Article Category: People | Pillars | SC36
Mitchell’s Journey

Mitchell’s Journey

Posted Tuesday, Dec 27
Written By Chris Jones
Photography by Chris Jones
Mitchell Dee Jones | April 29, 2002 - March 2, 2013
Southern Calls, Vol. 36, June 2022

I drove by your building a hundred thousand times and never once noticed it. Why would I? Death is what happens to other people. And when you have young children, mortality is the last thing on your mind. Instead, we’re focused on young life and the promise of a bright and vibrant future.

So, when I heard that dreaded tap on the front door, everything in my world turned upside down and inside out. I saw two strangers: one dressed in a finely pressed suit and tie, the other a formal dress.

Although a river of tears blurred your faces, I sensed your soft smiles. I don’t remember what you said – I only remember the sinking feeling of existential pain.

You reverently went about your work. I’ll never forget how you placed Mitchell’s favorite blanket over his chest as if to soften the blow of our son’s passing. I would have never thought to do such a thing – but it was a little salve for my gashing wound. A wound as vast as the Grand Canyon that would take years to dress and suture. Years to heal.

You whispered as you coordinated, transferring my son from his bed to a gurney. Suddenly, I watched two strangers roll my sweet boy into the dark, bitter winter’s air. I was mortified. Incredulous. I was just talking to Mitch the day before, and he was very much alive, so sweet, tender, and innocent. As you loaded my boy into the back of the vehicle and drove away, panic shot through my body, tears rolled down my cheeks, and began to freeze.

I physically gasped for air as though I was watching my child in the act of being kidnapped. My mind knew what was happening, but my weary heart couldn’t keep up.

As you drove away, every part of me wanted to run down the street and stop you. I wanted to say, “Please, let me get in the back with my boy. He must be so scared, cold, and lonely. I need to comfort him during this difficult time.”

I cannot conjure the words to describe the trauma I experienced at this moment – and the subsequent traumas of grief I felt a million times thereafter.

I wept so hard I threw up. Then, I wept even harder, and I thought I broke a rib. Although the sun was rising that morning, our dark night of the soul was only just beginning.

It wasn’t until mid-morning when I returned to Mitchell’s room and noticed you left a single white rose on our son’s pillow. When I saw that gesture of compassion, I immediately fell to my knees and wept again.

Twenty-four hours would pass before we walked into your building – a place hiding in plain sight until then. Hands trembling and voices shaking, we fumbled over product catalogs and display rooms offering products we desperately didn’t want to think about, let alone purchase. You were kind and gave us all the time and space we needed.

I’ll never forget the startling sobriety about life we felt as we walked through your long room with caskets on display.

The world became infinitesimally small, and the meaning of life towering. Monumental.

A few more days would pass before we returned to your place to dress our son.


The remainder of this article is reserved for subscribers only

In addition to receiving all of our quarterly magazines by mail, subscribers to Southern Calls have exclusive access to additional online articles, as well as ability to read all Southern Calls magazine articles as they come available.

Get your One Year or Two Year subscription today, or login here to continue viewing the rest of the article. 

Other Recent Articles

Issue 34 Available Now!

Issue 34 Available Now!

Join us as we wrap up another year, and while deliveries of everything around the world are apparently delayed off the coast of San Diego, we’re bringing you best wishes for a wonderful holiday season and a loaded December issue sure to satisfy. At 68, and proving...

read more
Dancer to Director

Dancer to Director

It’s raining in Far West Dallas, hard enough for rivulets of water to ooze through cheap, wooden window and door frames and down the water-stained walls of housing projects clumped together along and to the west of Interstate 30.    People living along posh...

read more
Cremation in America

Cremation in America

America’s “Modern” Cremation Movement It was a cold and rainy December day in 1876 when the modern cremation movement in America made its debut. In the small town of Washington, Penn., Dr. Francis Julius LeMoyne, a local eccentric physician, had built a simple...

read more
S. Todd Rose

S. Todd Rose

As chief of the Air Force’s Casualty Headquarters, Todd Rose is charged with a mission unlike any other in the United States Air Force. When an airman is killed, wounded, injured, or even takes ill, it is Todd’s job is to ensure actions are taken to support the airman...

read more
Lisa Scott-Coleman

Lisa Scott-Coleman

It was 1990 and Lisa Scott-Coleman was in the kitchen busy making dinner, unaware that her life was about to take an entirely different trajectory. She had a good job, a management role for a medical company, and was about to get married. Scott-Coleman’s fiancé,...

read more
The Heritage of Hart’s

The Heritage of Hart’s

Just prior to the dawn of the 20th century and nearly two decades following Reconstruction, Jesse B. Hart founded his modest mortuary in a small, single-room structure on Mulberry Street in Macon, Georgia. Originally operated as Keating’s Funeral Parlour, the local...

read more

Join Our Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter to periodically receive article updates, industry news, and details about new issues before they are released.

The Magazine

Never miss an issue.

Subscribers receive all of our quarterly magazines by mail, as well as all exclusive content on the website.