Category Archives: Deep thoughts

Of Firefly, Farewells, and the Good of the One

Hey, everyone. This is a blog post I had hoped I would never have to write, and it’s surreal, bordering on unreality, that I’ve sat down to put these words together at all. I lost my best friend, Travis, less than a week ago at the time of this writing. Just writing that sentence feels like I’ve dipped my heart in liquid nitrogen and then shattered it against the floor.

His loss was shocking for the fact that it was so unexpected. He had been having some health issues the last little while, it’s true, but no one that knew him could have guessed that he was facing a life-endangering condition. But now he’s gone, and those who knew him are left in the wake of his passing — confused, heartbroken, and stricken.

‘Nuff said.

I’ve written eulogies to people I’ve lost before on this blog, notably about my grandfather, my godmother, and my godfather. This is yet another in that series, but one that packs an emotional wallop the likes of which I’ve never been dealt before.

This post is an attempt to make sense of the world around me now. I won’t lie — this is going to be a rough one, but I hope you’ll stick with me on it. Travis is an essential part of my origin story, as you’ll see.

Who Was He?

I was an only child growing up. Thankfully, I had plenty of cousins on both sides of the family to fill that role. Travis was a cousin on my Dad’s side. He was six years my senior, and I looked up to him my entire childhood, and that never really stopped. He was a gentle person with the mind of an intellectual, the heart of a gamer, and the soul of a poet.

I admired all of those qualities about him, but others around us didn’t. We both grew up in the rural spaces of East Texas, and neither of us ever quite fit the country mold or mentality. We were eternally the puzzle pieces that didn’t quite fit the space we were granted. We loved comics and philosophy, history and science fiction/epic fantasy, literature and gaming, both of the tabletop variety and video games. The Venn diagram of our interests was very nearly a circle.

Those interests did not make us very popular with our peers at the time, however, but it didn’t matter because we were around each other enough that we knew we had a fellow geek and nerd in the other. We would sit in the backroom of our great-grandmother’s house, a place known as the Boys’ Room, and talk for hours about everything that was on our minds.

This isn’t the actual sign, but a similar one was nailed to the door of the Boys’ Room.

The irony is that most people who knew Travis would likely describe him as quiet, but let me tell you that some of the longest and most engaging conversations that I’ve ever had were with him. He had a rapier wit and no small amount of snark that he injected in these conversations that often left me laughing until my sides hurt. So, yeah, he was easily one of my favorite people on this green Earth. When I say that he’s the closest thing to a brother that I have, I want you to understand my meaning.

But even the word brother doesn’t quite cover it. I’ve known plenty of people who have actual blood siblings who were not as close as we were. We were not only a family by blood but also by choice. I was lucky enough to maintain that bond right up until the end.

Processing his loss is not going to come soon, nor will it come easily. He occupied a unique and irreplaceable role in my life. His death is a major landmark. There will always be a ‘before’ and an ‘after’ time.

The truth is that the tapestry of our lives was interwoven, and having him ripped away, stitch and seam, leaves me as ragged around the edges as the metaphor implies.

A Fanboy Education

I’ve had a lifelong love of superheroes. My first impressions of DC were shaped by Super Friends, just as my first foray into Marvel was through Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends. I watched those shows before I could read, and even though he was older than I was, Travis always watched those with me when we were together.

I can hear the theme song in my head.

While the concept of superheroes was not something he introduced me to, per se, he did spark my interest in comic books. He was the first comic collector I ever met, the first to bag and board his comics, and the one who introduced me to the deep ocean of lore that made up the DC and Marvel universes. Some of the very first comics I ever owned came from Travis. My access to comics as a kid was pretty limited, and often Travis would be the one to bring issues that I had missed when we would meet up in the Boys’ Room.

I was fortunate enough to see nearly all of the MCU movies with him. I believe the last one we saw together was Deadpool and Wolverine before some of his health issues started to take their toll, making him adverse to going to the movie theater. Streaming helped with that somewhat, and we still got to watch a number of good flicks. The last one we watched together was The Old Guard, starring Charlize Theron, just a few weeks ago. 

