An Unexpected Visitor


If I’d learned anything from the first session with Dee, it was that there was absolutely no telling where our time together might lead us.  Although the jumble of words, sounds, and images received by her open mind later made perfect sense, that was not necessarily the case at the time.  All we could do was move as the spirit led us, gleaning what meaning we could along the way.  From my perspective the experience was surreal, both intimidating and thrilling.  Scott’s death and the force of my desire had indeed opened my heart and my mind, and I had been deeply gratified by the accuracy of Dee’s first reading.  The idea of communion with Scott’s consciousness, contact with the other side, had both answered my deepest prayers and blown my mind.

Nevertheless my rational mind, the part of me trained as an attorney, did not know what to think.  From one perspective, no amount of evidence will ever be sufficient.  But my heart was telling me otherwise.  All my instincts reassured me that Dee was the real thing.  Beyond the accuracy of her insight, I noted her almost complete lack of interest in money and remembered that she had actually dissuaded me from setting up a second session at the conclusion of the first, telling me she’d already given me quite a bit to work on.  On a deep level, I sensed that she was motivated only by love.  I realized that the Paul Crockett existing before Scott’s death would probably not be having these conversations with her, but I also knew that everything had irrevocably changed on March 1 and that man was forever gone.  In pursuing this new path, this path of the spirit, I found myself on a journey with neither map nor compass, being steadily pushed to new limits.

Now, as Dee spoke, those limits were suddenly pushed further.  It looked like we had company.  “Who’s Rob?,” she asked.  I knew the answer to her question, but hesitated for a moment as a wave of mixed emotion crashed over me.  Somewhat shocked, sorting through the implications, I replied simply “I knew a Rob that died of AIDS a few years ago.”  “Yeah, he’s there with him.  And I think they’re visiting one another right now.  Did he know Rob?”

I found the invocation of Rob’s name upsetting.  Even today, it is difficult to capture in words the unique journey Robbie Sommers and I shared together over the years, to sort through the anger and the love.  From the time we met in Tallahassee, Florida in1986 until his death in 1991, we enjoyed a special and tumultuous connection.  An extraordinarily talented man, Rob had risen to a top position in an unlikely place, the state Department of Corrections, despite his obvious gayness.  He had been able to make a positive difference there, seeing to it that televisions were placed in the state’s first prison AIDS ward, helping point some troubled kids in a better direction, and otherwise bringing an enlightened perspective to a bureaucracy much in need of it.

Though we shared many beautiful times together, a tension inevitably arose because in the end I could not give him what he wanted.  Over the course of time he had fallen in love with me, and I was unable to return his feelings.  Rob was a highly creative individual, pushy, effective, and used to getting his way.  Generous with his heart and highly insistent, he could not understand why I could not accept the gift he offered.  During the worst moments of the relationship, I experienced a level of manipulative behavior and anger unlike any I had ever encountered before, shaking me to the core.

Nevertheless, mutually recognizing the special bond between us, we finally reached a shaky truce.  I had moved to Tallahassee, the state’s capital, to clerk for a justice on the Florida Supreme Court.  When that position had run its course and it came time for me to leave the city at the beginning of 1987, I decided to take the opportunity to see as much of the world as possible before I began practicing law and was forced to get “a real job.”

It was Rob who drove me up to the Atlanta airport.  Together we had enjoyed an exhibition of the magnificent paintings of Jacob Lawrence at the High Museum there, leaving me inspired with the boldness of his color and the freedom of his line.  That night I had sketched away madly in color pencil until late in the night, interpreting from our hotel room window the view of the extravagantly Moorish-style Fox Theater just below us, its unlikely towers, arches and minarets reaching upwards, and the city’s downtown beyond.  A few hours later, finally sitting on the plane, rain beating down upon the windows, I knew that I was forever leaving behind a chapter of my life.  Thinking back on some of the sweet times we had shared together, I found myself nevertheless deeply relieved and grateful to be on my way.

I had finally returned from that journey and moved back to Miami, my home town, moving in with my parents while I looked for a job.  Within a short time I was working as a lawyer, busily learning a new profession and living in a world measured by the passage of billable hours.  The next month, in early February of 1988, I received a phone call at home that forever changed my life.  “Robbie asked me to call and tell you,” said the shaky voice of a mutual friend with whom we’d once shared good times, “that he’s in the hospital with full-blown AIDS.  Paul, he’s really really sick.”  Left breathless by the shock, I felt as though the bottom of the world had suddenly dropped out beneath me.  I had no idea what to say.  Never before had the AIDS bomb hit anywhere so close to home.  “I don’t know whether I should mention this or not,” he said in closing, “but you might want to think about getting tested.”  And then there was silence.

Hanging up the phone, I thought, my God, he’s talking about Robbie.  Suddenly the disease had a face.  As if punched in the gut, I cried out in pain and grieved from deep within.  Falling back on the bed I lay screaming, helpless, sobs wracking my body.  Major, our white German Shepherd dog, put his huge front paws up on the bed and began whimpering with me and licking my tears.  He could sense my total distress, and sought to comfort me.  I was otherwise alone, so very alone, and I appreciated his love.  Until his death a few years ago, I never forgot how he had been there for me when I really needed him.

