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Celebrating Jonathan
by Amy
Jaffe Barzach
Advocate
for Children of All Abilities, West Hartford, Connecticut
From the
book The Right Words at the Right Time (V2) - ed. by Marlo Thomas
I'd given up on all the usual words, now I was searching for the magic
ones -- words that would make the pain go away. It was just after New
Year's when I lost Jonathan, my baby son, to spinal muscular atrophy.
And I
was stuck. Everything I read in books and magazines made sense, but
nothing took the pain away.
Just before Jonathan died, I had sat with him in the hospital, his
little hand clasped in mine, his three-year-old brother, Daniel,
entertaining us with songs on his guitar.
A copy
of Parade magazine was on the table. On the cover were the words, Deal
With Loss by Celebrating Life. The meaning struck a chord in me, but
its full impact was yet to come.
Jonathan died three days later. The despair that followed was
unbearable; the days were difficult, the nights were worse. Searching
for comfort, I came across a passage in The Prophet by Khalil Gibran
that talked about celebrating life as a way of dealing with loss.
I
looked up from my book and saw the little memorial card my husband had
made for me, which included a picture of Jonathan and the words from
the Parade cover, laminated together.
This time, the words took a grip on me and wouldn't let go. I began to
cry uncontrollably; but the tears felt different, like a new beginning.
It was as if the darkness that had surrounded me for the past few
months had lifted.
Deal with loss by celebrating life.
I remembered a sunny day shortly before Jonathan had become ill. I had
taken him and Daniel to a playground, and while Daniel frolicked, I
rocked Jonathan in his carriage.
Suddenly,
I noticed a little girl sitting in a wheelchair on the sidewalk, sadly
watching the other children. Her fingers tightly gripped the spokes of
her wheelchair; her little chin quivered as she tried to hold back her
tears.
She
longed to be joining the other children at play, but with no accessible
path to the equipment, she couldn't get close. And even if she could,
there was nothing for her to do. Not one part of the playground was
available to a child in a wheelchair.
The image of that little girl sitting on the sidelines continued to
haunt me while Jonathan was struggling for life in the hospital. Now
here I was at my desk, thinking about how to celebrate Jonathan's life.
I had my answer.
What if I built a playground where all children could play? Wouldn't
that be a true celebration of life?
The idea stayed with me through the next few months, as I struggled to
find the strength and courage to begin the work. I started slowly,
enlisting the help of my family; I recruited volunteers -- more than
one thousand of them.
My
husband made little memorial cards, just like the one he'd made for me,
for our entire family. We carried them with us everywhere, and to this
day, I still find them unexpectedly in the pockets of something I am
wearing.
But as April 1st of that year approached -- what would have been
Jonathan's first birthday -- I was once again plunged into despair. I'd
see other babies who looked about a year old and my heart would break
all over again. I longed for Jonathan.
Rather than run from the date, my husband Peter and I decided to have a
party on Jonathan's birthday at the local hospital. We arranged for a
storyteller and a singer to entertain the children. We spent the day
crying tears of joy and tears of sadness.
We celebrated the day. And we survived the day.
Eighteen months from the day I'd first read those insightful words, we
opened our special playground. We called it Jonathan's Dream.
The
moment I saw children in wheelchairs rolling up the ramp to the
equipment, I was overwhelmed with tears of happiness.
Here were kids of all abilities, playing and learning together.
They were celebrating life. And I was celebrating Jonathan.
from the book The
Right Words at the Right Time
Volume 2 by Marlo Thomas
Published
by Atria; April 2006
For more information, visit www.rightwordsbooks.com
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