While the MCU has been a bit hit-or-miss the last few years, both of us were really looking forward to seeing Avengers: Doomsday. Seeing it this December is going to be really weird without him. 

All the Lasts

When someone I care about dies, I start to think about the ‘lasts’ with that person. When was the last time that I saw them, talked to them, went to dinner with them, those sorts of things. I’ve mentioned a few of them already, but here are some of the lasts with Travis:

  • Last text: A short message telling me to check with his roommate on some things related to Travis going into the hospital.
  • Last email: a listing of different doctors appointments he had in the works.
  • Last phone call: I had accidentally dialed him. He called me back to make sure everything was okay.
  • Last dinner: A trip to Longhorn Steak House after the last session of his Forgotten Realms campaign.
  • The list goes on, and on, and on…

The last in-depth conversation we had was about Firefly. The news that there might be an animated Firefly series in the works, with the original actors reprising their roles, made us both excited for a potential comeback. So, I had gone back to revisit the series, even introducing my young son to it in the process.

Travis and I talked about what the characters and setting meant to us while we waited in the doctor’s office. I told him that we had finished “Objects in Space,” the last episode of the regular series, and that we would watch Serenity soon. We weren’t sure how my son would react to the untimely deaths of Shepherd Book and Wash.

We finished up at the doctor’s office and I drove him home. I ate lunch at his house, though his stomach was not feeling well, so he didn’t join me. The last thing he said to me was that he really appreciated all my help.

That’s the problem with lasts; most of the time you don’t realize it was the last time you’ll do something. So, the last geeky conversation we had, out of the many thousands we’ve had over the years, was about a show that was gone too soon, and forever missed by those who loved it. Fitting, no?

Travis went into the hospital the very next day, and into the ICU that night. He never fully regained lucidity in the days before he died. One of the nights that I came home from sitting vigil at the hospital, we watched Serenity. When the movie came out all those years ago, the two of us had attended a sneak-peak of it, and loved it, of course.

Love keeps her in the air when she ought to fall down… tells you she’s hurting before she keens. Makes her a home.

Watching it now, I’m struck by Zoe and Mal’s last interaction in the movie. After the death of her husband, and the near dismembering of Serenity, Mal asks about the ship, but is really asking about how Zoe is grieving.

Think she’ll hold together?

To that, Zoe replies:

She’s torn up plenty, but she’ll fly true.

All the Firsts

As bittersweet as it is to remember my last interactions with Travis, I now face a universe of ‘firsts’ that happen without him present. His first birthday after he’s left us. My first birthday without him. The first holiday season without him here. That’s just the immediate stuff. The future holds all sorts of milestones, like graduations, weddings, and, yes, even funerals, where I will wish like hell that he was still here to be there for them. My first major book launch is in a little over a month, and now I won’t be able to share it with him.

Those thoughts are nearly unbearable. At times, they weigh down on me like I’m Atlas from myth, but a version of him that doesn’t have super strength, being crushed beneath the unimaginable weight.  

I feel like I’m the Variant now, in a timeline gone horribly wrong.

It’s going to be a long while, and maybe never, before I see or do something cool and don’t immediately think to let Travis know about it.

While it might be a very writer-y thing to throw into the mix here, one of the things that’s really damaging my calm is now referring to Travis in the past tense. I thought we had a good twenty or thirty years left to us. We were supposed to both go to a retirement home where we could spend our twilight years gaming without having to worry about any of the rest of it.

This wasn’t how our story was supposed to end.

The Games We Played

Speaking of stories, we made a fair few ourselves. Tabletop role-playing games, or TTRPGs, are a wonderful engine for those creating characters, stories, worldbuilding, and the like. I use those skills all the time in my books, and Travis was there as I developed them. The two of us had many grand adventures together, from the streets of Waterdeep and sands of Netheril, to the Siege of Kalaman, and the last stand at the High Clerist’s Tower, as well as so many other battles, adventures, and shining moments. He was an inventive and strategic player, whose characters often found ways to punch way above their weight.

