Archives For Jamie Caulk

I Hate October…

October 13, 2013 — Leave a comment

I Hate October

The kids and Mike and I 1998It came on suddenly, the month of October that is. I noticed it first in my lethargy, the strain of getting out to do anything. I noticed it next in my surviving children….tears and great sadness hitting them each at different times.

Jamie was in his car wreck on October 14th, 2011…two years ago tomorrow. I was driving in my car on my way to Nashville when I received the call. It was going to be a great time, as it was Presley Ann’s 1st birthday!

Two years later…tomorrow I am heading to Nashville again, only this time I am flying. Presley will be three years old.

Grieving A Child

The death of a child is unnatural…you are not prepared for it. The unnaturalness effects everyone in your family including the children left. They lost their brother. Their world…our world turned upside down. Then their niece, and 4 months ago their daddy.

Someone said to one of my children the other day, “you need you to get out, you will make more memories.”

Don’t they understand WE don’t want to make new memories?

We were a family of 7 at one time, and now down to five. Those who have lost a spouse or a child will understand that statement, those who haven’t will think we are all depressed.

No, we’re not depressed…it is called grief.

A Journey

Grief is a journey…not one we thought about or planned for. Who does?

Elizabeth Kubler- Ross wrote a book on the stages of grief. I can tell you from our experience’s the stages don’t follow a simple neat pattern….denial, isolation,anger, bargaining, depression and someday acceptance.

We are a close family…we fight…we make up and we are “loud.” Faith in God was a high priority in our home. One of my children, Matthew said one day to a friend, “we are a lot like the Osbourne’s only Christian.” I cringed at the time, but now I can laugh about it.

Christa, my daughter constantly says, “the house is too quiet.”

Becoming a mother was the most important thing I have done in my life. My children were my greatest source of joy and their hurts became my deepest sorrow. Now I am stumped I don’t know how to encourage them and see them through their grief, when I too am suffering.

C.S Lewis said in his book, A Grief Observed, that he never knew “grief could feel so much like fear.” He goes on to say, he is not afraid but it feels like fear…the fluttering of the stomach, the yawning,the swallowing and the restlessness. But my experience is different, I live in the fear. Not of dying…I’m not afraid to die.

I live in fear of something else happening to one of my children and having to bury another one. The thought of going through another trauma is unbearable. When my husband died in June, I lost my sounding board…the only person on earth that understood what that fear felt like. Mike the one who would hold me at night and without words absorb my pain and I his pain.

We and by that I mean my children and I were just “starting” to be able to function again, when Mike passed away. “No, I don’t want to go through this again, I don’t want to feel this way again, it is too soon, my heart cried out.”

But we did and do.

Grief is a human condition, it doesn’t matter if you are Christian or not, religious or not. When you love greatly you grieve when those you love leave.  The difference for us is that we grieve with hope knowing we will see them again.

1 Thessalonians 4:13-18

13 But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope. 14 For since we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep. 15 For this we declare to you by a word from the Lord, that we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. 16 For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord.18 Therefore encourage one another with these words.

Trauma

Norman Wright said in his book, Experiencing Grief, that it typically takes two years to recover from the natural death of a loved one, but if it was sudden it can take many more.

We have been ironically encouraged this week to hear from friends and family that lived with us through the trauma of being at Vanderbilt with Jamie. We know that they understand and are experiencing the same emotions of sadness we are.

I am leaving for Nashville tomorrow. It will be good to be altogether with those friends, and Christa decided she is driving down too.

I am going up to the 10th floor, the Trauma Unit at Vanderbilt and sit there in the family waiting area. It’s time to face those emotions and write about them down. My editor has been wanting me to dig deeper for my emotions, that should do it.

Do people speak from the other side?

Well, I never thought so.

Missy and Jamie Caulk But, I want to share with you this incident that happened to me a few months after Jamie died. For those that know me in real life, face to face they will tell you I am not a mystical type of person. Far from it.

But, this happened so I want to tell you about it.

One day a few months after Jamie died, a friend I had not seen or talked to in 30 years called me. Her son had died a year before.

