Monday, December 25, 2023

Christmas Day

 I don't think I have ever felt so bah humbug. I did not wrap a single present. Don wrapped a few. The rest I just put in bags. (And I'm not talking gift bags.) But it didn't really matter because they mostly just got money!


The day worked out fine. We got up at 9. Carter came over around noon, and he and Sean opened presents. Later, Alika, Garret, Birdie, David, and Kendra came over. I cooked a ham, so we all ate it and opened the presents. I didn't get any pictures of the kids.

I found a picture of the tree!

Odie and Holly are done with whatever Christmas Spirit I had before the 7th of December,


Our Christmas morning festivities





Christmas Eve

Jennie had asked me a couple of weeks ago if she and Ryan could bring the kids to our house for Christmas eve lunch. It's big and they don't have to pay for an expensive lunch. Sean really prefers to keep his "families" separate but was a good sport about it. It kept me functioning instead of sitting in the tub crying about my sister.




The little redhead is River, Sean's half sister. She is Ryan's daughter. 



 

Now Marjie is sick

 We got back from Aric's memorial Friday evening. First thing Saturday, my phone rang, and it was Shari. Marjie had a seizure and had been taken by ambulance to a UNC hospital at 4 am. Her lab values were so bad. I really thought she was going to die. And all I could think was I would never get to talk to her again. I didn't even know what to do. I thought about flying out yesterday, but she was still in the ER, so I decided to wait until this morning, and fortunately, things got better overnight.

Initially, they thought she was septic from a lumbar puncture she had as a prerequisite for a dementia drug trial. She woke up, and her labs started improving with antibiotics. They now think it was the DDAVP they gave her for her Von Willebrand. When they did the LP, they dropped her sodium so low it caused the seizure and pushed her into multi-system organ failure. 

As of today, they are thinking her seizure was sodium-related and not an infection, so they are not going to repeat the LP. They tried 5 times yesterday and couldn't get one, so they were trying to get an interventional radiologist to come in on Christmas Eve, and that didn't happen.
If Cary hadn't woken up, she'd be dead.

Shari was sending me her lab work, and this one put me over the edge. It was MSOF from sepsis, just like Aric.








Memorial Service


Maddie showed me these papers she found on Aric's desk after he died. He had bought an urn. He'd lost weight, was healthier than he'd been in years, and he wrote these letters and bought an urn. He must have had a premonition.

We drove back to Hurricane Utah for a memorial Service on the 23rd. 










 

