
The division of Helen Long’s estate was fairly straightforward. Her two story Cape Cod was to be sold and the proceeds divided between her daughter, Tina, and Mark and Matthew, her two sons. Personal items that held sentimental value were evenly distributed, stocks were liquidated and moved to provide for the grandchildren’s college education, and the vacation home in the Outer Banks was to be shared by everyone as a way to keep the family from drifting apart.
That last bit wouldn’t happen. Not to Helen Long’s family. She had spent too much time and given too much effort in keeping her family together to have them fall apart once she was gone. It was her mission in life, her purpose, and she could think of no better goal to devote her life to fulfilling.
She had done a good job, too. Having your last remaining parent pass away can bring out the worst in families, but this wasn’t the case for the Long family. In the months between the news that Helen’s cancer had spread and her death, she took great pains to ensure everything would go as smoothly as possible.
Funeral arrangements were made. Last minute bills were paid. And though Helen didn’t frequent church nearly as often as her children, her pastor visited often in the last weeks.
In a way, Helen’s passing was to be her crowning achievement. She, not her husband, had kept the family close over the years. There had never been rifts or disputes between the kids, never so much as an argument. Her dying wish was to keep it that way, to give her family something that would allow them to remember their mother’s love. Even in death, Helen would teach them.
And oh, did she teach them.
That last bit wouldn’t happen. Not to Helen Long’s family. She had spent too much time and given too much effort in keeping her family together to have them fall apart once she was gone. It was her mission in life, her purpose, and she could think of no better goal to devote her life to fulfilling.
She had done a good job, too. Having your last remaining parent pass away can bring out the worst in families, but this wasn’t the case for the Long family. In the months between the news that Helen’s cancer had spread and her death, she took great pains to ensure everything would go as smoothly as possible.
Funeral arrangements were made. Last minute bills were paid. And though Helen didn’t frequent church nearly as often as her children, her pastor visited often in the last weeks.
In a way, Helen’s passing was to be her crowning achievement. She, not her husband, had kept the family close over the years. There had never been rifts or disputes between the kids, never so much as an argument. Her dying wish was to keep it that way, to give her family something that would allow them to remember their mother’s love. Even in death, Helen would teach them.
And oh, did she teach them.
The funeral services were handled with both precision and ease. There was sadness, much sadness, but there had been ample time for goodbyes. Mark, Matthew, and Tina held their own. Even the grandchildren didn’t cry. The pastor himself said it was one of the most peaceful funerals he’d ever presided over.
When the lawyer called a week later for the reading of Helen’s will, it was only the children who attended. Their spouses and children didn’t feel a need to play referee or look after the best interests of their mates. After all, everything had already been settled. Everything would be fine.
They were right about the former assumption. The latter, not so much. Because while Helen had included her children in all of the planning, she neglected to mention the letter.
The lawyer presented the envelope to them and asked that they verify it had not been tampered with. Tina gave a sideways look to Matthew, who echoed it to Mark.
The lawyer lifted his reading glasses to his eyes and leaned back in his worn leather chair as he carefully slit the envelope open, revealing a single sheet of paper upon which a single paragraph had been written:
Dear Children,
Do not mourn for me because I will not know it. I’m gone. That’s it, just gone. Don’t go fooling yourselves into thinking that I’m sitting on a cloud somewhere with a smile on my face and wings on my back, because I’m not. I’m dead. There’s nothing after this life, so remember what I always told you—all you have is each other.
For the first time since her mother’s death, Tina began to cry.
Helen’s three children sat silent as the lawyer then proceeded to review the contents of the will, all of which didn’t matter before the letter and only mattered less after. Because the money and the trinkets and the vacation house wouldn’t make up for the fact that they would never see their mother again.
All this time, and they never knew. Tina and her brothers all attended church regularly, and they all were certain of their eternal home. They simply took it for granted that Helen was certain, too. After all, she had sat beside them many times in church.
But neither of them had ever bothered to make sure. They never asked that question. And now, suddenly, it was too late.
Two years after her mother’s death, Tina still carries that letter tucked inside a pocket of her purse. She showed it to me last week. The ink was worn and the paper crumpled, as if it had been thrown away and reclaimed time upon time.
“I can’t let it go,” Tina said. “I never will.”
I don’t expect she will. I wouldn’t, either. Tina still carries the burden of never asking her mother if her soul was secure. She holds out hope Helen’s mind was changed in her last minutes of life. That the letter was written in a bout with hopelessness and despair that was lifted in that last breath, and she will see her mother again.
