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Sunday, April 22, 2012

TO LOSE A CHILD


                          But the Dove found no rest 
                          for the sole of her foot,  and
                          she returned unto him into the arc...
                                                     Genesis 8: 9      
                              
        





  


As many times as I have attended families 
torn by unexpected senseless tragedy and sorrow I never thought it would happen to my family.  We all have a built in denial.  A sense of somehow being protected.  I had just left my home with a friend on my way to dinner.  It was a quiet sun drenched afternoon on the 22 day April of 1985, with the lilacs in full scented glory.
I was one week past receiving my chip for two years of sobriety from AA and my life was starting to turn around.

From the sidewalk I heard the telephone give that slightly louder and clearer ring that in retrospect was somewhat ominous.  Uncharacteristically, I doubled back and answered it just as the answering machine recorder kicked in saving the moment for history.  My son’s strained voice telling me the unthinkable.  I should meet him at Porter Hospital.  That my daughter had hurt herself.  I did not know then that he had just cut his sister down.  When I asked how badly, the answer was “Dad, I think she’s dead.” 

At that nanosecond in time several things happened.  A part of me was ripped away. My entire family was irrevocably shattered and my life was forever changed.  My world tilted left, then right, became opaque and stayed that way.

From there it was a surreal slideshow of slow motion stills.

 The silent ride to the hospital where I instinctively entered through the ambulance entrance while Julie parked.  There was an ambulance parked inside the covered ramp with the rear door open.  There was an ambulance cot sitting alone and unattended on the driveway.  I saw my daughter’s uncovered face and I knew then what I already had known.  My beautiful violet eyed daughter had taken her own life at 54 days into her 14th year.
I do not understand this.  I do not know why.  Only that it was a selfish act.

I entered the ER and was waylaid by the Chaplain where we were placed in a small barren windowless room in the hospital where it was suggested “we would be more comfortable”.  I suggested that perhaps it was he who would be more comfortable with us out of sight.  I interpreted the move as “We cannot, nor do not, want to try to deal with you”.  Medical personal are helpless in the face of death.  I believe they take it as a personal failure.  That is one of the reasons we have undertakers.

I left the room and walked outside.  I cut a sprig from a Colorado blue spruce and when I returned I placed it in my daughter’s hand.  Somehow it was a totem of eternal life.

The reason for the wait was for Keri’s mother to arrive, apparently so they could confirm her death to everyone at once instead of having to go trough it twice.  Her mother finally arrived and the ritual was consummated.  I cannot remember much of that except that I was unable to go to her mother’s side and comfort her.  I wanted to but I just couldn’t.

We left the hospital.  What had just happened was enough to make anyone drink, alcoholic or not.  I knew that my sponsor would be attending a certain AA meeting that evening.  I got there just as it was starting.  The usual format of a meeting was suspended.  I talked.  In retrospect that must have been one of the most unusual meetings in the history of AA.  I still occasionally meet people who were there and remark of it.

The calling at the Funeral Home in Littleton was marked by me being largely ignored and my wonderment that such a brainless, insensitive clod could have apparently been “assigned” to be the undertaker.

I was pretty much left out of the loop during the entire ordeal.  My sister and cousin flew out from Chicago.  I had about five personal friends and my sponsor in AA  at my side, all of them Jews.  Throughout my life it has been the Jews who have been there when I needed help.

The funeral was held at night in a large church in Littleton, CO.  It was filled to capacity with four to five hundred people in attendance.  The services proceeded during a violent electrical storm, with lightening and thunder, pelting rain and hail.  There were literally streams of water running down the outside of the huge stained glass windows.  I remember turning around and seeing my friend, Ira a towering, black bearded Orthodox Jew, standing in the back possibly as bewildered at being there as I was at seeing him there.  But he was there.  That is a friend.  I made it all right until someone started playing Amazing Grace on a piano.  I kept it together but it was a lot rougher.

I had asked one thing of the preacher, that he recite the Serenity Prayer.  This well fed, pompous, self serving excuse for a man did not honor Keri’s father’s only request.  He had his own agenda.  He had an audience and he was going to make the most of it, including a visible personal insult.  When I confronted him at the cemetery he wussed out, saying that while Keri and her sister and her mother had attended his church, I had not.  How Christian.  It was only because of a sense of resignation, that I did not slug him.

Keri rests now in the Littleton Cemetery at the top of a gentle sloping hill overlooking the Burlington Northern Railroad Tracks and the white topped peaks of the Rocky Mountains.


Next to Keri is buried her best friend Patricia, killed by a drunken driver at the age of 21.  The irony does not escape me.

                                               
THE SHADOW WEEPS

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

THE SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM

LOVE IS BLIND AND SO IS JUSTICE

Had I even contemplated doing any of the crimes that the ex sheriff of Arapahoe County, Colorado was charged with and / or convicted of, I would be hung up by my Balls.  It is that simple.  That a sociopath could obtain such power and position, I could understand.  But to let him walk with a slap on the wrist is incomprehensible.  This is a travesty and a miscarriage of justice of the first magnitude.  I have been served with injustice in my life and I hate like Hell to see this sort of thing happen.  But this is also the real world.  It is not only who you know, it is apparently who you blow.

      WELCOME TO AMERICA FROM THE SHADOW