He told me once that the first character he ever rolled up was a fighter in the Rolemaster system named Aelfred. This is when he was in college. If you’ve never played Rolemaster, it is far and away the most complicated tabletop RPG I’ve ever encountered. It does have one of the coolest skill systems that I’ve since adapted to other games. Suffice to say, if Travis could cut his teeth on that system, he was fearless at running other games.

The last character he played was a cleric named Gazpacho for a D&D 5e campaign. I was not involved in that game, unfortunately, but I was in plenty of others over the years, both as a fellow player and as a GM/DM. 

Here’s a litany of the characters that were in games that I played in or ran myself:

Francis Greenleaf and Malik the Reaver (Forgotten Realms), Korranderaythe “Kor” von Cristalvasser (Dragonlance), Laeryn Chanis, Gwaelon, the Rune Magus, and Phillipe “Flit” Ballantine (Valeriand), Alfon the Blade (RPG to Go), Jasper (Greyhawk), the Mimic (Reverse Dungeon), Faustindintal Krinkledoom the Gnome Beserker (One Shot), Tiny the Pygmy Storm Giant (One Shot), Rick Derris (Traveller), Sour Ron (7th Sea), Chuck Wagon (Werewolf the Apocalypse), Adam Adamant and Sebastian Vandergriffin (Glorantha), Gruhn and Hawk (Iron Kingdoms), Quarantine (AEOS-17), Councilor Trip (Fallout), President McKenna (Far Beyond the Stars), Derek Calderon (Star Wars), and Nevarre Nightshade (Shadow of the Dragon Queen).

Travis was also a prolific GM/DM. Here’s a similar list of campaigns that he ran where I was a participant:

Shadow World (Rolemaster), Memphis By Midnight (World of Darkness), Age of Netheril (Forgotten Realms), Angels and Devils (Forgotten Realms), Silverymoon/The North (Forgotten Realms), Game of Thrones – Past Lens (Rolemaster), Malkaziel’s Cataract (Forgotten Realms/Tenede)

In all this, I have to include this story. One of my first attempts to run a game was when I was in junior high. I created a super-simple RPG system that used only six-sided dice. It was really meant for us to play while on road trips where most of it was handled through just talking it out.

A couple of my cousins had made up characters and played for a while. They had levelled a bit and found some great magic items. At this point, I hadn’t figured out that if you introduce a new character into the party that you should start them out relatively equal to the other party members. When Travis came down from college during the summer, he made up a character named Alfon the Blade, a thief/rogue character who, rather unfortunately, only had one hit point. Travis didn’t mind, however. He was adept at playing oddball characters.

After getting kicked out of the town square for plinking on an out-of-tune harp that only had one string, I introduced him to our cousin Michael’s character, an extremely dangerous Dwarven assassin named Viper. Viper had made a reputation for himself by clearing out the local forest of several gangs of bandits singlehandedly. Understand that Michael was maybe 10-years-old at the time. Travis was 19 or 20.

So, when Viper met Alfon for the first time, Viper gave his future companion the immortal greeting of: “Why don’t you come with me to kill thieves, because thieves are easy. And if you don’t, I’ll kill you.”

I really wish I had a picture of Travis’s face in that moment. Considering that Alfon was one of those aforementioned thieves, who only had one hit point, Travis quickly agreed to join forces with Viper.

Travis told me later that Viper really knew how to make a sales pitch, the proverbial offer you couldn’t refuse.

Priceless.

The Good of the One

I cannot count the number of hours that I’ve spent talking with Travis about various intricacies and nuances of fantasy and sci-fi stories. Game of Thrones, Babylon 5, Star Wars, lots of Lord of the Rings, Dragonlance, The Avengers, Watchmen, Transformers, Dune, you name it. A love of Star Trek, however, is something that we both had in our blood even from an early age.