I hope so, too.
When the lawyer called a week later for the reading of Helen’s will, it was only the children who attended. Their spouses and children didn’t feel a need to play referee or look after the best interests of their mates. After all, everything had already been settled. Everything would be fine.
They were right about the former assumption. The latter, not so much. Because while Helen had included her children in all of the planning, she neglected to mention the letter.
The lawyer presented the envelope to them and asked that they verify it had not been tampered with. Tina gave a sideways look to Matthew, who echoed it to Mark.
The lawyer lifted his reading glasses to his eyes and leaned back in his worn leather chair as he carefully slit the envelope open, revealing a single sheet of paper upon which a single paragraph had been written:
Dear Children,
Do not mourn for me because I will not know it. I’m gone. That’s it, just gone. Don’t go fooling yourselves into thinking that I’m sitting on a cloud somewhere with a smile on my face and wings on my back, because I’m not. I’m dead. There’s nothing after this life, so remember what I always told you—all you have is each other.
For the first time since her mother’s death, Tina began to cry.
Helen’s three children sat silent as the lawyer then proceeded to review the contents of the will, all of which didn’t matter before the letter and only mattered less after. Because the money and the trinkets and the vacation house wouldn’t make up for the fact that they would never see their mother again.
All this time, and they never knew. Tina and her brothers all attended church regularly, and they all were certain of their eternal home. They simply took it for granted that Helen was certain, too. After all, she had sat beside them many times in church.
But neither of them had ever bothered to make sure. They never asked that question. And now, suddenly, it was too late.
Two years after her mother’s death, Tina still carries that letter tucked inside a pocket of her purse. She showed it to me last week. The ink was worn and the paper crumpled, as if it had been thrown away and reclaimed time upon time.
“I can’t let it go,” Tina said. “I never will.”
I don’t expect she will. I wouldn’t, either. Tina still carries the burden of never asking her mother if her soul was secure. She holds out hope Helen’s mind was changed in her last minutes of life. That the letter was written in a bout with hopelessness and despair that was lifted in that last breath, and she will see her mother again.
I hope so, too.






36 comments:
This has to be the saddest thing I have ever read ...
Billy, this hit me hard! I've been thinking about this lately and kicking myself for not knowing about some of my loved ones.
Within the past few months I learned that my dad accepted Christ long ago (this was news to me)...it was one of the happiest moments of my life!
Thanks for telling this story, we all need to make sure we don't end up in Tina's position.
That story is very disturbing. It isn't so much her lack of certainty that disturbs me, but her lack of hope.
Mark 9:24 Immediately the boy's father exclaimed, "I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!"
I don't think certainty is required of us, but hope, and and outstretched hand...
I find it sad that she died without hope, and that she left a letter to rob her children of hope. Very, very, sad...
Wow. That is truly gut-wrenching. Can you imagine if the funeral had been held after the reading of the will?
how sad. Of all the things to try and strip away, in your dying...to strip away the hope is the strangest thing to do. I feel bad for her children. The biggest and Best thing you can find in life is faith, especially faith in God.
How truly sad that she left this world without hope and left such pain in her children's hearts.
'So that having been justified by his grace,
we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life.' Titus 3:7(NIV)
I like the way The Message translation words this verse...
'God's gift has restored our relationship with him and given us back our lives. And there's more life to come—an eternity of life! You can count on this.'
all that love wiped out in one paragraph is truly tragic.
i'm very sorry for the children.
life is so precious - the gift even greater - eternity astounding! we must ensure we try with everyone in our lives to share the glory to come.
my heart breaks for the selfishness of this story. as a mom of 8 soon to be 9 - i can't imagine tearing them up like that when i'm gone. goodness that was really hurtful to read.
blessings billy!
jill
sad - she had no hope and it seems she wanted to make sure her children didn't have any either.
But as an optimist I would hold on to the idea that she might have changed her mind before her death and/or wrote the letter on a day when she was depressed.
Okay, I'm not sure I can even express how hard this story just hit me. It's amazing how truth can really hurt and make you think and wake you up and...
Oh...Lovely touch, the letter, the loss of faith, the fact that Tina can't let go.
Who is the narrator, the "I" at the very end. How important is he to the story?
