Three binders of regrets…and a wall full of starbursts

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On Tuesday we presented Jordan’s story to a multi sectoral group of stakeholders as part of the Mental Health Commission review.

I hadn’t realized how heavy this task was weighing on me – the relief I felt afterwards was enormous. I learned I could tell his story and not fall apart. And that I could tell it in a way that affected people and move them to want to change things.

In preparation for our presentation, we spent an afternoon in mid-April with staff from the commission; walking through Jordan’s history and creating a client experience map. This required me to spend the Easter long weekend finally making my way through the three binders of health records we had gathered – a task I had been dreading.

It’s not like anything lurking in those stacks of paper was going to be a surprise – we lived it after all. What I think I was most afraid of was possibly discovering comments written about Greg and I; judgments about our handling of the situation. In the end there was only one, written by his psychiatrist as he attempted to handover Jordan’s care to someone else.

“His mother is ‘burning out and disengaging” and his father displays some ‘enmeshment’”

I looked it up. Enmeshment refers to “an extreme form of proximity and intensity in family interactions. In a highly enmeshed, overinvolved family, changes within one family member or in the relationship between two family members reverberate throughout the system”.

Isn’t that the exact description of what you want to see in a close knit family? Love and concern and support and when one member of the clan is hurt, the others bleed too? Yet according to Jordan’s psychiatrist, this was a bad thing. That one of us was under involved and the other was over involved.

That seems to be a common theme in mental health and addictions services. “You have to let them hit bottom”, “You need to kick them out so they suffer the consequences”. Are you kidding? This is my vulnerable child you are talking about. Given the horrible outcome we experienced I would suggest it seems pretty obvious we were not involved enough.

What is becoming clearer to us now is that Jordan suffered from a deep clinical depression. And had been suffering for a very long time. It is likely what drove him at age 13 to try and run himself to death, and control his food intake and exhibit signs of OCD. We saw it, it concerned us, I even called the mental health intake line to get him an appointment with a psychologist, but in the end we didn’t follow through. Fear of labeling him?  Worry that placing too much attention on it might take a passing bad moment and exacerbate it into something worse? Denial? All of the above?

Of all the regrets I carry with me, this is the one that gnaws at me the most, the one I feel could have made all the difference. If I had it all to do over again, I would have insisted we put him into therapy in Grade 6. What if he had been able to develop coping mechanisms that would have prevented the descent into deep depression?

Reading the various descriptions of his psychotic episodes didn’t bother me; the bizarre thoughts and behavior. After all, those had simply become part of our new “normal” life. It was the unexpected reminders that my boy still loved us that reduced me to a sobbing mess. Like the nurse’s note from May 2012 where he expressed to staff that he really wanted to go over to the RUH Mall to buy his mom a mother’s day gift and was worried that it would take longer than the 15 minutes his pass allowed. Or when he was arrested last March and told the corrections center staff that he had not slept for 96 hours because his parents were away and he was worried that something would happen to the house or his brother if he fell asleep.

Reviewing all of his various records in one sitting confirmed what we already knew; that the last four years were a complete gong show. Everyone was focused on the drug use and the psychosis. No one was paying any attention to Jordan as he stated again and again that he was depressed. No one questioned whether the car accident was an attempt at self-harm. Only one nurse ever talked to him about all the self-inflicted burns on his body and what the motivation might have been to hurt himself. There was no communication or handover between psychiatry and his family physician, between the forensic unit and his family physician. That first critical year after his first episode of psychosis he had three 15 min appointments with a physician in October, then nothing till he ended up back in hospital the following September. He had little to no contact with the community mental health team and no treatment plan was communicated to his family physician. He was left to the mercy of his altered brain chemistry – and his brain proved to be an unmerciful god.

That was the story we shared on Tuesday.

We began by asking the group’s permission to place Jordan’s portrait above his value stream map. I told them it was important for them to really see our son as we told his story – because not a single person he came into contact with during his journey – not the police, not corrections, not justice and certainly no one in health care – every saw him as anything but his disease. No one ever saw the person he was and the person he could have been.