Spock’s axiom that “the good of the many outweighs the good of the few, or the one” is a philosophy that Travis put into practice daily. He continually put the needs of everyone else around him before his own, almost to a fault. He did not seek recognition or self-aggrandizement, but preferred to fly under the radar and be left alone.

When he went to the hospital for the last time, we saw Kirk’s reversal of that philosophy that “the good of the one outweighs the good of the many” on display. A number of folks dropped what they were doing to come and show their support for him and the family. Even more called, sent texts, or showed support through various social media. This continued even after Travis left us, and I don’t imagine it will let up anytime soon, and I’m thankful for it.

I can’t imagine trying to mourn a loss this unthinkable without the community around me. I know I will be leaning on them in the days, months, and years ahead. But to put that loss into perspective, now I know something of what Kirk would have felt when Spock died at the end of The Wrath of Khan, helpless to do anything but watch as the other one slipped away, and dumbstruck at not knowing how to process that his friend was gone.

When Leonard Nimoy passed back in 2015, a YouTuber named Melodysheep put together what I think is one of the most moving tributes to the character of Spock and by extension his relationship with Kirk. It’s also just a really good song that I will embed here. It’s worth taking a look/listen.

I definitely don’t want to paint Travis as being purely logical and without emotion, because he definitely wasn’t like that. But I was always the impulsive one, the one who rushed in where angels feared to tread. He was the cautious one, always advising me to look before I would leap, and to not make important decisions when emotions were running hot.

I’m glad I took some of those lessons to heart, but I’m not done learning from Travis yet.

On Farewells

A character flaw of mine, one which I’m very well aware of, is that I absolutely hate change. Once I get something where I like it, I want it to maintain indefinitely, but of course it never does. We live in a world that is constantly in flux. Almost always those are changes that we can do nothing about.

Losing someone I care about is the ultimate kind of change that I didn’t ask for or want. Again, I can do nothing about it now. I’m not sure what the shape of my life will look like now that he’s gone, and I’m not looking forward to finding out.

Words don’t usually fail me, but they do in this case. As raw as this account has been, it can never really do the man justice. I shall not look upon his like again.

But here I am in in the aftermath. All I can do is try to move forward, though it is tearing the heart right out of me, and try to live a life worthy of his memory and legacy. So, that’s what I’m going to do. I will honor him and the many debts that will now remain eternally in arrears.

Be at peace, Son of Gondor.

In closing, I’d like to share a bit of poetry with you. As I said, Travis had the soul of a poet. One of his favorites was The Noble Nature, which is a poem about the brevity of life and beauty. I’ll leave you with the last two lines of it, which were the last lines of the last email he ever sent me.

In small proportions we just beauties see.

And in short measures life may perfect be.      

                             —Ben Jonson. (1572-1637)


Don’t Quit Your Day Job

The title of this blog post is generally good advice — however, I have elected to do the opposite. Yes, folks, after many years of office jobs, contract positions, and corporate roles, I’m hanging up my proverbial entry badge and lanyard, and cutting the cord. Am I retiring? Far from it.

I left my full-time role earlier this month so I could focus on the things that matter most to me. Namely, my books, my games, museum and experiential writing, and my family. I did not make this decision lightly, but rest assured that when I realized what I needed to do, a feeling of calm tranquility washed over me, and the path ahead became clear.

The Moment in Question

About two weeks after I graduated from high school, my godparents took me on a trip to Grand Cayman. I’ve written previously about the two of them here and here. We were accompanied by their son, whose tendency to get up super early in the morning gave him the lifelong nickname of “Rooster.” We went SCUBA diving on this trip in some of the most beautiful waters I’ve ever been in, especially around Devil’s Grotto. This was also the time I saw a barracuda way too up close and personal, but that’s another story.  

It’s one of the most wonderful trips I’ve ever been on, together with three people I loved dearly. I remember the last few hours of that trip, I just sat under a gazebo, staring out over the brilliant turquoise and violet waters of the North Sound. I didn’t want to leave, and I think a part of me never did.

