Errol Milner Clifford 2006-2009

Errol Milner Clifford was born with a significant heart defect and a cognitive disability that prevented him from walking or talking. As we grieved the child we had anticipated, Errol’s full-bodied smile and irrepressible laugh turned our sorrow into joy, and taught us that many of the best things in life are unexpected. Inspired by Errol’s delightful spirit, friends, family, and neighbors rallied to support our family’s significant emotional, physical, and financial needs, through countless acts of selfless generosity. When Errol’s courageous heart finally failed him on December 23, 2009 we were left numb with grief. In these dark hours we listen hopefully for the echoes of Errol’s brilliant laugh. This blog is the story (starting from present and working back to Errol's birth) of the life and times of the amazing Errol Clifford.


Friday, October 02, 2009

Between Tears and Laughter

I’ve been tugged back and forth between tears and laughter today.

As I drove the boys to school this morning we saw an ambulance’s flashing lights ahead. We slowed and craned our necks to see paramedics on the side of the road crouched over a fifty-something man, compressing his chest, pumping oxygen into his lungs.

“That’s bad.” I said to the boys.
“Why do they have a mask on his face?” Owen asked
“He can’t breathe. He’s in big trouble. The mask will help him.”

As the man’s life slipped away, Owen, Roman, Errol and I drove on to school. By the time we hit the parking lot the boys were smiling and cracking jokes. “They were making his stomach fat!” “They were trying to blow him up!” They howled. I tried not to listen to their merry voices.

I dropped the big boys, and then Errol at his school and headed on to mine. By now the man was either dead or in the hospital. The boys had long forgotten him. I noticed an odd car behind me, a Nissan Cube. The more I looked at the aptly named car, the more I realized that the couple in the front seat bore a strong resemblance to their car. (Did they feel an anthropomorphic attachment to this car? Did the dealer laugh as the cubes drove their cube off the lot?) The driver and passenger were, in fact, human cubes: short, squat, thick-necked, boxy, cubic, with flat heads. They were, in short, in the right car. Which made me worry. I drive a Honda CRV.

And then I started thinking about the man on the cold hard sidewalk, among strangers gasping for breath. I drove on. I had a class to teach.

Errol is sating at about 70 (90 is normal-ish). He’s not getting the oxygen we hoped his surgery would provide. He’s too blue, too groggy, too unchanged. We hoped for more oxygen, more Errol. We worry about him.

I got to work and walked past a memorial that sits out in front of my school. It reads “Former site of the James Gray High School” and looks like a grave marker, as if someone is buried below (James Gray? A misbehaving student? Hope?) It is not a happy thing to see on the way into a performing-arts school, but the kids sure do work hard.

We worry about sweet little, fragile Errol. Seeds of Love took away our medical debts (THANK YOU ALL! WE WILL ALWAYS BE GRATEFUL!) but it can’t take away our worry for Errol. And I don’t think anything ever will.

4 comments:

Ms. Jennifer said...

ghsfgdfg

JOM said...

I agree with ghsfgdfg!

Ms. Jennifer said...

Ok,OK! Long week! Today was a day that Errol brought tears to my eyes. As he, Nori and I were singing "The Wheels On The Bus", Errol clapped his hands, lifted his hands up in the air and patted his legs independently as he watched me doing the same motions. Remember, we have to celebrate the little things no matter how small they are. Enjoy Errol for the wonderful little boy he is. Thank you for sharing him with me everyday!

Marigene said...

Jonathan - I've always loved this:

"I would not exchange the laughter of my heart for the fortunes of the multitudes; nor would I be content with converting my tears, invited by my agonized self, into calm. It is my fervent hope that my whole life on this earth will ever be tears and laughter.

Tears that purify my heart and reveal to me the secret of life and its mystery,
Laughter that brings me closer to my fellowmen!
Tears with which I join the broken-hearted,
Laughter that symbolizes joy over my very existence."

Gibran (Love, Marigene)