We were the last to speak and I think it was almost 4:15 when we began. At 5:00 I noticed the time and apologized to the group, said we would wrap it up. One person responded that he couldn’t speak for the group, but even though he was facing a drive back to Prince Albert, he was riveted by our story and could we please continue. So we did.

Greg spent the evening afterwards replaying it in his mind and wasn’t really happy with how it went – I think he wanted to impart far more facts to the group. I saw it as an opportunity to tell a compelling story – and based on the comments people made on their way out, they will never look at their work the same way. One woman thanked us and said “your story has left me with a heavy burden. I need to do a lot of self-reflection”.

I finished with a challenge to the group. I told them I believed with all my heart that Jordan’s death was absolutely preventable. That our fractured, underfunded, under resourced and quite frankly, fucked up mental health care system directly contributed to his death.

I rejordanminded those who work in health care about the story of Mary McClinton, the patient whose death lead Virginia Mason hospital on a mission to improve patient safety. I said today we are offering you the story of our beautiful, talented, brilliant boy in the hopes that you will be equally inspired to radically change the care and service experience for those whose mental health issues are every bit as critical as those with physical illness.

We spent the next day working with the group to identify barriers and challenges and making recommendations for how the various sectors (education, social services, police service, justice, corrections and health care) could work more effectively together. This was where Greg was able to share his carefully compiled data and research to great effect. We are cautiously optimistic that telling our story will have made an impact on the Commission’s report; that in the end it will have been worth the emotional cost that comes with telling it. But regardless, actually getting through those two days was more evidence that the ground is feeling firmer under our feet every day.

Joy of the Mountain

Once the boys were passed the age that their teacher’s pushed them to create hand drawn cards and crafts, Mother’s Day became a non event at our house. For the last decade or so I have started the day with a take out coffee and a walk on the Meewasin – watching the pelicans play at the weir – and then home to either make myself breakfast on the deck or to attend brunch with the Chartier’s. So last year was a complete surprise.

Lucas managed to carefully carry home on his bike this lovely citronella candle holder from Pier One.

lantern

And Jordan – who had barely spoken to me in weeks – brought me Oregano. gift

I later found these photos on his Facebook page. Obviously during one of his frequent visits to his grandparents he had taken over a ceramic pot a dear friend had created for me years ago and had planted and then carefully transported home what would become a perennial reminder of him.

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Oregano –genus Oreganum. From the Greek words “Oros” meaning mountain, and “Ganos” meaning joy, Oregano is seen as a symbol of happiness. The Greek’s believe that this herb springing up on a grave signifies the happiness of the deceased in the after life.

I am not much of a green thumb – most plants die under my watch. But this little pot of oregano is thriving in its spot in the sun on our kitchen table. A daily and much needed reminder that despite all our challenges and arguments – I was his mom, and he loved me.

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Easter

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Easter has always been about friends and family at our house. A four day feeding frenzy that kicks off on Good Friday with Georgie’s legendary homemade hot cross buns. The gift of a four day weekend is such a welcome reprieve after the stress of another dark winter filled with work and sports and snow… always the snow… to shovel, to slip in, to curse at!

Easter is also the first true gathering of the Clan since Christmas. That short pause – between a winter filled with hockey games, dance recitals, soccer, and track meets and the launch of greenhouse season and a summer spent at the Farmer’s Market – finally providing an opportunity for everyone to gather.

Helping

On Friday, the Grandparents host an Easter egg extravaganza – Rusty boils up dozens of eggs and the grandkids surround the kitchen table, creating a rainbow of dyed masterpieces for the parents to ooh and ahhh over.

Greg rarely makes it to the egg dying – he always needs to be the first guy through the door at the annual Draggins Rod and Custom Show. This will be his first year without his car buddy Jordan by his side.

A group of close friends started an annual egg hunt and brunch tradition that lasted for many years. Lucas and Jordan loved it so much they insisted on hiding eggs around the greenhouse before Sunday dinner for all the little cousins to find. Or not. I think Grandpa Rusty still periodically unearths a plastic egg filled with melted goodies!

egg hunt

The highlight of the weekend though, the one “can’t miss” event – is Grandma’s made from scratch hot cross buns. I am in awe of this wonderful woman who can churn out as many as 20 dozen buns in one day! The kids and grandkids burn their fingers grabbing the fresh out of the oven buns, smothering them in icing sugar and eating till they end up rolling around the living room – their stomachs ready to explode.