The Disney Treasure

I had always meant to go back, but could never find my way until just recently. My family went on a Disney Cruise in the Caribbean, and one of our stops was at Grand Cayman. I was on a different part of the island than the last time I stepped foot there, but the ankle-deep sand, the wind on my face, and the motion of the waves against the shore took me back to when I was a freshly minted 18-year-old.

The sad fact is that Rooster passed away when I was in college, taken way too early. I lost my godmother in 2020, and my godfather passed away almost a year ago at the time of this writing.

Now I’m the only one left who remembers that trip. To some degree this was my “Oak Tree” moment, but it was less about realizing the full scope of time in a place of history, and more about understanding that I only have so many years left to pursue my dreams with the vigor and passion they require.

Let’s just say that it brought things sharply into focus.

But How Will You Make This Work?

But Matt, I hear you saying: People don’t just quit their jobs! How will you pay your bills? How will you put gas in your car? Where will you get your protein, huh?!

First, thank you for your concern — it’s always appreciated. Second, I have been working towards this goal for some time now, trying to get things squared away and certain safeguards put in place before I could even consider making an honest go of it. All of those things had begun to align after years of preparation, culminating pretty recently. All that was left to do was to conjure up the will to finally break away, and conjure it I did, there on that beach in Grand Cayman.

Drink up, me ‘earties, yo ho!

So, here we are. This is what I do now. Sector M Games has two projects in the works, with a possible third to follow. I have decided to self-publish a series of books and short stories that I’ve been working on for a while now, while pursuing some traditional publishing routes for other books I have either finished or that are currently in production.

There are also some exciting freelance projects that I have in the works that I can’t quite talk about just yet, but there’ll be more on that as they develop. Additionally, I’ll be putting together a Sector M newsletter to keep everyone in the loop on the latest information and projects. Most importantly, I want to build up Sector M as a community that sci-fi, fantasy, and gaming enthusiasts can call home.

To that end, I need your help. I have a Patreon that’s been going for a while, and I’ve just finished a revamp of the membership tiers, so I strongly encourage you to check it out here:

SECTOR M PATREON

It’s a small community at the moment, so if you would like to get in on the ground floor and support what I do, please consider joining.

Aside from Patreon, I also have two books and two game supplements out there. If you haven’t picked up a copy of them yet, it would be a big help.

Books:

The Backwards Mask (Sci-fi)

Strange Reports from Sector M (Sci-fi/Fantasy anthology)

Game Supplements:

The Artificer’s Guide to Magic Items (5e D&D crafting guide)

The Knights of Solamnia Revisited (5e D&D for Dragonlance)

These four are just the beginning. It may take me a while to spin up some of the new projects I have in mind, especially those that I’ll need to build from the ground up, but this will be my focus moving forward. For those of you who are already supporting this effort (and you know who you are), you have my heartfelt and eternal thanks.

To those of you who haven’t yet jumped on the Sector M train (in the strictly figurative sense), I hope you will check out what I have to offer and help me build towards the future. With that in mind, I hope to see you around the Sector!

Si vales, valeo.

-Matt Carson

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Ad Astra: My Inevitable Journey to the Kennedy Space Center

As a kid, I thought that the greatest thing you could ever grow up to be was an astronaut. I know it sounds cliché, but when I was in grade school, I thought that there was no greater calling. Much of my love for science fiction stems from the science of space exploration.

There was just something about the mystique of braving the extreme dangers of outer space and coming back safely that was the ultimate in cool. Names like Aldrin, Shepard, Lovell, and even their Soviet cosmonaut counterpart, Yuri Gagarin, were the giants of my world. Let’s talk a little about why.

The Right Stuff

I believe now, as I did back then, that astronauts and what they do represent the best of us. Astronauts themselves embody peak intelligence, physical and mental discipline, courage, commitment and a willingness to push the limits of what we think is possible. On the odd chance that any astronaut, past or present, should read this blog, you are the stars of my sky. Truly. The same goes for the multitude of scientists, engineers and technical specialists that help make it all happen.

