By Alan Zendell
As we get older we all live
with certain realities. Our ranks will
thin, we’ll lose friends and loved ones, and eventually it will be our
turn. We all know it’s true, but we
generally don’t think about it unless we have to.
I lost my brother in
October. I wasn’t supposed to − he was only sixty-five,
four years younger than I am – but one night, without
warning, he died in his sleep. I’m the
calm collected one, or so everyone thinks. My baby sister (I always think of her that
way) was beside herself with grief. But
neither of us realized how difficult it would be. The next night, one of our favorite aunts
died in Fort Lauderdale.
My sister, in New York, and
I, in Maryland, had to arrange a funeral in Orlando by telephone and the funeral
home lived up to its industry’s reputation for vulturism. They took full advantage of us to the tune of
$13,500, and then conducted the funeral with no respect for the family and
friends. My seventeen-year-old nephew
was devastated by the cold insensitivity with which his father’s memory was
treated.
It was an awful
time. Hurricane Sandy howled, and we
felt overwhelmed by our brother’s death and the total disarray he left behind. We plagued ourselves with questions: was
there anything we could have done to avert this tragedy, any way we could have
saved him? And then the final straw, the
crushing responsibility for a nephew we barely knew and a niece we knew not at
all who looked to us for solace.
Drowning in
self-pity, I looked around and found myself surrounded by people who’d flown
from all over the country to be there with us − spouses, sons, daughters, and
cousins all rallying around us. I really
have the most incredible family! They
buoyed and sustained us like a warm, amniotic fluid. Se we embraced our new nephew and niece, and
saw the beginning of rebirth in their eyes.
Out of the ashes of tragedy rose the beginning of renewal.
We all flew home
through Sandy and she caught up with us again on her way north. Through all her grief my sister lived without
power for a week while I gradually got in touch with the enormity of my own. I slept badly, and I was listless and edgy, all
symptoms of deep depression. But Thanksgiving
was coming, and everyone who’d been in Orlando was going to be together again,
including others who couldn’t attend the funeral. I’m not usually very good at asking for help,
but I stood to tell them all how much their presence had restored me.
Fate wasn’t done
with me yet, however, and in December, I lost another person, a wonderful woman
who’d been like a surrogate parent to my wife and me for more than forty
years. But though we’ll miss her, by the
time of her passing we’d learned about the cycle of life.
On December 5th,
my first grandchild entered the world.
This beautiful, sweet boy has been the healing balm we all needed. Life is good.
I’d
like to introduce you all to Nathaniel Zendell, aged one month. Say, “Hi,” Nate
Alan spent more than
thirty years as a scientist, aerospace engineer, software consultant, database
developer, and government analyst, writing really boring stuff like proposals, technical
papers, reports, business letters, and policy memoranda. But trapped inside him all that time were
stories that needed telling and ideas that needed expression, so with
encouragement and cajoling from a loving baby sister he plunged into fiction.
Since then, he has written
mostly science and extrapolative fiction, the genre he loved since he was
nine. But his stories are about more
than aliens and technical marvels. He
creates strong, three-dimensional characters a reader can care about, because it’s
people and the way they live and love that are important. It’s the things they believe in and how much
they’re willing to invest to preserve them that make a story worth
telling. It’s convincing interactions
and well-researched credible plots that make a story worth reading.
And, of course, like any
writer, Alan loves having an audience.
10 comments:
Alan, Your story touched my heart. I lost my brother when he was only 61, and it still seems it was way too soon. I felt for you and your family as I read one trauma after another at such a sad time. But we do survive, don't we. Your story reminded me that even with our suffering, we are given the strength we need when we need it.
God bless you and yours.
A heartwarming story, indeed, Alan. My brother passed away ten days after I submitted my second manuscript, Rails of Freedom, which I had already dedicated to him. I was terribly sad that he didn't get to read it when it released last December. But God always provides the strength to endure and heal.
Hello Nate! And welcome.
KP
Thank you for sharing, Alan, and what a wonderful testament to family. God bless you and yours!
Great post, Alan. Heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time.
Nate so sorry for your losses. My heart bleeds for you and truly hope little Nathaniel will continue to be a healing to your soul and joy to your life. God bless you!
Thank you for sharing your story, Alan, for the glimpse of your wonderful family, and for introducing us to your adorable grandson!
Your books sound like the type I would love to delve into...someday, when I get time to just relax and read again!
Marylin, Donna, Linda, and Caroline -- Thank you for your empathy and understanding. Your responses make my own feeling more real.
Nate says hi, Kevin.
Patti - Thank you. I tried contacting you from your website but the link page seems broken.
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