One of the many things Jordan’s illness robbed him of, and the one that caused him the most heartache, was having to miss several of the last few Easter’s. It is the one thing he could never forgive me for – as it was usually my actions that precipitated him being in treatment and therefore away from his family.

Last April, the very first thing Jordan did when he got home was to head to Grandma’s to spend a day baking bread and buns with her. He was absolutely joyful when he returned home bearing his creations. And that’s what I will be thinking of today – the joy that Easter brought him.

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Sweet Dreams

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I can count on one hand the number of times I have dreamed of Jordan since his death. The first time he simply hung around in the background – I was aware of his presence but he didn’t speak and I couldn’t really see him; I just knew he was there. In the second dream he and I were in the kitchen, pulling dishes from the cupboard for him to take to his new place. (Not hard to read the symbolism  in that one). Last night I dreamed I was at our cabin. I was outside, and the place was packed with people. While there seemed to be many people there that I didn’t know, I didn’t mind really mind as I was busy serving wine to my Clothes Club.

A car pulled up, I turned to look and there were Jordan and Lucas getting out of the vehicle. I went to Jordan immediately and wrapped my arms around him for a very long, very tight embrace. We didn’t speak; I just stood with my arms wrapped around him, my heart filled with love.

And then I was in the kitchen, trying to figure out how to feed all these people with only one container of Costco potato salad and those President’s Choice crackers with fennel and cranberry. I felt like Marlo Thomas in the episode of “That Girl” when she improvises appetizers by spreading peanut butter on individual corn chips. (Isn’t the brain astonishing? I can’t remember a conversation I had two weeks ago, but I can recall with absolute clarity an episode from a 1960’s sitcom!).

I woke from my dream feeling such a sense of peace. I laid there for a good twenty minutes, replaying and re-experiencing that hug. In my dream Jordan was wearing the blue tank top from the picture I posted in my last blog. So the logical side of my brain is insisting that I summoned the dream forth from those memories. But the right side of my brain, the part that helps me recall “That Girl”, believes it was more spiritual than that.

My heart and I – well, we are content to simply be grateful it happened.

Hope is a Crocus

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Like everyone else, I have been desperate for this seemingly endless, bitter cold grey winter to be over. My grieving heart has been literally aching for the snow to melt and for spring to arrive. Then the first Cancer Society Daffodils arrived at the hospital and I found myself plunged into memories of Jordan.

How could I have forgotten how intimately spring and Jordan were entwined? He was always the first one into shorts and flip flops. Pushing his Grandpa to get the greenhouse open so he could plant his tomatoes. The greenhouse was always a safe haven for Jordan, a place of peace and contentment. From the time he could first reach the potting shelf, he has spent every spring with his hands in the soil, surrounded by the love of his grandparents. green 1j and coffee

 

 

 

 

 

“All through the long winter, I dream of my garden.
On the first day of spring, I dig my fingers deep into the soft earth.
I can feel its energy, and my spirits soar.”
— Helen Hayes

It was always Jordan who raked our lawn, turned the flower beds, assembled the patio furniture. Once Niko arrived in our lives, Jordan’s spring ritual included long walks along the river, searching to find and photograph the first crocuses. What courage  it takes to be a crocus. To push up through the frozen icy ground and trust that there will be enough sunshine to keep you alive. Did Jordan find strength and encouragement in nature’s persistence? When he witnessed that first crocus pushing up through the snow did he see it as a message hope?

groundj and niko ground

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last weekend we washed the dust and dirt from the deck and set the furniture up. I turned and caught a glimpse of the chairs and found myself doubled over in grief, weeping at the sudden memory of Jordan lounging in the chair, enjoying the first sunshine of spring. Grief continues to be such a sneaky bastard. chair2

And so I fill the house with daffodils and tulips and try to see the memories that are flooding in as a gift, regardless of the pain they cause. And soon Niko and I will head out to explore the Meewasin pathways – searching for our own signs of hope.

