Posts tagged Our Family Today
OH, WHAT A FEELING IS HEALING

Earlier today, my dear wife Facetimed me so I could see my little granddaughter. My heart leaped to the heavens, and it hasn't come back to earth yet. I hope it lingers there a while.

How I love this little girl.

I've been absent for the last few months because my family has undergone a significant change. I'll share more of that soon, but all is well with our family, and we are writing new chapters of love, hope, and healing. And oh, what a feeling is healing. Most importantly, I'm back and have stories yet to share; stories of the past, observations of the present, and musings over the future.

I wish Mitch could have met my grandaughter (his niece) in this life. He loved kids, and I know he would have adored her. And though little Mitch is a great way off, sometimes I feel his presence close to me, and my heart skips a beat. I close my eyes and thank heaven that our souls crossed paths and that our stars connected. I thank heaven Mitch was my teacher.

I'm still very much a student of grief and growth - and I'm taking careful notes.

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TWO GIFTS
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I sometimes wonder why we wait until it’s too late. We send flowers at funerals when those flowers might have lifted a heavy heart when that loved one was living. We honor our family and friends with eulogies after they pass – when our gratitude and love may have healed a weary, forgotten soul. I know it’s not practical to write eulogies for the living or send bouquets of flowers every day – but we can send a text or give someone a call when they come to mind. That counts, too. I’ve discovered the little things are always bigger than we imagine.

Today Mitch would have turned 19. He passed away a few months before his 11th birthday—a tender age, to be sure. As a little boy, he loved his Mom with all his heart. He still believed in Santa and loved building Legos. Although he was very much a young boy, he also looked forward to becoming a husband and father when he grew up.

Grief hurts even after 8 years. But I’ve also discovered grief refines us – if we do the work to transform our pain from our tormentor into our teacher. It isn’t easy. Grief is clumsy work, really … especially in the beginning. I remember the days I would shut my door at the office and weep. For the first few years, every minute was a waking nightmare. I sometimes prayed for my own death to escape the pain.

Yet, despite all the pain Mitchell’s death has caused me, he has brought me even more in love, joy, and meaning. Little Mitch was then and remains today, one of my most sacred teachers. He didn’t mean to be my teacher – he was just a little kid. Mitch was innocent and the embodiment of goodness.

As my teacher, Mitch gave me two gifts embedded in 2 profound lessons. I am so very far from perfect, but try to emulate these every day:

ONE: SEE WITH YOUR HEART

“When you see with your heart, you see everything that matters.” ~ Mitchell Dee Jones

Mitch taught me to look beyond someone’s jagged edges and see their heart. Even in the midst of being treated poorly by some adults, my little boy taught me to look for their pain. He understood that hurt people hurt people – and though we should not tolerate abuse and unkindness, we can practice the healer’s art by seeing the person behind the pain. Mitch taught me everyone is worthy and deserving of love.

TWO: BE KIND AND GRATEFUL

“Be nice to each other and be glad you’re alive. Nothing else matters.” ~ Mitchell Dee Jones

Little Mitch taught me the formula for a joyful life is found in gratitude and kindness. He showed me that kindness is contagious, and life is limited. So, I’ve learned how to spread one and treasure the other. We’re only on this earth for a few minutes – why not shine while we’re here?

Today, as my little family celebrates Mitchell’s birthday, I will double my efforts to see beyond – to see with my heart. I’ll share love and kindness to everyone I meet … and I’ll treasure what precious seconds remain in my own short life.

I don’t know what happens in that place beyond the hills. But I dream of seeing my 10-year-old son on some path’s horizon, a great way off. And when I see him, I will run at reckless speed to embrace him. My love for Mitch has only grown since I last saw him. I will thank him for being my son, my teacher, and my friend. While I walk my own path between now and then, I’ll do my best to stop and help the weary travelers I encounter and serve them in word and deed. For unqualified love is the greatest gift indeed.

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ALL THE FEELS

A few years ago, I marveled at how gracefully my young daughter carried her younger brother on her back. The waves were too big for Mitchell’s weakened muscles, and earlier that day, Mitch privately confided to me, almost with a whisper, “Dad, I’m afraid of being swept into the sea.” Laura-Ashley, sensing Mitch wanted to play with her, offered to help him so he could experience the ocean in the safety of her arms. This image, this tiny moment in time, fills my eyes with tears of gratitude.

