OUR FIRST BOOK

Our first book is almost ready. I haven't settled on a title yet, but the story centers around Mitchell and his puppy and what happens when we give.

I hope to have the first edition at this year's #milesformitchell run on April 23rd. I'm also wrapping up a book [not intended for children] that is a candid, chronological story of #mitchellsjourney- I hope to have it ready by mid-summer. This fall we should have a book of photos and essays ready to print.

This first children's book will be part of a larger series aimed at younger children. At the back of every book will be at least one essay and photo that was the origin of the story. 

Hopefully, there'll be something for kids and adults.

The first edition will be limited because I want to get feedback from early readers about what worked and didn't work. I've never written a children's book before - so I have a lot to learn.

My hope is that when kids and adults read the stories they will try to implement something new and positive in their lives.

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THE WONDER OF FAMILY

It was mid-September 2005. The weather was so warm I thought summer would never end. The mountain trees, however, told a different story. The lush green forest was slowly turning orange and red, reminding us change was coming and that the face of the mountain would soon lose its blush, ushering winter into the valley. 

It was a stressful time in my life. I had just learned my son had a terminal disease and at the same time I was struggling to make a new business venture work. There were client demands to meet, payroll, taxes and a million-and-one things that weighed heavy on my mind. Though Mitch was my 3rd child, in many ways I felt like a child myself. An imposter, of sorts. Although I could do a professional thing or two, I felt a bit like a child clothed in a man’s body, still trying to figure out who I was and discovering my place in the world. I was growing up. But growing can be painful and unsetteling.

I was no knight in shining armor. Instead, I was a flawed man in tattered cloth … but my wife loved me anyway. I was unsure of myself and full of worry – yet my clients believed in me. I was a boy trying to become a father, yet I stumbled to be the dad my children deserved. My kids didn’t notice my imperfections like I did, they just loved me for being me. It seemed that the world was kinder to me than I deserved – and for that I was grateful.

So, after a long day at the office, I set out to meet Natalie and the kids at a nearby park. When Mitch saw me, he ran as fast as his tiny legs could take him and jumped into my arms. I couldn’t get enough of this little boy and my other children. 

I asked tiny Mitch how his day went. He smiled in his shy way and said, “It wuz good.” He paused a moment and then corrected himself, “No, it was gwate.” I chuckled and kissed his little neck then said, “I love you, Mitch.” He then went on to tell me what he learned from Miss Nancy, his pre-school teacher. “She nice to me,” he said with a glimmer of confidence in his eyes. I could tell Mitch felt safe and cared for – and that did my troubled heart good. Tiny Mitch, with his sweet expressions, calmed my weary soul. Though winter and other cold realities were heading our way, I was grateful for the warmth I felt that day. 

Having children was a strange thing for me - for they taught me to love deeply and unconditionally. To my surprise, I needed them as much as they needed me. Such is the wonder of family.

I am grateful for my kids, for they remind me of the person I want to be.

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THE DARKER THE SKY, THE BRIGHTER THE STARS

I just returned from a father-son trip with Ethan and Wyatt. We went to Bryce Canyon and the Escalante National Park to explore the outdoors and make memories. One thing I’ve discovered along my grief journey is I must make new memories if I’m to heal and grow. 

On our first night, I took my boys to the edge of a tall ridge where we could see deep into the stone carved wonders of Bryce Canyon. As the sun cast its evening light across the sky, nature’s handiwork seemed to stretch out into infinity. Millions of years of erosion had left behind a most beautiful display of stone and color. At one point I asked my boys, “Wouldn’t it be neat if we could stand here in a bubble and watch 200 million years pass in a matter of minutes? What do you think we would see? How would the world change?” My boys seemed to think deeply over that question. So did I.

All the wondrous landscape at our feet was a testament that change and beauty take time. Sometimes I think grief is like the seasons. There are cold seasons and warm seasons and there are the times of change in between. With each season of grief, I am beginning to see a subtle erosion of the old and a beautifully unexpected shaping of the new.