 “There is a sacredness in tears. They are not a mark of weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than ten thousand tongues. They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition and of unspeakable love”

(Washington Irving)

The Paper Chase

If we are truly going to be heard, and if the role our dysfunctional mental health care system played in the death of our son is to be accepted as truth, then we need to paint as factual a picture of Jordan’s journey as we can. How many days did he spend in hospital. How many interactions did he have with the police. How many  minutes of talk therapy did he receive over four years.

In order to paint that picture, we needed to gather all the disparate pieces of his health care record together. Achieving this proved nearly as difficult as navigating through the system in the first place. Different agencies, governed by different legislation, ruled by different policies and requiring different forms. I spent hours searching websites for contact information and making calls – each time having to describe our loss and explain our purpose.

Jab jab jab goes that sharp knife.

As of today, we finally have his full record; approximately 6 inches of paper when stacked on top of each other. Surprisingly small in comparison to the four years of pain it represents.

The largest pile represents his hospital stays. While his brother was a frequent flyer of the EENT service at St Paul’s hospital, Jordan’s interactions were usually trauma related and his files were primarily from RUH. Although the Evan Hardy canoe trip in Grade 11 had us visiting City Hospital for investigation of the ankle injury he sustained while jumping off a cliff into the river.

And then of course, there was his birth.

baby In 1989 I  was working as a registered nurse at the old City Hospital and I naively thought “wouldn’t it be nice to have my baby at the hospital where I work”. In the middle of August. With no air conditioning. And no anesthetists on call and therefore no hope of an epidural. Jordan stubbornly resisted his arrival to the world – my first taste of his negative first reaction to anything I ever asked him to do. It took 36 hours, forceps, vacuum suction and me inhaling an entire canister of laughing gas before he finally unhooked his feet from my rib cage and decided to arrive.

While I really had no desire to see that experience documented in the notes of the brave nurses who cared for me (“patient has now been screaming for 60 minutes”, “patient has slapped husband in the face with wet wash cloth again”), I was absolutely unprepared to turn over the emergency record detailing his ankle injury and find this:

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The  irony of his birth records being destroyed the day after his death took my breath away.  I am still searching for the meaning in that.

Obtaining  his records was the easy part  – reading them will take more courage than I have at the moment.

Oh Christmas tree…

lucas tree

“Why oh why” grumbled Lucas, “Does our family tradition have to include getting the tree on the coldest frigging night of the year?” Minus 37 with the wind-chill – a new record.

A major hurdle has been negotiated and I am so proud of all of us.

Decorating a Christmas tree has always been my favorite part of the holiday season. Even when I was in high school and living at home on Ave J, I would drag a Charlie Brown tree home from Mayfair Hardware and decorate it with ornaments purchased at the Army and Navy store (some of which are still around). I was a tinsel user from way back until I met Greg who was not a big fan of the stuff (more conflict ensued as we discovered that I was a gentle draper of tinsel and he was a thrower of tinsel clumps.) But I stuck to my guns till the boys were old enough to have an opinion (“it looks stupid mom”) and I was out voted.

Once we moved into our home and had the advantage of a cathedral ceiling (allowing for very tall trees), and once the boys were born and became part of the annual tree decorating tradition, things got a little out of control. Gone were the days of my beloved Charlie Brown tree – replaced instead with manly monsters that had to be wrestled into the house and secured with additional bolts and strings to prevent them from tipping over and taking the house with them.

There was the year we tried a different tree vendor and discovered as we were setting up the tree that it had been sprayed with a sickly green colored fire retardant that had everyone breaking out in a rash and hives.

There was the year we bought the most perfectly shaped, perfectly colored blue/green beauty of a tree – only to discover that “trimmed” meant none of the branches actually had the strength to hold an ornament.

The best year ever though, was the year Greg dragged in a 12 foot monster, at least a foot of which bent over at the ceiling once we hammered it into the stand. “Are you sure it isn’t too big Clarke?” I asked. “No worries” said Greg as he cut the final string. Thwack. Thwack. Thwack. Children flew. Lamps were broken. Paintings were knocked off the wall. It was a pine scented, sap spraying Christmas explosion as the tree unfurled itself to its full 8 foot wingspan. The boys loved it! They slept under its branches every night that year and fondly referred to it as their “Christmas in the forest”.

