‘After the death of my children, Christmas is a black surround, without tinsel’
Sat, Dec 21, 2019,
06:30
‘Losing a child is like having your
heart torn out and your stomach emptied’
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Sir, – At this time of year, families are dreaming of seeing their loved
ones. The loved ones coming back by sea, or touching down on tarmac, flowing
through the arrivals lounge of airports, warm-cheeked and teary-eyed, breaking
the barrier to the warm homely arms of childhood. Or coming by car, snapping
the car doors shut for a while and walking in the front door of old familiarity
– the family home. This is miracle-making.
Eighteen years ago this Christmas, my first child of three, my daughter
was very ill and she died early in the New Year. It was a meteorite falling on
a family that was already rocked by loss and absence. Since then, our family
has been cruelly pared back to one, myself, the mother, living alone at home.
At night I sleep to the rattles of an empty house. Even the wind has a
faraway cry when it rattles at the window. My three children, my daughter and
two sons died from Cystic Fibrosis, a genetic disease of the lungs. They lived
a full and spirited life together, their illness did not define them. They were
witty, intelligent, and gifted with homegrown talents that filled this home
with music and liveliness. They expressed their true selves to their world of
friends, and gave of themselves freely and honestly.
Losing a child is like having your heart torn out and your stomach
emptied. Grief gets in the way of daylight, not to mention the nocturnal dark.
Christmas is a black surround, without tinsel, while the masses are
plumping up the shopping streets.
But grief can be another day on the wheel, when paradoxically a blue sky
can unveil and a white egret appears in the branch. I have named him Doy after
my youngest son, whose pet name was Doy. He will fly and land with me as I walk
beside the river in the valley behind our home.
Before Doy died, his dark eyes looked ahead and he said, “Look for me in
the trees. I will be there in the trees.” – Yours, etc,
KATHLEEN KEYES, Bray, Co Wicklow.
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