I was sitting in my car talking to her because we have five dogs, and I knew if I opened the garage door they would all start barking and I didn’t want to interrupt the conversation since it had been so many years since we had spoken.

In the course of the conversation, I mentioned, “I just wish I could talk to Jamie one more time.”

She told me she went to a medium to talk to her son and if I wanted she would give me her number so I could call her.

I was silent.

I said, “Listen, I don’t judge you at all, we all have to do what we have to do to cope. But, I believe if God wants Jamie to speak to me he will.

We finished our conversation 30 minutes later and agreed to stay in touch.

February Ann Arbor, Michigan, is freezing cold and when I walk into my house, I walk in via the garage, through the kitchen and to the front coat closet and hang my coat up. (I do not my kids)

I walked back into the kitchen and heard “Hi Mom”.

Andrew and Jamie CaulkI called out to my son Andrew, “Andrew, I didn’t know you were home,” as I walked over to the couch in the Great room to talk to him.

Silence

Andrew wasn’t on the couch, so I then walked back to the basement door and called Andrew’s name.

He wasn’t there.

Andrew was not home.

“JAMIE, it’s you isn’t it?”

I stood there frozen. I had cold chills running all over my body.

I knew it Jamie, it was an audible voice, I heard it with my ears and not in my heart.

No one was home.

I had prayed to have a dream about Jamie, many of my friends and Jamie’s friends had dreams but I had not. I still have not had one dream. As I said I am not a mystical person.

Jamie of course is not really in the grave, he is more alive than ever in heaven. His body lies in the grave, asleep waiting for the Resurrection of dead. On that day everyone who has gone before us, will arise and meet the Lord in the air. (1 Cor 15:13, “But if there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised.”

Some people rise to everlasting life and some to eternal damnation. The resurrection of the dead will be simultaneous both of the just and the unjust (Dan. 12:2; John 5:28, 29; Rom. 2:6-16; 2 Thess. 1:6-10).

Have you ever had anything similar to this happen to you? 

Heaven…seeing our loved one’s again someday

Christa Jamie Allyssa Caulk God placed us in families. There is a bond in families that surpasses most other human relationships.

When someone you love departs from this earth, your heart cries out to know if you will see them again someday?

St. Augustine said,“We have not lost our dear ones who have departed from this life, but have merely sent them ahead of us, so we also shall depart and shall come to life where they will be more than ever dear as they will be better known to us, and where we shall love them without fear of parting.”

Scriptures

2 Samuel 12:23   David was speaking about his lost son, he said, “But now that he is dead, why should I go on fasting? Can I bring him back again? I will go to him, but he will not return to me.”

Matthew 8:11  “I say to you that many will come from the east and the west, and will take their places at the feast with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.”

This scripture speaks of knowing the individual identities of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. There is a continuity between this life on earth and our new life in heaven. We will continue to be intimately involved with our loved one’s in heaven and recognizable.

Luke 16:19-31  This is the story of Lazarus and the rich young ruler. You can click the link and read the story but the point I am making is  seeing our loved ones in heaven someday. Lazarus remembered his family and wanted Abraham to warn them. He was talking to Abraham in heaven with Lazarus at his side.

Jamie Caulk

Christa and Matthew, Jamie’s older sister and brother made this video last year for Jamie’s birthday. They did a great job of using Jamie’s own words at the end.

 

It is hard to wait sometimes but we live with the assuredly that we will see our loved one’s who have gone before us in heaven someday. 

Jamie Caulk

Happy Birthday Jamie Caulk!

Today, my son, James Lindsay Caulk, would have turned 29. However,he is celebrating his 2nd birthday in Heaven. Jamie left this earth on October 20th, 2011 from injuries he sustained from a car wreck in Nashville,TN.

No one knows what it is like when you lose a child, except other parents who have also lost a child.

 

Caulk's at Big House Last year on Jamie’s birthday we went to the U of M “Big House”. Some of our clients coach for Michigan and they opened up the football stadium so we could go in to honor Jamie.

We brought big lanterns to light and set off to honor his life. When we got to the field it was windy and we decided it would not be smart to set them off over the football field for fear something might happened to the grass.