This year finds us scaling back a bit – not quite to the Charlie Brown tree of my youth, but certainly smaller, easier to set up, less time to decorate. I have been dreading Christmas since the day Jordan died and   I honestly did not think I would be able to find the courage to even fetch the box that holds the decorations, let alone touch the ornaments that Jordan’s hands have touched so many times over the years.

But as December arrived I found myself wanting to provide Lucas with some sense of stability, some way to reassure all of us that we will make our way through. So we talked about it as a family and the tree was bought. And we survived.  We didn’t wallow, we reminisced and even laughed. I was determined to make Jordan part of it all, so we lit his candle and hung all the decorations that Jordan had made over the years. And we talked about the ornaments that represent special moments; like the Christmas we went to Disney World, the Christmas spent in a hut in the middle of the Abel Tasman trail in New Zealand, ornaments representing their favorite things, like hockey and soccer. And we found some joy in the remembrance of those priceless family moments.

I am well aware that I am still very much cushioned from reality. That some force is at work protecting me from the full pain of this unbearable loss. I like to imagine that it is Jordan’s gift to us – this ability to remember him and love him and take comfort from the familiar traditions we have always shared during this holiday season. But still, it is so very hard.

Small steps. Deep breaths.jordan

Once a Falcon…

Another gift…falconThe Arns Falcon Bantams informed us that they will be honored to present the Jordan Chartier Memorial Trophy to this year’s (and for years to come)Outstanding Lineman.   

We also learned that the Bantam Team wore black arm bands this season to celebrate and honour the lives of Quinn Stevenson and Jordan Chartier who were Falcons.  Coach Chris Lemkky told the boys that “once a Falcon, always a Falcon at heart and to wear these arm bands with pride”.  This slide of Jordan and Quinn ran in the slide show during the banquet.

They asked us to prepare something that could be read when the trophy was awarded:

Jordan Chartier was an exceptional young man.  An Evan Hardy Soul, he graduated from Grade 12 as one of the top 10 students; qualifying him as a Greystone scholar. He received academic awards for the highest marks in science and in industrial arts and the furniture he built in Woods was of artisan quality.

Jordan held himself to such incredibly important values: kindness, honesty, trustworthiness. He had a strong work ethic, strong views on social justice, a commitment to physical health, and he leveraged the Chartier gene for determination (some might say stubbornness) to be successful in everything he tried.

He believed in community service and demonstrated that commitment by donating blood and volunteering for 3 years with the PAALS program on campus; spending every Saturday morning assisting children with physical and intellectual impairments participate in physical activities. During his first year at the University of Saskatchewan, Jordan was a volunteer coach for the Titans.

He was a talented athlete who achieved success in several sports (track, triathlon, hockey, soccer), but football was his true passion. Jordan shared his love for the game with his grandfather, Rusty Chartier, who was a member of the 1953 Canadian Championship Hilltops Football Club.  It was also a point of great pride that the team his Grandfather played for was coached by Bob Arn and John Babineau.

Jordan spent five years playing for the Falcon’s, beginning with the Peewee team in 2000. He was 11 years old and we were stunned when they put this skinny kid on the Offensive Line where he played center and on special teams. We thought the coaches were crazy but they clearly saw something in Jordan and he responded to the challenge.

Jordan led by example, starting with never missing a practice rain, snow or shine and he played with the same level of intensity regardless of whether it was a practice or a provincial championship.  A former teammate described an occasion when he had let his guard down during a practice only to find himself on the receiving end of a crushing blow from Jordan. “You do not stop until the whistle is blown” Jordan reminded him.

His proudest moment as a Falcon was when the team went undefeated; capping the season with the city championships. He brought his extensive football experience with him to the Evan Hardy Senior Football team continuing to play offense, defense and special teams; there were many games where Jordan didn’t come off the field. His leadership and skills contributed to the Souls achieving the High School Championship and going to provincial finals. At his final football awards banquet, Jordan was presented with the “Fighting Heart” award; two words that perfectly describe his drive and determination and his love for the game.