The space program, on the other hand, is the culmination of our greatest scientific, technological, and engineering efforts in an ongoing attempt to satisfy our curiosity about the universe around us — a curiosity that can never truly be satisfied. In essence, it’s our best people, doing the best work, for the greatest reason. It’s the noblest part of our humanity writ large. Yeah, I know I may be laying it on a little thick, but I really believe that.

Two Space Centers

While I’ve lived in Texas my whole life, the Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston was just far enough from where I went to school that we never went there as part of any field trips. This is the place that James Lovell was addressing when he said “Houston, we’ve had a problem here” during the Apollo 13 mission. It was only as an adult that I got to sit in the viewing room, among the original red velveteen seats overlooking Mission Control where Lovell’s message was received. I’ve been there a few times now, and I can’t help but be inspired every time I go. Houston is not exactly in my back yard, but it’s a weekend trip, like going down there to go to Texas Renaissance Festival (yes, the one from the documentary), or any of the many excellent museums there. 

The part of NASA that I had never visited until recently, however, is the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Cape Canaveral, Florida, where the Mercury and Apollo missions, just to name a few, launched from originally. Rockets still launch from there today, though now commercial rockets from Blue Origin, Space X, and others are in the lineup as well.

For me, this was the place where the rubber met the proverbial road of the space program. This was the stage where it all happened, both the towering accomplishments of Apollo 11 and the tragedy of Apollo 1. Following through on President Kennedy’s aspirations to put a man on the moon is nothing less than a triumph of the human spirit. 

Perhaps the most tangible symbol of this is the Saturn V rocket, which was key to the moon missions. If you’ve never seen one before, it’s massive. As tall as a 30-story building, taller than the Statue of Liberty, when you look at this rocket, you start to get an idea of what it took to get to the moon. The difference between the gigantic superstructure of the Saturn and the almost ridiculously small command module at the very top is unbelievable. It’s humbling to stand in the shadow of this titan and begin to understand the number of scientists, engineers, construction specialists, and other personnel it took to design and build something like that.

Now, I’m not blind to the driving forces behind the early space program and the finer points of the Space Race, but when I look up at a Saturn V, I see only humanity at its finest. It’s the same kind of feeling when I see a space shuttle. Well, the KSC has the Space Shuttle Atlantis (OV-104) on the grounds as well, and seeing it up close was a powerful experience.

It’s strange; the shuttle is both bigger and smaller than I had guessed. Still, I could only just stand there, looking at her for a long while. You can still see the pits and scars on the black tiles of her aft section, near her thrusters, made from micro-meteors. Even writing about it gives me chills.

Much like my trip to Graceland, I think I’ve been on a journey to the KSC for a very long time, long before I knew exactly why or could even find it on a map. I think my trips to the JSC and, ultimately, the KSC were inevitable, and I can’t wait to go back one day.

The Next Generation

Of course, there are any number of interactive experiences and displays scattered around the KSC, even a couple of rides you can go on that simulate space exploration. Much like the JSC in Houston, I definitely get the impression that many of the attractions are meant for school field trips and families with children.

I’m glad of that. Younger generations deserve to have an exciting and inspirational vision of the space sciences, astrophysics, and exploration the same as me. I mean, I grew up eating astronaut ice cream and drinking Tang, and I’ve never doubted for a minute just how important the space program is to all of us. Not just those of us in the United States, but all of us.

Why It’s Important

I’ve heard the arguments against it all, of course. I even understand where these arguments come from. Normally they go something like this: How can we afford to spend all that time, effort and money on space stuff when we have so many problems down here at home?

For me, that’s the wrong question, which boils down to: How can we afford not to? We can talk about the tangible things that are directly attributable to the space program like the aforementioned Tang, non-stick coating for pots and pans, and so on, but many of the advances we enjoy today, like computers, cell phones, the internet, have their roots in the pursuit of space.

But more than that, consider this: The space program is a catalyst for science and technology that isn’t war. It is a peaceful way for us to learn more about life, the universe, and everything. Space is also one of the few fronts where nations that are actively hostile on the ground can still cooperate up there.