The second night we drove deep into the woods to take photos of the stars. Before long the sky grew pitch black and the evening breeze calmed and became strangely still. Ethan and I peered heavenward and saw more stars then in a single gaze than I've ever seen at any one time in my life. The air was so cold it felt like we were marooned on a small rock floating in outer space – even the air seemed thin. Cute little Wyatt sat cozily in my truck with the heater roaring as if he were stationed in a life capsule waiting for us to return from our space exploration. 

As we peered into the vast night sky, we felt infinitesimally small. In an instant the world, with all its sound and fury, seemed insignificant as compared to the mind-boggling vastness of space. I told Ethan that scientists believe there are roughly 70 billion trillion stars in space. We know so little of the universe – and the deeper we probe the more bizarre the universe seems. All of humanity are but infants, cradled in heaven’s lap. We know about as much about the universe as those old geographers who once thought the world was flat. 

Ethan was sensitive to light pollution and wanted to make sure we were as far away from civilization as possible so that he might see deeper into space. Ethan knew that the darker the skies, the brighter the stars. 

So, as we sat in the cold of night looking deeper into heaven than we ever imagined, Ethan and I contemplated the relative nothingness of mankind. It was a humbling moment. Often, when Ethan and I shoot the night sky, he wonders out loud about Mitch; he asks questions about where he is, what he might be doing, and he wonders if Mitch might be near us at times. I know Ethan misses his brother and that grief weighs heavy on his heart. So, I try to be a strong shoulder for him to lean on and a listening ear and understanding heart. If I cannot take his hurt away, I can at least hold him while he hurts. And, when the skies draw black, I hope he learns to get away from life pollution – so that his spiritual eyes might see heaven’s stars more clearly. Stars one cannot see in the light of day ... stars that will surely point the way.

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LEST WE FORGET

I will never forget when Mitch sat at the bottom of our steps, struggling to catch his breath after playing one of his last Nerf gun battles. He said to me, “Dad, why can’t I be like a regular kid? I know I will not get better. I know I will die.” In that very moment, keeping my composure consumed what little strength I had left. I was a broken father, stumbling over pebbles and powerless to rescue my son. Still, I hid away a river of tears so that I might comfort my little boy and not frighten him. Though the prospect of losing Mitch frightened me deeply. “Mitch, my son, I don’t know why we have to do hard things. I only know that our Father loves us and that we are on this earth to learn and grow.”

I don’t know how much those words comforted my son in that moment of childhood grief – but I do know he thought deeply about life and death and what happens on the other side. As his father, I did my best to teach him – not to believe my words, but rather I tried to give him the tools so that he might learn for himself … so that he didn’t need to simply believe on my words, but that he might have a knowledge of things for himself. After all, that is the greatest gift we can give our kids … “Don’t believe me. Let me show you how to find out for yourself.” As he neared the end, Mitch came to know (in sacred and undeniable ways) there was more to life than what we saw with our mortal eyes.

So many of the experiences my tender wife and I had leading up to (and during) our son’s death are the kind of life traumas that you never get over. They are not the stuff of nightmares … they are the stuff beyond nightmares. I have discovered that you don't set it aside and move on. That is impossible. Instead, we have to learn to live with those memories and decide what meaning they have for us. 

Though I often write of hard things in this place, I don’t live in a constant state of grief. I have grief moments, but thankfully they don’t last as long as they used to. In a manner of speaking, I no longer see a light at the end of the tunnel – for I believe I have passed through the tunnel. That doesn’t mean all is well and that things are as they used to be. I am forever changed over the loss of Mitch. I will miss him the remainder of my mortal days and I have learned to live with chronic grief. 

At least for me, Mitchell's Journey is like cleaning a deep wound. It's not for everybody. What's more, because my wound is deep, I tend to go deep and it hurts a lot. But that deep cleanse is necessary so as to not allow sorrow to infect my soul.

As I continue down this path of reflection over my son’s journey, I don’t write to wallow. I write to examine. To think deeply. To discover the meaning of suffering and other things. I write because I don’t ever want to be that person who forgets the lesson. I think that’s a universal human struggle: to remember and to see clearly. For when pain passes, we tend to forget and go to what’s easy. Mitchell’s Journey, at least for me, is a place to remember and a place to see. 

I write so that I might remember what I’ve learned at such a terrible price. I write lest I forget and become what I used to be. For where I was yesteryear is no place for me.

 

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