Reposting from Facebook I don't have the emotional fortitude to rewrite

 Aric Michel Cramer Sr

March 29,1959 - December 9, 2023
I was a 19-year-old Freshman at Ricks (BYU Idaho) in 1981. They had block semesters, so Return Missionaries could start college without waiting for a new semester. One Sunday, I was sitting in church with my roommates when a newly returned missionary stood up in a testimony meeting. His name was Aric Cramer. He was 6’8” tall and handsome and had just returned from two years in Australia. All the girls at church’s mouths fell open. I leaned over to my roommate and said, “I’m going to marry him.” She just smiled.
Fast forward two months. The dorm I lived in had engagement ceremonies. This was a Mormon college in 1981! The girls all stood in a circle and passed around a lit candle. Eventually, the candle would come to the engaged girl, and she would blow it out; everyone would scream and cheer, and she would say who she was marrying. I don’t remember the girl’s name, but she said she would marry Aric Cramer. My roommates looked at me, and I shrugged my shoulders and said, “Not going to happen.”
The semester was coming to a close, and I still had not met Aric other than he baptized me at the temple when we were doing baptisms for the dead, and he couldn’t remember my name to save his life! I remember thinking, you're going to marry me; you need to learn my name!
In 1982, I was appointed news editor of the college paper. Aric decided to run for student body officer/Academic Vice President. He needed a campaign manager, and apparently, he did know who I was because he asked me. I don’t remember what happened to the fiancĂ©, but Aric won his campaign.
Nine months after we met, we got married.
When we graduated, we moved back to NC to finish school. Aric was pre-med but switched to law. In NC, we had two boys, Carter and Alex. We were both religious, and when Aric gave Carter his baby blessing, he sobbed so hard that no one could understand what he was saying. He said he knew life was not going to be easy for Carter. Aric loved those boys!
Aric enjoyed Tai Kwan Do, weight lifting, and mountain climbing. Our life in NC was tough; we worked long hours and had no money. We lived in a crappy mobile home with roaches, and when you flushed the toilet, sewer flowed in the backyard. Carter was diagnosed with autism and learning difficulties. We had him in a special school, and I was doing tons of therapy with him. Alex was smiling and hanging on for the ride. Fortunately, my parents and family lived in NC and helped us through some impossibly tough years.
Aric finished law school, we moved to Utah, where I went to nursing school and Aric Jr was born. AJ was a happy, easy baby. Life went on; Aric worked as an attorney, I worked as a nurse, and we lived in Centerville. When the kids were around 6, 10, and 12, Aric took me to lunch and blew my world apart when he said he had moved out and filed for divorce. It was earth-shattering, and I didn’t know how I’d survive.
A couple of days later, I took all three boys to Sizzler for lunch, and as I was sitting there as a “single mom” eating lunch with my boys, I realized we would survive, and we did. Aric survived, too. We were married for 15 years and divorced for 25. For the last 25 years, all our interactions involved our boys.
Aric stayed in Bountiful while they were young and then moved to St George, but he always kept in touch and supported his boys. If the boys got sick or had problems, he would drive to Centerville. Aric coached baseball and basketball for Alex. He worried constantly about his kid’s future. Planning for Carter’s stability was a huge stressor for Aric.
When the grandkids were born, Aric and his partner Maddie would drive 4.5 hours to Centerville for a one-hour birthday party or a 120-second ice skating competition, take the kids to lunch, and drive back to St George. They flew to Hawaii for 12 hours for Alex’s wedding. There was no distance too far or an activity to short for him to travel to support his children and grandchildren, and Maddie always joined him.
In addition to his kids and Maddie, Aric loved the law. He wanted to abolish capital punishment, and as a criminal defense attorney, he believed that everyone deserved a fair trial, no matter how guilty. I used to get mad at him and his death row cases and say you KNOW this person is guilty and he would say it didn’t matter. "My job is to keep the needle out of their arm.” He did a lot of high-profile criminal cases in Utah and was passionate about criminal justice reform. Aric was Libertarian.
About a year or two ago, AJ felt that his dad did not have long to live. At that point, Aric upped his time with the kids. AJ and the grandkids drove to St George to visit; Carter regularly took the shuttle to St George. In the last eight weeks, Aric took Carter and Alex to a Jets game (AJ doesn’t like football), he took Carter to Vegas last month, and he and Maddie drove to Bountiful on Thanksgiving to eat dinner with the kids and grandkids and then turn around and went home.
On Dec 4th, he left AJ a message for his birthday. On Dec 7th, Carter called him and he told him he was sick, his back was broken, and he needed surgery. On Dec 8th, he was in a coma, and on Dec 9th, he died. (Aric had worked hard to improve his health over the last two years, he lost weight and was controlling his diabetes so his sudden death from infection was shocking.)
Maddie, his three sons, and grandchildren were there to say goodbye and tell him how much they loved him. To say their hearts are broken does not do justice. Aric planned to live to be 101, but instead, he died at 64.
When I was a very young nurse in the ER, I was caring for a young mom whose baby had died from SIDS. I was so heartbroken by how the grandmother was holding on to the daughter, who was holding on to the baby, and they were both sobbing. As I held on to my boys as they hugged their dying father, I felt that kind of pain. My boys loved their dad, and he loved them.
















Aric Sr death

I got a call from AJ about 11 at night on the 7th saying his dad was sick and they needed to leave for St George and were bringing the kids over. Hence, the bed is full of doggies.

On the 6th or 7th, I can't remember which; Carter called me and said he had talked to his dad, and his dad had a broken back and wasn't doing well. He wanted a second opinion before back surgery. Carter asked me if I could die from a broken back. I told him he did not usually; you just wished you would cause it to hurt so bad. I hadn't heard anything from Alex or AJ, so I didn't think about it until AJ's call. AJ called in the morning and said Aric was unconscious, and they were putting him on a ventilator, and I needed to get Carter to St George. Alex was already on his way. I called Carter a plane ticket and drove to his work to pick him up. I walked in and told the people at the front desk that I needed Carter and that he wouldn't be back for a few days due to a family emergency. They went and got Carter, and I was waiting in the lobby. Carter walked out, and the fear on his face when he saw me was fucking tragic. He just knew. I told him to step outside with me. I told him I thought his dad was going to die and I needed to get him to St George. The look on his face was so devastating.

Friday afternoon, AJ called and asked us to drive the kids to St George to say goodbye to their grandfather. He has staph throughout his body, in his heart and brain, and had a massive stroke.

Khloe holding his hand.


Vally holding his hand.
Connor was sitting on a bed, counting to 100.

 Watching my kids deal with their dad's death was probably the hardest thing I've ever witnessed. I have been so devastated by it. I'm suffering from some disenfranchised severe grief. I've been surprised because I've been divorced for 25 years, and the chances of us staying married were 0. I never thought of Aric unless it involved the kids or grandkids. We did a pretty decent divorced job of raising the kids, but we did it separately, so I wasn't sure why I was so affected. AJ talks about how much he misses the houses he's lived in. I kind of leave the past in the past and don't think much about it, so when Aric died, I was forced to think about the past and how young and naive we were when we got married. Everything that went so wrong and the things that went right, and I just felt a tremendous sense of loss for Aric dying so young, Maddie losing him, his kids losing him, and his grandkids not having their grandfather. 

Ginger bread houses and Happy Birthday AJ

AJ wanted crab for his birthday so we combined crab and lasagna and ginger bread houses all into one evening.

The Bird and Connor were game.







 

December came (and sucked)




This is the only picture I have of the tree. Birdie and Connor were excellent about removing ornaments, playing with them, and putting them back on. Holly would climb to the top of the chair and reach up to the ornaments I didn't want played with.

 

Blog Archive

Followers

Contributors