(Larry Landers: October 15, 1958 - June 16, 2014)
By
the time I met him, signs were already there, albeit unrecognized. He had been
described as a bit aloof, uncomfortable socially, a hesitant conversationalist.
But that was ok. He, like me, had a wife
that could carry a conversation, and we were comfortable just being along for
the ride.
It
was apparent that our children were quite fond of each other and so the
dreaded “get acquainted lunch” was scheduled. We were already in love with
their daughter, and they with our son. It was an enjoyable lunch in a safe,
public place, and I think we all knew that day that our lives and families were
destined to be intertwined.
Not
long after that first lunch, the symptoms became more pronounced and after
months of tests, the fearful diagnosis came: early-onset Alzheimer’s. That was
March of 2012 and he was 53.
By
the time they were at our house for a few days in January 2013 for wedding
dress shopping (the selections being more varied in Fort Worth than in
Amarillo), his confusion made conversations difficult and public excursions
tension-filled and frustrating. So,
while the girls shopped, Larry and I stayed at home, sharing burgers and a
“Lord of the Rings” marathon; two naturally quiet fathers-in-law-to-be, making
the most of the situation, and secretly enjoying our escape from Bridal
Boutique into Middle Earth.
Larry
managed, accompanied by his Mrs, to walk his daughter down the aisle to marry
our son on June 8, 2013. With the help
of friends and family keeping watch over him, he made it through the day. Six months later, he got to see his other
daughter graduate from college. He knew he was proud on both of those days,
though I’m sure he had moments of uncertainty about the source of his pride.
On
Monday, June 16, I wrote this post on Facebook: My friend Larry Landers, father
of my precious daughter-in-law, won his battle with Alzheimer's about 23 hours
ago. Those who do not have a personal relationship with Jesus, as Larry did,
will find that statement difficult. But the truth is that Larry has
crossed the finish line victoriously while this disease stood helplessly by
with no way to prevent him from stepping into eternal health, peace, and joy.
This is not goodbye. It is congratulations and we'll see you in a little
while.
I
was glad to hear, at his funeral service, stories about the man I never knew:
the real Larry; the young man I would have enjoyed fishing and hiking with; the
one whose brilliant mathematical mind I would have benefited from; the one who
knew that his life mattered to God and who brought up his daughters to know the
same.
So
many families have a “Larry”. I wrote
this to encourage you to remember and celebrate the real person when you are
weary of the one whose mind has been stolen by disease. There is still something special about your
“Larry.”
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