It feels like yesterday she was carrying Mitch on her back. Now, my sweet little girl carries a child of her own, and soon, Natalie and I will become grandparents. My heart is bursting with joy for my sweet daughter and her loving husband.

About 13 years ago, I started collecting children’s books for my future grandkids. I have since taken them out of storage and started practicing my dramatic readings and homemade sound effects. I can’t wait to read to them - and more than that, I can't wait to feel their little heartbeats as they fall asleep in my arms.

More recently, over the last few months, I’ve had a brooding impression that a grandchild might be near; so much so, I was pointing out little baby clothes to Natalie with a kind of dreamy anticipation of being a grandfather one day. It’s difficult to describe how excited I am to love and hold my future grandkids.

Laura-Ashley graduates from nursing school in April and is expecting in May. I’m proud of her on so many levels. She works in hospice, and I am humbled by how she serves her people: with dignity and respect, of course … but also with personality and authenticity. She has a unique relationship with each of them, and she becomes a bright part of their day. I remember what Mitchell’s hospice nurse meant to Natalie and me, and to see our daughter become that for others is humbling. There is so much to love about my not-so-little girl: I admire how Laura-Ashley makes friends everywhere she goes, I giggle over her unusual description of things, I cherish her adorable sense of humor, and I love her tender heart.

Nobody ever told me how being a dad would feel, and I wouldn’t trade this feeling for anything. Today, I’m overflowing with all the feels.


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IF I COULD SEND A POSTCARD

Photos are like postcards from a time long gone.

I’ll never forget this warm autumn evening when Luke put his arm around his best buddy and said, “I’m glad you’re my friend, Mitchell.” I was about to walk down the trail of our secret forest so they could play – but when I overheard them talk about video games and some new nerf war strategies, I lingered at the edge of the woods so I could listen to them dream without a care in the world. For a minute or two, the little boy in my heart sang and danced like an invisible ghost playing vicariously with them. Though not a child, for a moment, I wanted to be.

As a father, I smiled on the inside – knowing these two children were right where they were meant to be. None of us knew how soon Mitch would meet with catastrophe, and we had no idea how soon we’d have to say goodbye. That same arm wrapped around Mitchell’s neck in this photo would soon be stretched outward, holding his friend’s hand, barely conscious, as Mitch struggled to breathe. These two boys made of clay would have to face some very adult realities. The innocence of childhood soon rebuffed by their mortality.

When I took this photo, I had no idea the hell that soon awaited me. Neither did I imagine discovering some deep and beautiful treasures filled with light – treasures that can only be found in the darkest shadows of grief, even the pitch of night.

In the most curious of ways, Mitch and Luke’s paths seemed destined to intersect – and for as long as I live, I’ll thank heaven for connecting these two beautiful souls. At first, they seemed like ordinary boys that just happened to be neighbors. Soon, they went from casual friends to best friends. They were each other’s confidants and helpers. And in the blink of an eye, they became my teachers.

This past summer, I have spent a great deal of time in our secret forest building retaining walls by hand, cleaning up the trails, and turning that place into a quiet sanctuary for the soul. It has been a magical summer of healing, repairing, and growing. That tiny forest in our back yard has become a place to separate, meditate, and think deeply.

As I worked in the forest, I wondered what I might write Mitch, if I could send a postcard. Sometimes I write little cards in my heart and send them to the sky. “Hi Mitch, I miss you. You flutter in and out of my mind – soft as a moth – and oh, I wish you’d stay. What I would give to be with you, for just one more day.”

Sometimes, deep in my heart, it feels like he writes me back.

Sometimes.

There are other times I wonder what I’d write my younger self – knowing what I know now. Would I try to influence the choices I made and take a different path? Absolutely not. I would live my life again and again, even to infinity, so that I could know and love Mitch. Has his life brought me pain? Yes. But his existence was also beautiful. This young, broken boy has become my teacher—grief my tutor. Class has not ended for me, and I will be a student of love and grief until my days have ended, and I journey to that place beyond the hills.

Until that day, I will treasure these postcards from the past and look for the lessons buried in a potpourri of love and sorrow. In truth, I can’t wait to discover what I’ll learn tomorrow.


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