"Alas! there are some wounds that cannot be wholly cured," said Gandalf. "I fear it may be so with mine," said Frodo. "There is no real going back. Though I may come to the Shire, it will not seem the same; for I shall not be the same.”
I had a friend back in the late 1980's. He was quite a bit older than I. I was in that stage of life where all of my children were very young and we were consumed with all of the loving and raising and disciplining and feeding and diapering that goes with that phase of life. My friend was early in his senior years, the winter of his life was just beginning to set in.
My friend loved children in a kind of shy and awkward way. He kept his pockets loaded with candy and quietly handed it out in generous amounts to any small children who crossed his path. My kids called him "the candy man". I just called him Paul.
Paul loved people of all ages I suppose, but he was known for his concern and attentiveness toward children. After I got to know him a bit, and learned his story, I better understood some of what was behind his candy-filled pockets.
Paul and his wife had lost a child under horrific circumstances many years before I knew him. Their son had been run over and killed in front of their house by a school bus. During the time that I knew Paul, when all of my children were young, the idea of ever losing a child seemed at once so terrible and so "out there" that I couldn't imagine how it was that Paul and his wife ever managed to recover.
So I asked him one time, "How do you ever get over losing a child?" His answer was immediate and short: "You don't," he said, "you just learn not to cry all the time."
Gut. Punch.
Last month marks three years since my own daughter died, an event that, had I any inkling of it at the time that I knew Paul, would have filled me with unspeakable horror and dread. It is, as they say, "every parent's worst nightmare".
It's one thing to have a person in your life, like Paul, whom you used to know. But it is different in every way when the person you used to know is your own child.
Shortly after my daughter died I wrote these words to some friends:
Everything about my daughter is now in the past.
Of course, we are not the first parents to lose a child, but I suspect every parent of a lost child knows too well the obscenity of the idea that your own child can become someone from your past -- someone you used to know.
It’s eerie and disconcerting and wrong.
Our daughter was a young adult, not a child, when she died. Her death was acutely distressing but not entirely surprising. The medical examiner recorded her death as being caused by an accidental fentanyl overdose. It would be truer to say that her death was the culmination of years of reckless thrill-seeking. Notwithstanding what the relentless propaganda in the media would have us believe, there are very few truly innocent among the fentanyl dead.
We loved her more than our own lives, but in essential ways, even before she died, she had already become someone we used to know. "Things that should not have been forgotten were lost," wrote JRR Tolkien. That's a pretty good description of our daughter's early adult life. And her untimely death finally foreclosed any possibility of recovering something we desperately hoped she had only lost for a time. When I shared the terrible news with my wife, that our daughter was dead, she immediately doubled over and, choking through her tears, cried out, "we can't hope any more". There would be no possibility of recovery or rescue now.
One of the unnerving things about losing a child is the way that it alters you in almost primordial ways. So much so that it seems like the person you were before your child's death has become yet another someone that you used to know. You have a memory of your prior self, but it is deeply misaligned in essential ways with who you have become.
What I mean is that something foundational about the expectations you brought to the world is shattered when your child dies. It seems impossible to ever see your life or your future in quite the way it had always been. It isn't that you can never again have joy, or give and receive love (although at first such thoughts seem grotesque and abhorrent and strangely disloyal). It is just that those things are altered for you now. It is very much as Frodo said, "Though I may come to the Shire, it will not seem the same; for I shall not be the same."
I think I understand better now why my friend Paul chose to invest himself in giving little bits of joy to all the children around him.
My own grandparents lost a 3 year old daughter to pneumonia during the late 1920's. My grandfather very nearly succumbed to it himself. A close relative purchased two cemetery plots for my grandmother to use because everyone expected that both her husband and her only child were going to die. But my grandfather survived somehow, and only his young daughter is buried there now. Twenty-five years after those events my grandfather, two sons married, was known as someone curiously devoted to his daughters-in-law. Unusually so. He doted on them. Their wishes were his commands. And his daughters-in-law adored him for it. I now suspect that he was lavishing on them the love he had stored up for a daughter which, for a quarter of a century, had no place to go.
Leaning into the giving of joy and the lavishing of devotion - those are the reactions to losing a child that I have watched in the people that I used to know. It is certainly a beautiful thing, but it is obtained at a most terrible price. It may be the most expensive thing in the world.
But it is also a clue to the central meaning of the universe. When John the apostle of Jesus wrote, "God is love", he was not spouting kissy-face platitudes but was, rather, offering us a key insight that can unlock our understanding of everything.
I do understand some things better now than I did before. I suspect every parent who has lost a child could say that. I definitely operate with fewer illusions. That's one of the hard-earned benefits, I guess, of having someone you love slip suddenly, totally and forever out of reach.
Like the dew on the mountain,
Like the foam on the river,
Like the bubble on the fountain,
Thou art gone, and forever!
Love is the thing. Love big while you can.
This article recently appeared in Touchstone Magazine.
I'm so sorry that you and your wife lost your daughter. May God continue to heal your family. Had never read this Whitman quote before but saw it the other day:
"Those who love each other shall become invincible."
Thank you for your post. I'm currently dealing with bereavement for my late girlfriend, and while it is a pain I never thought I'd feel (and yet, survive), I worry more for her mother. I'm sorry for your loss and I hope we can still love, in our way, while we can.