Letters to the Editor 8-13-15

 

St. Joseph’s Cemetery needs attention

I’m writing on behalf of all families who have loved ones buried at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Millbrook.

I would like to ask you to take a ride and look at the cemeteries around the county and see how immaculate they are, even the ones dated back to the 1800s. Then take a ride to St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Millbrook.

The weeds are growing up around the fence approaching the cemetery. It is half-mowed most of the time, if at all. It appears the only areas kept up are the ones closest to the church. The stones aren’t trimmed, there are stones you can’t even see because of the overgrowth.

I am probably going to make a lot of enemies in Millbrook from this letter but we have loved ones laid to rest here.

Would you want your loved ones laid to rest in a place like that?

This has been going on for as long as I can remember! Why hasn’t something been done or said before now?

Leonard J. Anderson

Millbrook

 

 

The effects of checking the ‘donor’ box

My 19-year-old grandson recently became a hero.

He and a friend went long-board skateboarding one day in July. He didn’t wear his helmet as he promised his mother he would. Wearing a helmet prevents most major head trauma and should be part of the gear worn to skateboard.

Speed is the aim of this type of skateboarding, not jumps or fancy maneuvers. It appears his board came to an abrupt stop, but he didn’t, somersaulting into the air and landing on his right shoulder blade and lower skull. The damage was horrific. Doctors said a helmet would not have prevented this injury. Surgery only proved the damage was so extensive as to not be compatible with life. We lost our beloved grandson that day.

He was, however, kept on life support, as we learned he had checked off the “donor” box when applying for his driver’s license three years earlier. Because his blood type was O Negative, he was classified as a universal donor, meaning all other blood types were compatible with his, and these people could receive his donated organs.

Consequently, a 30-year-old father of two, whose damaged heart would not keep him alive much longer, would receive his heart; a 50-year-old man with advanced liver disease would receive his liver; a person on the West Coast would receive his kidneys; and my grandson’s undamaged lung and corneas went to two other recipients. He saved several lives and improved the quality of all.

Our family learned at this time that organ donors are accepted up to age 80 and skin donors up to age 85. However, only one in 100 persons who sign on as donors is accepted, for various reasons.

We have been designated donors for many years, and we urge others to join us in this worthwhile endeavor. It costs you nothing and may just save a life or two.

Barbara D. Lemmen

 

North Canaan, Conn.

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