Final Thoughts

Space is the one place where humanity can really come together for the betterment of all. At least, that’s how it’s been, and I hope it continues on that way. I know that sounds a bit pie-in-the sky, and maybe it is, but that is one of the reasons that the space program resonates so heavily with me. It’s the best of us, exploring the unknown, and uniting in a shared purpose.

And what could be more human than that? 

Thanks for reading.

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Of Obituaries and Empathy

Here’s a fact about yours truly you may not know: My writing career began at a metropolitan newspaper … as an obituary writer. I was 18, just starting out in college, and was recruited by the instructor of my Mass Communications class.

I stayed at this job for more than three years while I went to school. Once I graduated, I went into the world of marketing and advertising, where I have largely remained. Well, at my day job recently, I wrote an obituary for a prior employee who had passed away. For a moment, I dusted off that skillset of where I started out as a writer. It was a sad duty, but one I accepted, for reasons that I will get into later in this post.

While this was all on my mind, I wanted to put down in words some of the things I learned in this early role, why I ultimately left it, and why I think that obituaries and funeral services, in general, are important.

Life and Death in the Obit Department

For the most part, I was just a writer at a desk, working on a computer like everyone else, but there were additional elements that made the job emotionally challenging. We had a random number of obituaries that would come in each day, and this job taught me about deadlines. Do whatever you need to do, just make sure your copy is in by 3:00.

We would verify all the elements of an obituary with the funeral home, often just the spelling of a name that looked off, or a birthday if the one listed on the intake form didn’t match up, things like that. Most of the time, we would just call up the funeral home and speak to one of their representatives, but sometimes we would need to contact the family.

Understand that these were people who had lost a loved one a day or two prior to this call, or even that same day. They were often confused, angry and still trying to wrap their head around their loss, so we had to be very gentle with them. While we had to remain professional, everyone understood that a dose of empathy and understanding could go a long way.

Perhaps the most heartbreaking part was when they would show up to the office to deliver a photo of their loved one. They might even look fine and composed when they walked through the door. It was the moment that they handed the photo over that they almost always started crying. That act was what brought the realization of their grief to the forefront for them. It made the loss real. We had a special side room with a box of tissues and two chairs to give them space to compose themselves. I must’ve seen this scene play out dozens of times during my tenure there.

It wasn’t all bad, however. Because we dealt with dozens of names per day, there were times we started to see emerging trends in when a person was born and the theme of their name. For instance, from about 1908 to the early 1920s, it became popular to name girls after precious stones. Pearl, Emerald, Opal, and so forth. My great-grandmother, who was born in 1911, was named Ruby.

We also determined that the average age of the incoming obituaries was around 77, which was skewed every once in a while by a younger person, usually a teenager, who tragically died in a car wreck or a similar accident.

Of course there were exceptions.  

Why I Stopped

Much of what I learned about journalism in those early days drove home the idea of professional detachment, of learning and reporting the facts without getting too close as that might harm your objectivity. That wasn’t always easy when you were dealing with grieving families on a daily basis. Even when they would sometimes call up the office and yell and scream at us for getting something wrong (whether it was actually wrong or not), I knew that was just their grief talking. I still had a job to do, and I couldn’t get too wrapped up in any one case or else I simply wouldn’t be able to function in that space.

As the saying goes, it was bound to happen, and one day it did. I received an obituary for an eight-year-old boy. Any time I received an obit in my queue that was in the single digits, it warranted a second look, just to make sure that neither the family nor the funeral home had left out a digit.

This one came with the photo, an Olan Mills portrait of the kid. And let me tell you, this photo was so good that it looked like one that might come with a wallet or a blank picture frame. He had a big smile on his face like he was about to burst out laughing, a smile that was reflected in his eyes. He just looked so full of life. I was immediately saddened just by seeing this boy who should’ve still been alive, but wasn’t. My professional detachment took a major hit. All through the day, I was haunted by the thought of this boy. Often, the cause of death wasn’t reported to us, so I never found out what had taken him.

