In college I worked one summer at a funeral home. Morbid? Maybe, but I wanted to be around the death process to understand, not fear it.
Sometimes though things, places, events — they change you, change the way you think, change the way you see and feel life. That summer changed me, one night in particular.
I had two jobs that college summer. As soon as I finished my maintenance job, I’d shower, put on my suit and rush to the 2nd job at the funeral home.
It was a visitation that night, just one body, with few visitors expected. The funeral home owner told me he and his family were leaving town for a short trip, threw me the keys and told me to lock up after everyone left that night.
No one was there, so I went into the state room and was shocked to see the tiny casket. Inside was a beautiful, eight month old baby girl.
I swallowed, hard.
The owner was right, few came. The family was poor and had very little social support. Very graciously, the owner had provided almost everything free of charge for the family in such a time of grief.
There were only three people there the entire evening, the mother, grandmother and me. That was it. No one else. No family. No friends. No visitors.
I sat outside the state room door and listened to the mother grieve. There is such a ripping emotion, a feeling of deep hollowness in the sound of a mother grieving a lost child.
Eleven days earlier a horse had fallen on the lady’s husband. He’d had three operations on his leg in nine days and was in the hospital ICU. It was still nip and tuck for him.
In the midst of the stress and going back and forth to the hospital, the unthinkable happened.
The eight month old baby girl had an undiscovered blood disorder. Within twenty-fours of the first symptoms, the baby’s kidneys unexpectedly failed. One floor under where her daddy was being treated, she died.
Now, at the funeral home visitation the night before her funeral, I sat near the main entrance. From where I sat, I could see the mother and grandmother on a couch directly across the room from the little casket.
The baby girl, even in her permanent sleep, was adorable. She had on a little dress and a small pink and white bonnet. She looked more like a lifelike doll in a storefront window than a lifeless child.
The empty armed mother and grandmother sat nearly two hours quietly talking in the state room. They went to a back patio for a few minutes before wandering back into the state room.
That’s when the mother moved to the tiny casket. She reached for a music box sitting beside the little girl, wound it, and carefully placed it back in the coffin beside her daughter.
Maybe because it had been so quiet for two hours, but the soft song chiming from the music box shattered the silence like boulders at a glass factory.
Without moving a muscle, the mother stood next to her child watching her baby sleep.
The music box played Brahm’s Lullaby. With each ring of a note, the music played in the ears while the words sang in the head:
“Go to sleep. Go to sleep. Go to sleep my dear baby. Close your eyes, Start to yawn, Pleasant dreams until dawn.”
The mother bent down and whispered something intended only for her child. The heart broken mother touched the small bonnet with trembling fingers as the song continued:
“Go to sleep. Go to sleep. Go to sleep my dear baby. Close your eyes, Start to yawn, Pleasant dreams until dawn…”
The grandmother joined the mom at the casket and fresh tears from a bottomless well of grief flowed.
The music box, ever so timely, played down its song.
Slower and slower, softer and softer, the music box wound down.
“Go to sleeep. Goo too sleeeep. Gooo tooo sleeeeep myyyy.”
The music hushed.
The baby slept.
The silence screamed.
The two women fell in each other’s arms uncontrollably sobbing, mourning from the deepest of the deep.
Changed. Forever, changed.
I never sang Brahm’s Lullaby to my own children. I still can’t hear it without thinking of this baby girl, who would now be 34 years old.
I don’t know how her family ended up dealing with everything, how long it was before stormy darkness turned to partly cloudy days, or even what happened to the little girl’s father.
And I’m not sure how, but somehow the tears that fell on the carpet that night eventually began to dry.
Even so, some tears never dry completely.
Wow, truly an emotional experience. You have a big heart sir, and a wonderful way with words to prove it. Great post and great storytelling Jeff.
(side note- I noticed this (to her child, bu what, I don’t know) a missing t?
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Ah! Appreciate it! Need you to proof all my scribblings! Thank you for the encouragement, Ash!
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Lol, no sweat bud. That was a great read. And how many times have I gone back and went Doh! ?
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Lol…yes, “Doh!” is every time I go back and see what I read right over!!!
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Oh my. You weave a beautiful blanket with words. Totally lost it when her mother wound up the music box. My precious Dad used to give me a music box every year until I became too “old” for them. I only have one now, casualties of various house moves and accidents.
