Seventeen has always been a significant number in the life of our family. We have had many births, deaths, and significant events involving the number. Your Grandpa went to Vietnam on a 17 and returned on a 17. My Grandpa died on a 17. Your dad was born on a 17 as was I and your sister. Emerson was supposed to be born on a 17 but he came early. When your Grandpa entered the hospital for the last time his room number was 4317. We took you to the hospital for the last time on a 17.
I am not necessarily superstitious but that number follows me. It is not always good or bad, just significant.
There are no words to express the heaviness of my heart when the funeral home handed me your death certificate. No parent should ever be given one. But there I was with Steve ever faithfully standing beside me. I put it in a folder and we came home.
Because of the licensing with the state I had to send them a copy. As I pulled it off the scanner box 17 jumped out at me.
I am exceedingly grateful for the person responsible for filling in box 17 because it is absolutely perfect.
Usual or last occupation: Loving People
You took your job seriously and were exemplary at it. Your salary is measured in a currency more valuable than anything on earth. It is eternal and immeasurable.

When the world gets quiet the tears get loud. As I lay in bed last they came faithfully. Steve held me as I spoke about the intensity of your love for me and mine for you. How when we were apart each of us couldn’t wait to get back to the other. We were obsessed with each other. It kills me that I have to wait now to get back to you but my hope, my faith assures me I will.
You were the absolute best at loving people. You did it intensely, easily, unconditionally. You loved with a reckless abandon and purity with no selfish motivation. You were my daily example of how God intends us to love one another and you, my sweet boy, did it with no strain. It is was just who you were.
When a loved one dies there are platitudes used to make the grieving feel better. Some feel like a Band-Aid on a deep jugular gash but they do hold truth.
The truth is your love didn’t die because you did. And you do live in the hearts of those blessed enough to have been in the radiance of it. They are different people and love more vibrantly because of what you deposited into them. The full measure we will never know as it ripples on and on and on.
I am exerting what little energy I have to grieve in a healing way. When I become panicked because you died I take a deep breath and remind myself you lived. When my mind replays the hospital trauma I introduce these images into my mind. I am processing the grief but I am also determined to not get stuck here.
Box seventeen is helping me do just that.














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