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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOhio Boy Who Came Home For Early Christmas Dies
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -- A boy whose last wish was to be home for his favorite holiday has died, two weeks after his hometown welcomed him with a Christmas tree outside his window and a motorcycle-riding Santa Claus.
Doctors had told the family of 13-year-old Devin Kohlman that he didn't have long to live so residents in the city of Port Clinton along Lake Erie spent the past few weeks giving him an early Christmas.
They sang carols outside the family's apartment, piled tons of shaved ice into drifting snow near his window and decorated a park with colorful strings of lights, reindeer cutouts and a red "Merry Christmas Devin" sign.
Devin, who was diagnosed with brain cancer in the summer of 2012, died Monday afternoon, said family friend Roseann Hickman.
Family and friends gathered for a vigil after his death while an early-season snow fell over the city.
more...
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_CHILDS_CANCER_EARLY_CHRISTMAS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2013-11-12-12-54-19
Historic NY
(37,453 posts)Frustratedlady
(16,254 posts)Bless his heart. Condolences to his friends and family.
progressoid
(49,999 posts)NewJeffCT
(56,829 posts)his family has my sympathy.
titanicdave
(429 posts)hideous of all diseases........it is unrelenting and shows not preference for gender, race, or age.......I know, Multiple Myeloma is taking my younger brother from me........what a miserable thing cancer truly is......
calimary
(81,523 posts)So sorry to hear it. I'm so sorry your family has to deal with something like this at what ordinarily should be a very happy and peaceful and contented time for families everywhere.
It just doesn't seem fair, does it?
VERY small comfort, but - posting about it here on DU might help a little bit. You have lots of company, and lots of sympathy, and lots of empathy. You have no idea how much is there waiting for you to tap into it! Many people here have shared health crises of their own or a close loved one or friend, and the rest of us have banded together to listen, to support, to console, to commiserate, or just to be there. I have found that DUers have very broad shoulders and very large ears, and many many virtual boxes of kleenex. Someone's always here. Someone's always awake. Someone's always paying attention. You don't have to struggle with this alone.
I can't adequately explain to you what it meant to me after my mom died and I posted a brief post about it. I was almost avalanched with people's posts here, sympathizing, empathizing, offering comfort, offering their own stories of grief and mourning and many a death watch. We knew she was on the way out. It was a long, miserable, lingering illness. We knew she was dying and that the end was coming soon, but it still wasn't any easier to cope with. What DID make it easier to cope with was the love and support and kindness from people here. I was so touched. It was more than seven years ago and I'm STILL touched by it. I still think about it and get choked up and feel so grateful for those kind words and heartfelt sentiments that people expressed.
You don't have to struggle with this alone. You won't be alone in that pain. You'll discover that a lot of people here - are there - standing next to you.
riverbendviewgal
(4,254 posts)My son died of brain cancer too. It is devastating. How kind and caring his town was.
Demeter
(85,373 posts)even if they weren't dying immediately. Even if they had decades of life ahead of them.
This is shocking only because it's so unusual.
I am so sorry for your loss, dear. I cannot imagine how to cope, even.