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Then you understand the power of music for a little box wound up by one’s own hand. It rings out music in a unique, special way!! And thank you for your kind words!!!!
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I can’t imagine the loss of a child. One would think that your heart would have to stop beating. I remember when I was about six years old I was playing in the lane behind our apartment building with a small group of boys around the same age when a car came out of no where and hit a little boy named Joey and sent him flying a good distance down the lane. His older sister was there and I’ll never forget her screaming his name. Little Joey never knew what hit him and he was dead before he hit the ground. Hearing her scream his name has never left me. Some things are so hard to fathom. Blessings.
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Bruce, some things like that, hearing Joey’s sister scream his name, never leaves. It is hard to fathom losing a child. It just seems that children should always outlive their parents. May we never have to find out what that’s like!!
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Ya, not sure if I could get through that one. I don’t even like thinking about it. Blessing buddy.
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You too friend!
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Holy frijoles, someone is cutting onions in the room I am currently sitting in. Whew! So emotional. Well written, Jeff and what an experience. Thanks for sharing!
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Thanks so much, Robyn! I can’t imagine the pain of losing a child at all, much less a small baby!
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Thank you for sharing this.
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Thank you, sir!!
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Beautiful story!
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Thank you!
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This is a heart wrenching story of grief and the pain of loosing a child. The loss of an innocent little being, with a life so short, is just heartbreaking to me. You have told it beautifully Jeff.
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Thank you, Anne….I honestly wish this is one story I hadn’t seen.
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Wow Jeff!
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Thank you sir!
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Beautiful life story, Jeff. The music box is so very special. I think that is something that I would also do. I’ve played, sung and hummed Brahm’s Lullaby more times than I can count over the years when my two were that young. I’ve also collected music boxes that represent special times over the years. Thank you once again for such lovely word art.
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Thank you, as always, Kathy for your kindness! I hope you never have to use on of those music boxes like that, my friend!
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Silence screamed..!!
Very well used words!
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Thank you!
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Oh, my! I don’t even have the words to say how beautiful this is. ❤️
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Wow! Appreciate the kindness, Irene! Hard subject!
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I shouldn’t have read your post. Thank you for sharing.
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Anne, I am sorry if this was a trigger or something that has a negative effect on you…. Jeff
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No need to be sorry. It’s just so sad, and yet surely something worth sharing.
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Powerful! Beautiful! Passionate! Compassionate!
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😊 Many thanks, Sue!
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Beautifully written, Jeff. Thanks for sharing this intense memory with us.
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Thank you, Des! Appreciate it!
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Beautiful story, and so sad. I think you’ve captured the depth of the mother’s, and grandmother’s grief. My heart hurts for those unknown ladies.
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😁 Thank you, Candace! Says a lot about you too to feel so deeply for these ladies.
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It was difficult to read this because my husband and I lost our first…stillborn. It brought the grief back, even after 25 years. I can’t even begin to imagine the grief of having cared for your child for 8 months and then, losing that child. Beautiful and tender treatment of this story of grief, Jeff. You are a powerful writer! Your posts always touch my heart…either through laughter or tears. I love that! 🙂
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You are very kind, Lynn. I’m so sorry you lost your firstborn. My oldest daughter and her husband lost Emitte, their first, who was also stillborn. We had three hours to hold him after the delivery. Bitter sweet. I look forward to meeting Emitte, and trust that my dad met him there in heaven and showed him around from day one. Maybe your child and my grandson have met! I like that thought, but yet that kind of grief, as you well know Lynn, never leaves. It dulls over time, but never leaves. Until we see them again…
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All the comments above say everything I feel, your words touch our hearts, our minds. I feel like I am present in that room as I read your words.
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Thank you, Sandra!
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Powerful imagery. How often little unexpected events stay with us our entire life.
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True! Very true.
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Beautifully written Jeff. As a parent that lost an adult child, I can say the tears never really dry up. It’s like the ebb and flow of the tide. Some days are stormy and other days are sunny. You have such a gift with your writing. This was very touching.
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Thank you for your kind words, Debra! I think of y’all often. Maybe the sunny days will one day outweigh the dark ones! Peace to you!
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