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‘At 1.45am on Wednesday 20 September 2023 a lone policeman turned up at my door. That was the end of my old life’

Full of vitality and future plans, KATHRYN FLETT’s 21-year-old son Jackson met friends for a night out last year – only to die in an unfathomab­ly random accident. She describes how his vivid energy is helping her find her way through the grief

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On Tuesday 19 September 2023, I wrote a Substack piece about that week’s big story, Russell Brand, and (according to my texts), I messaged my eldest son, Jackson, at 17.38: I posted my Substack. He knew I’d been writing most of the afternoon and the message swiftly bounced back with a heart emoji attached. Lazy of both of us, really, as he was only on the other side of the wall that separates my home office from the living room where he was sitting, typically multitaski­ng: watching the big TV on the wall, with his laptop on his knees and phone in his hand. A few minutes later, while tidying my digital desktop, I heard a muffled ‘Mum!’, so I got up and went in.

‘Yup?’

‘I think this is probably a very good piece but what are you saying exactly, about

Brand? I mean, I’ve skimmed it! I should probably read it properly, right?’

‘Up to you, always interested to hear your thoughts but maybe read one thing at a time?!’

‘Yeah, yeah, I’ll read it again. Look I’m going out in a bit, meeting the lads. I’m going to make a burger first, though.’

‘There’s a stubby beer in the garage fridge if you want one. I’m going to do some more work. Don’t forget I’m going to Cornwall tomorrow, leaving early.’

‘Ah, so do you want me to come back from the flat first and say goodbye?’

I’d given Jackson the keys to a nearby empty rental I owned that was between tenants, on the grounds that I didn’t want to be woken by my famously heavy-footed son and a couple of his mates coming back late. ‘Don’t be silly. You probably won’t be awake when we leave, much less back here.’ He laughed. ‘Better say goodbye now.’ We hugged.

‘Have fun,’ I said, though it was just a Tuesday night – local pub, game of pool. No biggie.

‘I will!’ said Jackson.

‘Love you,’ I said.

‘Love you, too,’ said Jackson.

He went downstairs, made a burger, drank a stubby beer and chatted with my partner, Julian. It was maybe 20 minutes later when, from my first-floor office window, I saw Jackson leaving the house. He put in his Airpods as he crunched over our short gravel drive then turned left out of the gate, on to the main road, heading down the hill to the flat.

He didn’t turn around and wave at his mum. Why would he? This wasn’t a movie. He was just a 21-year-old man at the tail end of what he’d described as ‘the perfect summer’, going out for a few hours with two of his best mates before he woke up on Wednesday morning and cracked on with the rest of his life. He had a lot of plans.

Except there wasn’t a Wednesday morning for Jackson. Because at approximat­ely 12.50am, after an unfathomab­ly random accidental fall into a void hospitalit­y space on Hastings seafront – the Courtyard, where the bars and cafés were all closed – my eldest son died instantly.

According to the toxicology report, he was neither excessivel­y drunk – he’d had about three pints – nor under the influence of drugs. It had rained and he’d bounced up on his toes, leaning too far forward over a lethally low retaining wall and... he kept going. That he was about to fall headfirst on to concrete, much less die as a result, would barely have registered. It was a freak accident made more freakish by the fact that Jackson was a First Dan black belt in karate, with the balance of a mountain goat. Nonetheles­s, the interim death certificat­e stated that the ‘precise cause of death was 1a) Comminuted depressed skull fractures with brain laceration­s. 1b) Massive head injury. 1c) Fall from height (witnessed)’. As well as being witnessed by his friends, it was all captured on CCTV.

So those are the facts, for the record.

And as well as being the end of Jackson’s

life, that was the end of my old life, too. Everything since 1.45am on Wednesday 20 September 2023 – which is when the lone policeman turned up at my door to break the news that my vividly alive 21-year-old son, the recent physics graduate who had just landed a well-paid modelling job and who had the whole of the rest of a shining life ahead of him, was dead – belongs to an entirely different other life, now consigned to the past.

My new life, a mere six months old, is however a place in which I still have two sons, only one of whom is physically alive. The other is alive inside me (where, according to an academic study from 2012, some of my sons’ cells almost certainly remain).

As I tentativel­y negotiate this liminal space, Jackson accompanie­s me, all day, every day. He may not text me emojis, nonetheles­s I feel

his energy – always very powerful in life – driving me, helping me navigate a tragedy that is dreaded by all parents. His energy helps me cope with the way this cruel and brutal loss will continue to impact the rest of my life. Which, even in these early days, I can confirm it does in every conceivabl­e way – and many inconceiva­ble ways, too.

I am only halfway through my own Year of Magical Thinking and Jackson is already an insect captured in amber; he never saw 2024, or war between Israel and Palestine. When he died, AI imagery still couldn’t render convincing fingers, Spurs were on a winning streak and Oppenheime­r – the last film we saw together – hadn’t yet won Oscars and Baftas. Meanwhile, as Studio Ghibli fans, we were both still looking forward to the release of Hayao Miyazaki’s now

Bafta- and Oscar-winning The Boy and the

Heron. I’d bought tickets but Jackson didn’t know that.

20 March 2024 (exactly six months since his death) was a day without him physically yet he is everywhere around me. It is no time since he died… yet it is all the time. I strive to deal with my loss by leaning in to the rolling tsunami of grief, as and when it suddenly hits. Allowing myself to truly feel these emotions is the painful place where I connect – reconnect – with my son. Because that’s the space in which our love still lives; we were very close in life and we’re still very close.

One of the many ways I am attempting to cope with my loss has been to create a music festival (raising money for charities supporting bereaved parents and siblings) in Jackson’s memory. As a family, we are all about music – my father was a lyricist whose words have been sung by Elvis Presley, Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Frankie Valli and many more besides – while Jackson was never happier than when he was standing in a field with his mates watching live music.

JackoFest will take place on 27 July at the De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill-on-Sea, the day before what would have been his

22nd birthday. The idea rose phoenix-like out of the ashes of a party we had already planned for 2024, celebratin­g my 60th and my youngest son’s 18th. With Jackson turning 22, we added up to 100 and had planned a multigener­ational ‘centenary’ bash in a local pub where Jackson occasional­ly worked during uni breaks. Instead, the

Marina Fountain in St Leonards-on-Sea ended up holding my son’s record-breaking (the pub’s biggest ever bar take) wake, on 14 October last year.

We have more artists still to announce – however, tickets are currently on sale for my festival of maternal love. It’s for Jackson’s brother, Rider, and all their friends, and my friends, and the boys’ wider family, and anyone else who wants to join us – in honour of the extraordin­ary young man whom it was my privilege to grow, and then once born, to get to know.

For me, it’s Jackson’s love that lives on.

And it’s that love which will continue to define the shape of the rest of the lives of his family and friends. He was fiercely loyal to us, as we are to him. We miss him and we love him, and he knows it.

He is Stardust, he is Golden.

‘HE IS AN INSECT CAPTURED IN AMBER. HE NEVER SAW 2024’

For more informatio­n and JackoFest tickets visit dlwp.com/event/jackofest. Kathryn’s fee for this article will be used to donate tickets to deserving recipients, including similarly bereaved families

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 ?? ?? Above: Jackson with his mother, Kathryn, on his 18th birthday in 2020. Opposite: at his Cardiff University graduation last summer
Above: Jackson with his mother, Kathryn, on his 18th birthday in 2020. Opposite: at his Cardiff University graduation last summer

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