One person sat for a long time beside a grave near where I was visiting. He was quiet, perhaps having a little lunch? He took a long time and when it was time to go, he gently caressed the bronze marker and then bent down and kissed it. This kind of devotion impressed me. After he left, I went to see the grave. It was a simple marker with some little Christmas Trees left behind, all brushed off. Singular. Alone.
I first 'met' Don and David Keeney several years ago when visiting Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills. They were twins, evidently, born in 1955. David passed away first not yet three years of age. Don survived for almost exactly a year to the day beyond his twin, not yet four.
The inscriptions on both of the markers are the same: "For of such is the kingdom of Heaven." I just found the quote from Matthew 19 in the King James version of the Bible. The verse quotes Jesus saying that children should not be hindered from coming to him. I don't think that the Bible verse really means that children should be in Heaven, but that's sort of the fatalistic take that I make on the inscriptions.
These twins are buried under a big tree next to folks who lived full lives, or at least long ones. I wonder what it was that made these guys vulnerable back in the fifties? I wonder about their parents and maybe siblings? I wonder about twins and their special bonding and why Don got an extra year to live?
It's Christmas Day. Good movie. Good chatting with Stuart and Marlene. Well treated at the DGA. These are presents that are mostly intangible, but welcome and... just enough.
P.S. The Keeney's showed up on line. The parents, Dwight and Joyce, had three more children. Daniell Lee and another set of twins: Laura Faye and Lavon Rayond Keeney.
Lovely, Michael. Well thought and well crafted...
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