The kids went to the top of the Michigan football stadium and tried and tried again to light the lanterns. But it just didn’t work, so we came home and tried once again off our deck. Nope too windy here too, so together we enjoyed Jamie’s favorite dinner, steak and baked potatoes.Andrew and Allyssa Caulk

I made him his favorite cake, German Chocolate and will be making it again today.

Journey of Grief

Grief is not a journey I would have chosen to walk down. However on that road, my families whole perspective on life has changed. Since the deaths of Jamie and Lillian (Lillian is my granddaughter who died a month after Jamie did) our values and what is important in life is not the same.

Paul said in Philippians 1:21 that “For me to live is Christ and to die is gain.”

To die is gain?

There was a time I did not understand that scripture, but I do now.

Yes we grieve. Jesus also experienced grief, (Isaiah 53:3) but our grief is not without hope.  We know our death on earth is not the end…it is just an interruption and we will one day all be together again forever.

Death

Steve Jobs spoke some profound words on death:

“No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don’t want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new.”

All of us will experience death on earth, that is 100% certain. Life on earth is a vapor, a breath away for all of us.

Birthdays are always a big deal in our family. My son Matthew Caulk, who is a Realtor in the Nashville, Tn area made this video last year to honor Jamie.

[vimeo: 661 372]

 

Stay strong, stay faithful, stay honest, stay loving, stay true to who you are, most importantly stay true to who God is as you’ll be who you are, and you’ll be happy, you’ll be you, you’ll be free. -Jamie Caulk

Happy Birthday James Lindsay Caulk, I miss you like crazy but we will see you soon!

Love, Mom

Brain Death is a Theory

February 19, 2013 — 1 Comment

Jamie Caulk

Jamie CaulkJamie is my middle son, he was born on March 6,1984, he died on October 20,2011 at Vanderbilt Hospital. This blog and forthcoming book is about my journey learning about “brain death”.

None of us go through our time on earth without experiencing a few life altering events. Some occur when you get married, some when you achieve the pentacle of your career, some are good, some are bad…and some become your destiny or calling.

The journey I am on now is not one of my own choosing but it is one I have embraced and am passionate about. It concerns brain death.

What is brain death?

Brain death is a legal term that has gained world wide acceptance in the medical community and throughout hospitals across the nation. The theory of brain death came about via an Ad Hoc Committee at Harvard University in 1968. Thirteen men met to formulate a new legal definition of death. Up until the Harvard Committee published their paper, death in the United States and most countries meant the cessation of the respiratory and circulatory systems. In essence you were dead when your heart stopped beating and your lungs stopped functioning.

A Definition of Irreversible Coma-JAMA1968_Page_1After the Harvard Criteria, a new legal definition of death was added to the long held definition of death. The new definition added the “irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem.

Brain death is a theory

The Harvard Committee’s new definition of death was NOT based on any clinical or scientific studies, performed on either humans or animals. No scientific evidence or clinical trials were presented at all ! By 1978 in the U.S. over 30 different sets of criteria had been published,each new set less strict than its predecessor.

According to Dr. D. Alan Shewmon, Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics, University of California (Los Angeles) School of Medicine and a corresponding member of the Pontifical Academy for Life, the fundamental flaw in the “brain death theory” – and a theory it is – is the belief that the brain confers integrative unity upon the body, transforming it from a mere collection of organs and tissues to an “organism as a whole.” 

No single organ, including the brain,controls all the other vital organs. As Shewmon notes, hearts can beat independently without brain function and many other systems in our bodies continue on their own.  

Dr Shewmon, the noted neurologist argues that a diagnosis of death by neurological criteria is based on an erroneous theory, not on scientific fact. Also,complete irreversibility of neurological function is an arbitrary prognosis, not a medically observable fact.

Dr. Shewmon,at one point in time believed in the “theory of brain death” until the facts changed his opinion.

I had not considered or thought about the concept of “brain death”. Like most people we only came face to face with it when a decision had to be made.

Now I know and this is the purpose of this blog and future book. To help other families going through a traumatic situation and to tell the truth to families  about brain death and transplantation. 

Here is a paper written by Dr. Shewmon “You Only Die Once:Why Brain Death Is Not The Death of a Human Being.