Royal Oak Tribune

‘I miss mommy’: Families shattered by COVID forge new paths

- ByMatt Sedensky, Kelli Kennedy and David Crary

Just four months had passed since Ramon Ramirez buried his wife and now, here he was, hospitaliz­ed himself with COVID-19. The prognosis was dire, and the fate of his younger children consumed him. Before ending his final video call with his oldest, a 29-year- old single mother of two, he had one final request: “Take care of your brothers.”

Before long, he was added to the rolls of the pandemic’s dead, and his daughter, Marlene Torres, was handed the crushing task of making good on her promise. Overnight, her home ballooned, with her four siblings, ages 11 to 19, joining her own two children, 2 and 8.

The emotional and financial demands are so overwhelmi­ng that Torres finds herself pleading to the heavens. “Please help me,” she begs her parents. “Guide me.”

As the U. S. approaches the milestone of 200,000 pandemic deaths, the pain repeats: An Ohio boy, too young forwords of his own, who plants a kiss on a photo of his dead mother. A New Jersey toddler, months ago the center of a joyous, bal

loon-filled birthday, now in therapy over the loss of her father. Three siblings who lost both mom and dad, thrusting the oldest child, a 21 year old, into the role of parent to his sisters.

With eight in 10 American virus victims age 65 and older, it’s easy to view the young as having been spared itswrath. But among the dead are an untold number of parents who’ve left behind children that constitute another kind of victim.

Micah Terry, 11, of Clin

ton Township, Michigan, misses seeing his dad at his karate classes, stopping by his father’s workplace, and sneaking in chicken nuggets with him at the movies. At his saddest points, he talks about him all day. But his brother, 16-year- old Joshua, grows quiet when the grief hits, channeling his feelings through the piano, which he learned to play from his father.

“My dad was my best friend,” Joshua says about Marshall Terry III, who died in April. “My goal is to

make him proud while he watches from heaven.”

In Waldwick, New Jersey, Pamela Addison’s 10-month- old son Graeme is bubbly and doesn’t seem to notice his father is missing, but it’s different for her daughter, Elsie. Addison sees the tot’s last truly happy day as her birthday in March, when Papa bought balloons and the virus seemed a distant threat.

Martin Addison was dead a month later at 44; today, Elsie, at the tender age of 2, is in grief counseling to handle it all.

“She’s having a difficult time adjusting to the fact he’s not coming home,” Addison says.

Four- year- old Zavion and 2-year- old Jazzmyn have been taken in by siblings after the death of their mother, 50-year- old Lunisol Guzman of Newark, New Jersey, who had adopted them when she was in her 40s. The oldest of her other three children, Katherine and Jennifer Guzman, swiftly decided to seek guardiansh­ip.

“These kids are our family,” Katherine said. “For us, it was a no-brainer.”

She says that Zavion and Jazzmyn are mostly resilient, but occasional­ly utter the same simple, heartbreak­ing sentence: “I miss mommy.”

No authoritat­ive count of parents of minors lost to the coronaviru­s has been tallied, but it appears certain to run into the thousands in the U.S. Some children are now landing in the homes of grandparen­ts like Anadelia Diaz, whose 29-year- old daughter, a single mother of three, died of COVID-19.

“I don’t call it a burden,” says Diaz, of Lake Worth, Florida. “It’s unconditio­nal love.”

Her 15-year-old grandson has long lived with her, but Diaz feels like a new mother again, aching from racing after two little ones — one 18 months old, another a year older — in a yard now dotted with a swing set and a kiddie pool.

She and her husband once dreamed of a vacation in Alaska; now she’s had to stop working as a housekeepe­r and even a trip to the grocery store is an ordeal. The toddlers were used to sharing one room with their mother and, striving not to disrupt their routine even more, Diaz now sleeps in her den with them, where they wake each morning to a big picture of their mother on thewall.

Losing a daughter felt like losing part of herself. Her daughter’s memory is what keeps Diaz going. She turned 56 the day she buried Samantha, and she prayed she could survive to see the children through to adulthood.

“All I ask God is for our health and for strength, nothing else,” she says.

Stepping in for those who’ve died can be uncertain terrain.

After Ramath Mzpeh Warith and Sierra Warith married and had their first child, Ramath Jr., they settled on a division of labor: Momwould focus on classes to become an ophthalmol­ogic assistant and handle most childcare responsibi­lities. Dad would work late as a Cleveland bus driver to support them.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joelle Wright-Terry poses with her sons Joshua and Micah in Clinton Township. “My dad was my best friend,” Joshua says about Marshall Terry III, who died in April from symptoms of coronaviru­s. “My goal is to make him proud while he watches from heaven.”
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joelle Wright-Terry poses with her sons Joshua and Micah in Clinton Township. “My dad was my best friend,” Joshua says about Marshall Terry III, who died in April from symptoms of coronaviru­s. “My goal is to make him proud while he watches from heaven.”

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