The Star Malaysia - Star2

A painful gaping void

The loss of a child is a death out of order, leaving parents with incredible sorrow.

- By MArY NIEDErBErG­Er

SPOUSES who have lost their partners are widows and widowers. Children who have lost their parents are orphans. But there is no term to describe a parent who has lost a child.

Locally, some of those parents gather at a church each month to share memories of their children and sorrow that only they can understand.

Others soldier on alone or lean on family, friends or faith, sometimes founding charities, scholarshi­ps or anti- violence groups to keep alive the spirit of their loved one.

Whatever the circumstan­ce of their children’s passing, whatever the ways in which they chose to grieve, the parents share a common, painful void. The death of a child steals away the past, present and future.

“You always have plans for your kids. We certainly fill our lives with hope. When our child is gone, that hope goes away,” said Bob Boyle, whose daughter Kelly was killed in a car accident at age 22 in 1994.

Nancy Kirkwood mourns “not being able to see, hear or speak” with daughter Tess Senay Raynovich, 20, who died in a car accident in 2012 not far from her home.

“When you lose your child, when a young person dies, there is so much that is lost. Much pain is caused by thinking of everything she is not getting to do, never having a baby, just so much ... .,” Kirkwood said. “This is an incredible sorrow and I have to learn how to live with that.”

An aspiring artist, Raynovich was getting ready to move to a ranch in Montana where she planned teach art to children when she died.

“Everything is marked by that. Her friends graduated from college, her cousins got married. All of these things are happening without Tess and that seems impossible,” Kirkwood said.

Disruption of the expected natural order and helplessne­ss felt by not being able to protect or save their offspring bring a heartache that can be fathomed only by others who have experience­d it, the parents say.

“It’s a lifelong process. You are going to be dealing with it for the rest of your life,” said Valerie Dixon, who lost her only son, Robert, 22, in a street shooting in June 2001.

Lori Malazich is a bereavemen­t coordinato­r at UPMC Children’s Hospital who follows up with families after the death of the child.

“Parents experience this pro- found sadness and it happens out of order. Parents have this belief that they are protectors, that we can somehow protect our kids,” Malazich said.

Guilt over not protecting a child exists even when an illness takes a child’s life and “even when a medical profession­al says ‘ There is nothing you could have done or not done,’” Malazich said.

The first year after a child’s death is torture as parents mark the first birthday, first Christmas, first Mother’s Day or Father’s Day without their child.

The second year is worse. “That’s when it really sinks in they are gone,” Boyle said.

And it’s not always the major events that pack the hardest punch.

For Dixon it was grocery shopping after her son’s death and spotting Quaker oatmeal with apples and cinnamon on the shelf. “I broke down right there in the store. I always bought that for him,” she said.

Anger and questionin­g of religious faith is common following the loss of a child. So is asking the question, “Why us?” Malazich said.

“Who is going to give me the answers on what happened and how to get through it,” questioned David Fabus, whose son Joey, eight, died from a rare brain tumor in January 2015. It was the second time the Fabus family lost a child. Their 15- month- old daughter died in 1997 from a rare kidney disease.

“It’s devastatin­g to think that two of your six children are being taken away from you,” Fabus said. “I have a lot of questions for God, if he does exist.”

For those who seek support in group meetings, The Compassion­ate Friends holds meetings one Sunday a month for families who want to share their experience­s or just sit and listen.

Telling the story of how their children died and talking about the

 ??  ?? compassion­ate Friends gather parents dealing with the loss of their children, and seek to offer some measure of comfort with rituals such as the release of butterflie­s. — TNS
compassion­ate Friends gather parents dealing with the loss of their children, and seek to offer some measure of comfort with rituals such as the release of butterflie­s. — TNS

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