As I worked through this obituary, I found that there was some inconsistency in the information that was provided. For the life of me, I don’t remember what it was, perhaps a family member’s name that looked misspelled or a mismatch between the day of the week for services and the day of the month. I called the funeral home, but no one picked up. Standard procedure was to then call the family. This boy had lived with his family in Alaska, so I dialed the number.

This was long enough ago that folks still had answering machines. Well, guess whose voice greeted me, inviting me to leave my name and number after the beep? I sat there at my desk, looking down at his photo while that boy’s voice spoke to me on the phone, and his voice exactly matched his photo. My detachment shattered at that point. I can’t remember now if I even left a message. I likely did, but it was suddenly my turn to use the side room to try to compose myself.

I never looked at the job the same way again. Sometimes in the hustle to meet deadlines, the names and dates and associations all blurred together. Sometimes you stopped seeing them as people and viewed them as just line items on a list, as tasks that needed to be completed. This little boy stopped me in my tracks, giving me a sharp reminder that each name was attached to a family that was morning their loss. But how could something as simple as an obituary encapsulate the fullness and nuance of someone’s life? The truth was it couldn’t.

It wouldn’t.

It shouldn’t. 

I limped along in this job for another few months, but I knew I was done. I went to work for a local phone company, and while there were a few opportunities for me to come back to the obit department along the way, I never did.   

Why They Are Important

Obituaries may be a flawed and limited way to mark someone’s passing, but time and reflection have changed my attitudes toward them. The same goes with funerals and memorial services. They are sad affairs, of course, but they help us frame the loss in our minds when everything seems in chaos. They are a necessary step to help us mourn and begin to heal.

“This is where we part.”

When I said earlier that I hadn’t written an obituary in a while, that wasn’t precisely true. What I meant was a formal obituary, one where I didn’t know the individual personally. The fact is that I have been writing obituaries of a kind right here on this blog, though they are a far cry from what I did at the newspaper. In these, my detachment had completely gone out the airlock, and rightfully so. These were people that I loved, that I still love, whose loss devastated me, and I still wrestle with their loss. (You can find them here, here, and here.)

Obituaries, like funerals, are for the living. While they can help us get back on the proverbial horse, they have another function, one that I think is the most important: It’s how we remember them. When someone is gone, that’s one of the greatest honors that one human can do for another — simply to remember them fondly.

A Note On Empathy

Of course, I couldn’t let a heavy topic like this go by without some sort of geeky reference, so here it is. In The Lord of the Rings, Gandalf was an angelic being known as a maiar.Other powerful figures in the story, such as Saruman and Sauron, were part of this same group. Each of the maiar were at some point apprenticed to one of the valar, much more powerful beings that were effectively gods. In Gandalf’s case, he had served Nienna, the vala whose portfolio was grief and sadness. She continually wept for all the pain in Arda, even for things that had not yet come to pass. It’s thought that the reason Gandalf understood empathy and pity so well was because of this affiliation.

With that in mind, I’m a big proponent of the adage that we should always be kind to people because we never know what war they’re secretly fighting that we know nothing about. Our friends, our family, our co-workers may be going through some seriously emotional stuff, and we may never be aware of it. Perhaps a small kindness from you is what helps someone who is struggling to get through their day. Having been in various states of mourning for more than a year now, I know this to be true.

Yes, it’s easy to be cynical about this, especially with all that is going on around us, and it seems like it’s everyone for themselves. I’ve noticed a quote from Elon Musk that’s been floating around on Twitter these days. There are a few variations, but they all more or less come down to this:

“The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.”

I’m not sure that I could disagree with this statement more. I think that it’s a lack of empathy that is the root cause of much of our suffering, and the overwhelming majority of our problems. Our worst vices, our inhumanity to each other, all stem from a lack of empathy. So, in a world where we could choose to have more or less of it, I would choose more every time.

I think that’s what makes us fundamentally human.

Thanks for reading.

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