Houston Chronicle

Boy’s obit in his own words: ‘See ya later, suckas!’

- By Christina Caron

Garrett Matthias, 5, thought about what his funeral would look like one day. He did not want a solemn gathering; he wanted a carnival-like atmosphere.

“Funerals are sad,” his obituary said. “I want five bouncy houses (because I’m 5), Batman and snow cones.”

When he died, he said he wanted “to be burned” and “made into a tree so I can live in it when I’m a gorilla.”

And after he died? “I am going to be a gorilla and throw poo at Daddy!”

He shared all of this — and much more — in conversati­ons with his parents over about 10 months battling a rare form of cancer.

What he did not know was that his words would live on, compiled into an obituary that has been widely shared.

His illness started at the end of August, when Garrett was 4.

“He came home from preschool one day and it looked like he had a stroke,” Garrett’s mother, Emilie Matthias, said Saturday. “The left side of his face looked like it was paralyzed when he smiled.”

After consultati­ons with different doctors, all of whom said Garrett had Bell’s palsy, he saw one who suspected something far different. In September, a biopsy revealed he had rhabdomyos­arcoma, a cancer that attacked his temporal bone and inner ear, rendering it inoperable.

‘Forever a prankster’

The Matthias family — Garrett; Emilie; her husband, Ryan; and their daughter, Delphina — traveled from their home in Van Meter, Iowa, to seek treatment in Iowa City. It was supposed to include 54 weeks of chemothera­py and six weeks of radiation.

The sarcoma hadn’t yet spread to his brain.

He was “forever a prankster” who teased the doctors and nurses with whoopee cushions and clothes pins he would sneak onto their clothes, his obituary said.

And when someone told him, “See ya later, alligator,” he would catch them off guard with “See ya later, suckas!”

His obituary reflected a blend of his boyhood and the treatments he endured. In a section titled “The things I love the most,” it said: “Playing with my sister, my blue bunny, thrash metal, Legos, my day care friends, Batman and when they put me to sleep before they access my port.”

He was known around the hospital as “Garrett Underpants” because he hated wearing pants or shorts, Emilie Matthias said. One day, he said he would be a profession­al boxer, and his name would be “The Great Garrett Underpants.”

But after more than 30 weeks of chemothera­py, Garrett developed headaches so debilitati­ng that he could not speak.

“It had migrated from the temporal bone to the lining of his brain, which is what regulates the spinal fluid,” Matthias said. “At that point they came and told us that his cancer was treatment-resistant.”

Asgardian ceremony

They had planned to travel to Florida through the Make-A-Wish Foundation, but Garrett’s illness was too severe, so he instead visited the Omaha Zoo in June.

“He got to interact with the gorillas, and he had a great time,” his mother said.

But the trip was cut short.

“We went to the zoo on Friday morning and by Friday night he couldn’t walk,” she said, adding that the cancer had spread to his spinal cord.

He died July 6. Garrett once told his parents that his favorite superheroe­s were Batman, Thor, Iron Man, the Hulk and Cyborg.

In that vein, his family honored Garrett on Saturday night with a symbolic Asgardian burial ceremony — a nod to a scene from the movie “Thor: The Dark World.”

Garrett’s grandfathe­r, Fred Krueger, built a 2foot-long ceremonial boat adorned with a shield that Garrett got at a Renaissanc­e festival, Matthias said. The boat was set afloat on a neighbor’s pond, while an archer shoots a burning arrow into the sky.

And yes, there were snow cones. And bouncy houses, as well as fireworks, cotton candy, face painting and spin art.

 ?? Emilie Matthias via AP ?? Garret Matthias, 5, received treatment for a rare cancer in Iowa.
Emilie Matthias via AP Garret Matthias, 5, received treatment for a rare cancer in Iowa.

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