Memories

Four Weeks

Sharon posted the following entry on her blog on June 22, 2009

It has been nearly a month since Lewis experienced his earthly death.

He died of heart failure.  It was totally unexpected, undiagnosed, and as best I can remember his symptoms had been scant for those of us who loved him dearly.  That he died of “too big a heart” is perfectly fitting for the man I loved.  I was the largest benefactor of his unreasonable and sometimes delirious ability to love unconditionally, I was his fierce defender and I was his most potent critic, often expressing dismay at how much he was giving of himself to me and others when he was wearing thin and becoming stretched at his seams.

His seams, as I knew them, were very transparent.  You could feel when he was getting cranky.  He was not that way very often, but when he was his face muscles would stiffen and he would firm his lips and hold them tightly together to prevent himself from saying something he would regret.  Being warned, I would wait for his sigh, his long relaxed breath, and then we would begin to communicate in some other way.

What is so wonderful to remember about him is how extraordinarily happy he would become while observing and interacting with life and its pulses, its unique gifts of beauty and intricate design, and its simple eloquence.

He loved collecting feathers from our two ringneck doves.  He preferred the smallest ones, pure white and symetrical and kept them in bottles and plastic containers for display.  He kept an assortment of polished stones that he again would deposit in various preferred places in our home and office–some he found in his  daily walks and some he would collect through his travels here and there.   He also collected seeds and nuts of all kinds and had them displayed on his office shelfs where he could share them with clients and describe his affinity for them in his daily sharing and work.

He was a reader of books and literature of all kinds.   Complex works of scientific scholarship, books of wisdom, all kinds of science fiction and fantasy, religious and theological writings and scholarship, novels, how-to books, historical understandings and works of the ancients were a part of his everyday interests.   I cannot tell you how sad I am to have lost my companion who had such an encylopedic mind.

One of his beloved clients is a woman who is a writer of science fiction and fantasy.  He always looked forward to his time with her, a discussion of her current writing struggles, and he much enjoyed providing her encouragement in her craft.

He was very intentional in his life.  I was the most favored recipient of his kindly intentions.  During the last two years of his life he was slowly working to program me to fasten my seatbelt and harness it safely around the bottom of my mid-section as a matter of habit.  It didn’t take much to tip me to the side of feeling irritated by his trying to direct me, so it became a delicate balance and he was very good at it.  He intentionally responded so as to increase my patience and other character parameters in much the same way.  Fortunately, we were both inclined to laughter and prankishness, so he didn’t have to help me there.

In the last five years we were sharing an office daily.  Many of my clients, and certainly members of our staff, took object lessons from the way he would deal with my excessiveness and enjoyed his frank and sometimes capricious repertoire.

It added humility to our lives.

I have missed him these weeks in every possible way that can be a part of one’s daily encounter.  His presence, his helpfulness, his touch, his light snoring, his companionship, his joviality, his principled rhetoric and playful expressions, his ability to keep our home and office running without breakdown for want of lightbulb or paper and most of all I miss his exorbitant love.

I know from being his life-long companion that he stepped into the heavenly kingdom and God’s side without a scratch or even the smallest of pauses.  He had been a devoted journeyman apprentice of God’s plan and sought to walk in the Light everyday and in every way.  This gives me the most comfort:  that he and God are on the same ” line”  listening to me as I ask for help and guidance each day.   Sometimes it is quite a conversation.

I know that there are others in God’s presence, too, listening and encouraging each of us mortals as we struggle with our loves, losses and lemons.

We are persuaded to move forward, to not flinch from the journey, to enjoy each moment of our passage and to keep God’s dream for humankind as our vision, as our muscle and our innermost hope.   We may cry and feel the pain of our fears and demons but we will always be able to reemerge in the Light.

As the first shaker (1807) hymn with notes tells us:

The heavens of glory are our Destination.  We’re quickly advancing to the that happy shore.  We’re traveling on in the regeneration.  And when we get through we will sorrow no more!

Two Weeks

Sharon posted the following entry on her blog on June 13, 2009.

last snapshot of lewis 5-24-2009

Some of you know that my husband died on May 25.

I am reeling from the reality.