This is very saddening, but I do believe that God is full of grace and we don't know what really happened in Helen's heart between her and God.
The words, well, those may have been from her head, but her heart...well her heart may not have truly believed them.
Wow. Just wow.
Do you think she just said that to keep the kids together? To help them in her words, "remember what I always told you—all you have is each other."
She is right...All we have is each other and the love we show to our families, friends and our neighbors...What is more Godly then Love?
Money and things brings out the worst in families... even the best of families. Maybe she knew she had to be drastic.
Maybe she knew one of her kids would fight for more then their share. After all who would know them better then she?
Maybe that is just what she needed to do to keep them together peacefully in a Godly fashion.
Billy,
This is powerful. Thank you for sharing.
Blessings and prayers, andrea
Billy,
This is a grim reminder of what some of us face even now not knowing where we will wind up when we die. I thought about this as I dropped my kids off for school. I was able to smile as I know if any of us were to be separated by death, we will once again be reunited. I am confident our eternal future is secure.
But is sad to know that not everyone has that guarantee and for some they honestly believe there is nothing after this life. It all ends.
The good news is that it is never to let to know for sure what will happen if you just believe in God and seek our a pastor and make that commitment now before it's too late. Never think you will have plenty of time to do it later.
Love and Hugs ~ Kat
Billy your soul is a river of the Spirit. . .pouring out over and over. Thanks for this!
Isn't it amazing how a great story can be so sad. Definitely gets you thinking and wanting to make sure you talk to everyone you love...
i feel heavy stillness.
Wow. That is so sad. Like Helen said, disturbing, even.
But it's just what we need to hear.
Thanks!!
I read this last night and was so struck by it I could not even think of what to comment. How we sometimes take things for granted through our fault or not fault at all. Very well told.
If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all. Hmph.
I do not comment much here anymore, for I must develop a thought, and express it, and long comments are anethema to several blogs.
However, my own mother died in May, 2008, leaving behind 10 living siblings (twin sisters already died young, at age 11 and 12)and she left 99 grandchildren and great-grands, now grown to 103 this past year.
When the attorney opened the Will, mom's request was for NO funeral.
She felt the money would be better used for people who are hungry, cold, and broken.
She was $17,000 too late, thanks to one sister insisting mom go out in style. Rethink this folks.
We had a $25,000 funeral last month in another sister's family (in-laws). A waste of money.
In Mom's case, her children can each make a choice to see her again, for she is with Christ (indeed, she and I discussed precisely WHERE we will meet in heaven, in our final words together).
But as I read the letter above, I could not help but ponder the daughter carrying a letter, written and sealed long ago. An attorney HAD to read and witness the Will, and surely he could have spoken up as a Christian.
It would seem a need to lament the loss of two, not one.
But then, the polar opposites occur here and in the Bible.
This woman led an apparently exemplar life of love for her family, just as God loves His family. She sought unity, not division. Sounds like God to me.
And the Bible tells us that in a final fleeting moment, though a life was led in complete opposition to love, making sin central, and becoming worthy of death on a cross, a thief uttered a sole sentence to the Lord, and is one of few people we are absolutely certain,...is in heaven.
"This day, you will be with me in paradise"
The letter was written long ago and sealed. The life was lived with actions that spoke of a heart like Christ's.
None of us can say that this woman uttered as the thief, to Christ in her dying breaths "Take me with you".
I post a lengthy comment as HOPE to the daughter in grief, that what she holds onto, may NOT be true at all.
Christ came to seek the Lost.
This mom was lost as she wrote, but exemplifies the Found in her life and actions, something she may not have gotten around to correcting in writing, but DID correct in living.
I take hope in one line of this post:
her pastor visited often in her last weeks of life. If Mrs. Long believed her own "Will", this pastor would NOT be needed at all.
Sometimes, your dying breaths are all one needs to finally "hear" the truth, and while alone with God, utter her belief in that truth.
In the Court of Law, this woman has provided evidence to be convicted. But it is NOT the Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing But the Truth, thus leaving reasonable doubt.
The Court of Love has enough reasonable doubt to say "Not Guilty".
And how many in the Old Testament proclaimed their belief in Christ, though "none come to the Father but through me?"
May Mrs. Long's daughter find peace in this perspective.
As always, Billy, you leave on your posts words that make us stop, think, consider. What strikes me especially is the sadness of thinking you know all about another person and finding you know nothing at all.
