What Can I Say About Larry?

In the late 80s, my mother met and married a man I didn’t like much at first.

After living for years with my terrifying but largely responsible father, Larry seemed dreamy and impractical and disconnected from reality — better suited to lazy afternoons watching the Sci-Fi channel or reading fantasy novels than, say, being anything approaching a husband for my mother or a father to me.

But as time went on, I discovered that his gentleness and imagination were just what my mother needed, and thinking back on it now, they were just what all the rest of us needed, too. He gave my mother years of safety and happiness, plenty of those long afternoons reading cool books and talking weird theories about the universe, and he did the same for my sister and I, too, not to mention my nieces.

He introduced me to Middle Earth. It was at his house that I first watched Star Trek: The Next Generation. He typed up my first serious story so I could submit it to magazines…when I was fourteen.

He bore the brunt of my sullen teenage years, too, all the eye-rolling and fun-making of a person who seemed a total crackpot at the time. Larry had deeply felt spiritual beliefs that certainly weren’t like everyone else’s, and I didn’t have much respect at the time for a former hippie still keeping the faith twenty and thirty years later.

I do now, though. I admire Larry’s steadfast lifelong battle against everything practical, everything expected, everything dull and emotionless. He won that battle last night.

Larry died around 7:30 with all of us around him. He seemed content, pleased to see us, and he was more than ready to go after months of having one organ after another replaced by uncomfortable machines. It was strangely appropriate, I guess, that a man almost solely of the spirit would slowly lose his body like that.

He didn’t really need it.

I don’t pray much, but when I do, I usually say, “Please let good happen. Let us recognize it when it does and endure when it doesn’t. Let us be its agents.” Larry was definitely one of its agents, and we’ll all miss him.

He helped provide space and safety for my imagination, and I’ll always be grateful. Toward the end, he couldn’t speak while on the ventilator but he could mouth words. I think he might have said he was proud of me, though it could just be my ego misinterpreting him. Either way, I’ll do everything I can to live up to that.

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4 Responses to What Can I Say About Larry?

  1. tom says:

    Very touching, Will. I’m very sorry for your loss. Though I only met Larry a handful of times, I’ll never forget him. Please give my best to your mom and Andrew.

  2. William says:

    I’m glad that Larry was able to go quietly with his friends and family surrounding him. Everyone should be able to say goodbye to the world that way. He was one of the nicest people I ever met, and I remember always being welcome in his and your mother’s home when we were young. I’ll hold him in my memory; best wishes to you, your mother, and Andrew.

  3. Richard says:

    I only met Larry once or twice. He was out-going, nice, and seemed to really like being in the mix of interesting characters that attend Willcon. I hope that all of you will combat the sadness of the loss with the happiness of the memories of him.

  4. Sorry to hear about this, Will, and a moving eulogy.