The Vulnerable Bede once compared a faithless life to a sparrow flying through a banquet hall in winter, where “the fire is burning on the hearth in the middle of the hall and all inside is warm, while outside the wintry storms of rain and snow are raging.” “The sparrow flies swiftly though the hall.  It enters in at one door and quickly flies out through the other and (so) this life of man appears but for a moment.”

When your life’s love is taken in a moment from your life, one can appreciate an image of momentary warmth and shelter evaporating into the night

The other side of the veil is a great mystery…and we must face its unknowns.

Brendan’s Facebook Updates

I first heard about my father’s passing when my mom called just after midnight. The next several hours were a nightmare. Around 7am I was alone in mom’s living room and I felt the need to share what had happened with friends. I chose to post what had happened on Facebook. Writing it made it seem more real. The immediate support of my Facebook friends and acquaintances was somehow comforting.

I captured my posts and the comments I received below.

 

Celebration of Life

A Celebration of Life service was held on May 31, 2009 at St Paul’s Episcopal Church

The service was officiated by Rev Joy A. Rose, TSSF and Rev Sanda S.W. Taylor

Jeremy Moon opened the service by singing “Bring Him Home”

Scripture was read by family members:
Hymns were sung by everyone present:

The Homily was delivered by Pastor Sandy

During Communion we were led in song and music:

  • Jesus, Remember Me
  • On Eagles’ Wings

THE CHRISTIAN’S COMFORT

The Christian’s comfort in sorrow is to be found,
not in the memory, but in the presence of the one we love.
The Christian is in God; the departed one is in
God, too, only nearer to Him than we on earth.
One is on this side of the veil, the other on that.

By coming nearer to God the living and the dead come
nearer to each other in Him, non in any physical manner by
sight  or sound or touch – that would be only to restore
what is most imperfect and what death was meant to end-
but in the deep, hidden bonds that bind the sould of them that
love God together.

Thus prayers and good works and Holy Communion and the
personal love of Jesus become the comfort of one that
sorrows, not because they make one forget or benumb one’s
feelings, but because through them the soul is being drawn
nearer to God.  Thus there comes to be a deep meaning in
the benediction ‘Blessed are they that mourn’

Newspaper Article

Maryland Independent


Man killed in single-car accident
Son says heart disease caused therapist’s death

Wednesday, May 27, 2009
By BETHANY RODGERS
Staff writer

A 65-year-old psychological therapist died Monday after his car struck a utility pole in La Plata, according to police.

An autopsy showed that Lewis Oscar Moon’s cause of death was heart disease and that he had no serious injuries from the accident, his son, Brendan Moon, reported.

Moon of La Plata was driving north in the 900 block of Washington Avenue when his car drifted off the road, police reported. The car collided with a pole at about 10:43 p.m., according to Moon’s sons.

Moon was transported to Civista Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead at about 11:30 p.m.

The La Plata resident was working on Monday night and was probably heading to pick up some office supplies at a store when the accident happened, said Brendan and Jeremy Moon, his two sons.

Staying late at the office wasn’t unusual for Moon, who owned a counseling center with his wife and often worked from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. to accommodate the schedules of his patients.

As a therapist, Moon listened well and was particularly good with children, his sons said.

“He always took the time to let kids talk a lot,” Jeremy Moon said.

In his off-time, Moon liked reading, boating and spending time outdoors. But mainly, he liked to help out other people.

Even when he went on walks, he’d find ways to serve, said his sons.

“We’d be walking through the woods, and he’d start picking up other people’s trash,” Brendan Moon said.

“Serving was part of his everyday life,” said Jeremy Moon, who added that his father went to New York City after Sept. 11 and volunteered at Ground Zero. “He was always looking for the little ways to help people.”

Lewis Moon was an active member of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Waldorf and a member of the Audubon Society. He was married to Sharon Moon for 43 years and had two granddaughters, according to Brendan Moon.

A celebration of life service will be held for Moon at 5 p.m. May 31 at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church.

Officer S. Stanley of the Charles County Sheriff’s Office is handling the investigation.

Sheriff’s Report

FATAL MOTOR VEHICLE CRASH: On May 25 at 11:41 p.m., Lewis Oscar Moon, 65, of La Plata, was driving north in the 900 block of Washington Avenue in La Plata when he drifted off the roadway and struck a telephone pole, causing the vehicle to overturn. Moon was transported to a nearby hospital where he died a short time later. Officer S. Stanley of the Traffic Operations Unit is handling the investigation.