Wow... Very powerful! What an awakening and an opportunity to everyone who reads The Letter! On November 2, 2003, while my mother was in a hospital in St. Louis, Missouri, I asked momma if she had ever given her heart to Jesus (saying the sinner's prayer.) Even though I knew she had been attending church with my stepfather, I had that lingering still small voice asking me if momma was saved… will she go to heaven. You see momma was a diabetic and a double amputee of both legs to the knee. She had been on dialysis for 3 years and I knew her time was short. Without hesitation, momma repeated the sinner’s prayer with me giving her heart to Jesus. During her funeral on June 30, 2004, as I stood at the podium in front of my siblings, holding the stuffed baby lamb I gave momma the night she prayed with me, I told the story of Momma’s Love! Although I am the only child of 9 who believes with all my heart that Jesus died on that cross for me and you, I pray that my siblings find Jesus too. If you ever get an opportunity to share the Gospel of Jesus with anyone… do it right away! - Twitter... OkieGray
This pains me so. Stuff is just that - stuff. But to know the soul of their mother was not drenched with Jesus' love - ouch. Would have been better to fight over the "stuff" and see mom in heaven.
Billy,
This story breaks my heart! My dad was diagnosed with Lung cancer this past May. I spent the whole summer with him and did all I could do to talk about Jesus. Dad believes in God but hasn't ever received Christ as His Lord & Saviour. I have soooo many people praying for Salvation for my daddy because I know that while he may not be healed here on earth then at least he would not suffer any longer but be healed in Eternity! I pray this will NOT be his ending!
Very heart breaking.
Carrying the hope, sharing the guilt, and wading through a river of tears and regret.
Rather than hold on to a note that causes despair, maybe Tina & her brothers will one day cling to the hope that their mother knew Christ. Won't we be surprised by who is and is not in Heaven? I hope so...and I hope not.
When one is terminally ill, there can be such a hopelessness over the finality of what they think they know. I would think despair and discouragement would set in.
But, I'm for holding out hope. The the truth be confirmed on the other side, God is not careless in what He holds in His hands, even when we are weak and lose sight of our hope.
I'm praying for Tina & her brothers. I'm praying they will find their hope, and not grieve. I'm hoping their mom had a lapse of faith during that time she wrote the letter, and that she truly had a heart claimed by Christ. I cannot imagine their grief, and because of how sad this story is, I'm looking for honest, real hope. It's always Jesus. And if He had her in His hands, He didn't lose her. Even in a momentary lapse of faith. So I pray her faith was real.
Thank you for sharing, Billy. We will keep your friends in prayer, so this hurt doesn't rob them of their joy. I can't even fathom their hurt right now.
That made my throat tighten up. So sad. :(
Oh, man, Billy. You have me in tears here for that family. I think we should all approach that one person (we all know at least one) and ask. We don't have to judge, just drop a hint. Many people who don't know God are afraid to talk about Him and His word and what He commands of us. Perhaps an inner guilt of knowing they aren't following? No one likes to admit they're wrong. We need to let them know God loves all of us, even ones who do not know Him, even sinners. Oh wait that's all of us too, isn't it?? It's our job to share God's love. So let's do it. If you help save one soul in your life, then you have accomplished great things!!!
What a powerful,heart and soul wrenching post!
My natural instinct is to be angry that in all her love for her children the mom left a letter which Satan is using to create a guilt-trip! While I feel deep compassion for her own lostness, hopelessness, depression,and illness I do wonder why she chose to write that letter. As others have commented - this post is disturbing and will be the topic of conversation with friends next week!!!
As a chaplain assistant I am always moved to touch people's lives with the Love of the Lord so that even in their last months, weeks, hours, they would turn their hearts toward the Savior. Many, as far as I can see, never make that decision. They were given countless opportunities throughout their life, but did not chose Him, they tell me. But then, I can't see the depths of their hearts - the doubts, the fears, the pain - and I must leave all with Him who can and who loves them more than I can.
People who have only this life are among the saddest I've ever known.
good post
David
www.redletterbelievers.com
This made me cry. So powerful, and such a reminder to ALL of us. I know it's late, but I'm tweeting this right now. Wow.
A sad lesson for us all.
Great post Billy. Goes to show that we truly cannot know someones status with salvation unless we ask. "Who is Jesus to you?" The most important question we can ask someone. We must begin to care more about the eternity of others and less about our comfort.
Hugs,
Sherri
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