Many of the values Jordan lived his life by were honed and reinforced by his experience with Kinsmen Football. He learned the value of hard work, about discipline and commitment, teamwork and respect for others.  At the first Falcon awards banquet he ever attended, Jordan was given a certificate with the motto “Fortune Favors the Brave”. And that is probably the most valuable lesson Jordan received from playing football – to be brave under difficult circumstances, to have the courage to tackle impossible tasks, to never stop fighting.

Once a Falcon, always a Falcon.

Leaning in … and looking back

photo (2)The first few weeks of November were very hard. I over extended my schedule, didn’t take time to exercise, or to grieve, and as a result was left feeling vulnerable and constantly close to tears. Which the control freak in me absolutely hated!

It didn’t help that we spent the  afternoon of November 8th with the Chief of Police and two of his superintendents reviewing Jordan’s history with the Saskatoon Police Service. Reading the police reports detailing the circumstances that lead to his being arrested last March was WAY harder than I expected;  every officer who came in contact with him that weekend knew, and documented, that he was obviously very ill and yet he ended up in jail rather than in emergency. Reliving the desperation and fear we experienced during that last psychotic break was so emotionally draining. I realized that if I was going to continue to try and share Jordan’s story, I needed to find a way to build some resilience.

Loyal  followers of this Blog (all 2 of you!) will know I haven’t had much luck when it comes to finding a counsellor. However I am finding it helpful to borrow the advice being given to a friend by her grief counsellor.

As a result, one of the things I have been working on is trying to control when the grief comes. The counsellor’s recommendation was to set aside 20 minutes each day, at the same time each day, and lean into the grief and feel all of the feelings that come. Then thank Jordan for the shared time and let him know that I have to go and do other things.  The therapist said it was important to try to compartmentalize the grief, but not to block it – which is why it is so important to set aside time each day.  If we spend too much time leaning into the grief we deplete our reserves of strength.  And blocking the grief for too long leaves you feeling weepy and vulnerable. She also reinforced that working too much depletes our reserves and doesn’t allow time for positive things (like driving Lucas to school, walking at the pool). Taking more control over my calendar is a work in progress.

Journalling as a coping mechanism is highly recommended by everyone, and they hardly need to sell me on the emotional merits of writing – it’s a tool I have used for years. But there have been many times over the last four years (and especially in the weeks after Jordan’s funeral) where the grief and pain was so profound that writing seemed risky to my emotional well being and I physically could not make myself do it. But lately there has been a little voice in my head urging me to write – telling me that getting it out of my head is the only way to heal my heart.

So I have started with a relatively easy first step –  retrieving some of the emails I have written since Jordan first became ill and dumping them into this blog. You will notice that there are some huge gaps – times when dealing with Jordan’s situation and dealing with life was simply too overwhelming, too painful to share. Going back in time and filling in those gaps is the harder, but necessary, next step. We’ll see how it goes.

“I am the master of my fate, the captain of my soul”

Remembering Jordan…

Halie

Our beautiful neice Halie posted this note and picture on Facebook today. Another reminder of how much he was loved and the many lives Jordan touched.

For 19 years I was lucky enough to have known, and spent time with my amazing cousin Jordan Chartier. Many peoples lives have been changed forever after losing such an amazing person on July 30th of this year. Jordan was an academic, an athlete and an overall amazing person who valued family above all else. He was someone I looked up to and and aspired to be like in many ways. Before his cremation our family was blessed to be able to say goodbye to Jordan in a  very special way. Jordan was placed in a plywood box that we were able to sign with our messages to send with him. Earlier that day I had learned that Jordan spent one of his last nights at the lake star gazing. This happens to be one of my absolute favorite things to do in the summer. So on his box I drew stars, as many as I possibly could, so he could be surrounded by stars forever. Later after we had  left the funeral home, I looked at my hand to see a perfectly printed star. Ever since that moment I have known that I wanted it to be there forever. The perfect representation of my cousin and a reminder of the amazing person I was lucky enough to know. Today I made it permanent and got the little star tatooed on my wrist.

If you’ve made it all the way through this paragraph I have written; please take a moment out of your day to learn about mental illness. The goal is to raise awareness so that other families don’t have to go through  what our family has had to.

In loving memory of Jordan Chartier.