a war shrouded in shame.
I would like to think Sylvia ended up in a lovely commune with naturalist bohemian types, had her baby, and is living a peaceful life on an organic farm somewhere in northern California. Did she meet someone who offered up a completely different alternative lifestyle?
Sadly, it would have to be something hugely life altering for someone to walk away from their life
And, never to return to contact the ones she left behind, and undoubtedly loved very much. What are the chances of that?