Bammer death, a painful reminder
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LAGUNA LIFE
All is quiet except for the wind, which howls. It has been raining
for the past day and half. Finally, some more desperately needed
rain. Perhaps winter is beginning to awaken.
The somber weather matches the somber feeling stuck in my soul
since I heard
about the passing of Jennifer Bammer. I didn’t know her personally
but I do know the sadness that follows. The screaming. The tears. The
sleepless nights. I know it all too well and I also know that
Jennifer is the centerpiece in many people’s hearts, never to be
forgotten.
I know the search for answers. But there are no easy answers as to
why a person with so much life ahead of her passes so young. There
can’t be. Only the man upstairs may know.
I’d like to think that everything does happen for a reason, and
I’m sure that it does, but it doesn’t change the path of the pain
that is left behind.
I remember because I have walked the very path I speak of. When I
was young, one of my brother’s closest friends, Gary Tibbits, was
killed in an alcohol-related accident. He was like another big
brother to me. I cherished that guy. He used to always pin me down
and tickle me, until I would nearly pee my pants and tell me surf
stories about how good the waves were at El Moro. He was a real
happy-go-lucky type of a guy and then one day he was gone. I never
understood why? Partly because I was only in the seventh grade at the
time, and inside I had all these questions that could never be
answered.
I was so hurt that he was gone. I remember almost hating him for
leaving and I soon just pretended that he moved. I choose to remember
him by living and thinking of the memories that I have of him.
Instead of going to his memorial I went surfing, I felt closer to him
this way and I also never had to say goodbye.
It amazes me how well I remember him and how much, to this very
day, I still think of him and his smile.
My only now hope now is that Jennifer and Gary both smile when
they read this and know that our thoughts are with them.
-Peace-
* JAMES PRIBRAM is a Laguna Beach resident, professional surfer
and co-founder of “They Will Surf Again,” a nonprofit foundation
assisting people with spinal cord injuries. He was also a member of
the Water Quality Advisory Committee.
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