Suddenly dropped into a free fall of pain and shock by the news of my friend’s dire situation, it was days before it occurred to me that the news carried ominous implications for my own health.  In the late 80′s, in the figurative backwaters of Tallahassee, AIDS had seemed something far away, an awful, incomprehensible experience that happened only in distant places to other people.  Though Rob and I had enjoyed a sexual relationship on and off over the years, it had never occurred to us to regularly use condoms.  Now the lesson was all too clear.  We had all been at risk.  After building up to soaring crescendos of anxiety in the weeks that followed, shadows of terminal illness haunting my dreams, I finally worked up the nerve to take the HIV test.  It came back negative.

In an instant, that phone call had changed everything.  In the face of death, my differences with Rob suddenly seemed minor.  What could I do for my friend, now in the hospital and in such pain?  Not much, our mutual friends back in Tallahassee told me, except to come up and see him and show support, to be there for him.  Also, they suggested, why don’t you bring a living will with you?  Since I had frequently helped clients complete the documents, legally making their wishes known as to the withdrawal of life support in the event of a terminal diagnosis, I seized on the suggestion.  There was really nothing I could do, I knew, but at least this was something.  I was doing what I could.  At least it might bring him some peace of mind.

The following weekend, just before Valentine’s Day, I had flown up to Tallahassee and been greeted by a group of friends lost in their grief and barely able to keep one another afloat.  They had held me, told me how glad they were that I had come, and warned me what to expect in the hospital room.  He was doing a little better as a result of the iv’s, they said, that awful rash is gone and the infection in his throat is finally fading.  But he’s still burning up with fevers; he drifts in and out; sometimes he gets angry.  I tried to listen but my mind wouldn’t cooperate.  It had all been too much, and it was only just beginning.

No warnings could have diminished the shock or the horror of that first visit.  In those days visitors were required to put on gloves and surgical masks before entering the door.  Even close friends were suddenly transformed into space aliens, seemingly lost and far-away from home under the harsh fluorescent lights.  And there in the middle of the small white room was Rob, wearing a hospital gown and sitting up in bed.  He looked pretty much the same, I thought, but he’d gotten so skinny, especially his legs.  My God, I thought, all the muscle is just gone.  As I walked forward to greet him he tried his best to smile, but then pointed to himself and said “Look at me.  There’s hardly anything left.  Just skin and bone.”

Suddenly leaning over a cold bedpan to dry heave, nauseated by the brutal antibiotics coursing through his veins, he looked up at me afterwards with tears in his eyes and said “There’s no words for how horrible this fucking disease is.”  As he looked into my eyes, I saw in his a level of pain, disappointment and exhaustion that immediately broke my heart.  A few minutes later he signed the living will I’d brought with me, the hand clutching his pen shaking so badly that his signature was barely legible.  Even that simple effort seemed to leave him breathless and exhausted.  As he spoke in the next few minutes with another friend visiting, a woman he’d worked with, I noticed that she brought out in him a different quality, one I’d never had a chance to see before.  Filled with sadness, I wondered why all the sides of this complex and gifted man were coming to an end, and such a painful one.  How could this be?  And where was the dignity in it?  Later, back among my friends, they held me as I broke down and cried.

Despite the severity of that first illness Rob was a survivor, and had hung in there for more than four years after his diagnosis.  Though we shared some special moments together during that time, he seemed to drift with his illness ever further into isolation and uncharted emotional waters.  Now more than ever, it seemed, I could do no right.  When he visited Miami once after Scott and I were together, Scott almost immediately developed a visceral dislike for this haunting figure from my past.  He had little patience for this idiosyncratic, skinny little man shuffling about, clutching to him his small backpack like a purse.  Rob had been battered by repeated rounds of brutal illness but was still on his feet, stubbornly clinging to life.  Perhaps troubled by the specter Rob’s presence presented for his own future, Scott had said dismissively “He moves around and bitches like a crabby old lady.  I hate that.”

One year, after I had committed the cardinal sin of forgetting Rob’s birthday, he called me up to tell me that he “just couldn’t deal with the stress of me anymore” and was cutting me out of his life.  Though I made a half-hearted effort to argue the point he quickly cut me off, and I never saw or spoke to him again.  When I heard months later that he had died, an awful death, I felt it important to travel to his funeral in order to pay my respects.  Though my feelings about the man could not have been more mixed, nor the lessons of our experience together more unclear, I knew that he had become part of me.  For better or worse, his story had become caught up in mine.  In grieving his loss, I honored my own.

To: A Message Of Peace Planted In tIme

A Spirit Begins To Stir – part one

A Light Breaks Through

No circuits remain uncompleted where truth lies

Scott, November 1996     Channeled Writing

As I waited the next evening with some apprehension for the telephone to ring, hope, doubt and fear all circled and danced through my mind. I sensed that I was on the threshold of an important experience, but had no idea what shape it would take. When Daviea finally called we chatted a little, as I was too terrified to get to the heart of the matter. The stakes were simply too high, and “what ifs” were running through my mind. At last, Daviea said “I asked her how Scott was doing.” In the momentary pause that followed, my heart seemed to stop beating in my chest. “What did she say?,” I asked after what seemed an infinity.

“She said that he’s smiling!,” she reported, ” and that he’s doing very very well where he is. She said that a couple times, ‘he’s doing very very well.”’ Even as she spoke I began to feel unaccountably light, as if a breakthrough were being made. “She said he’s much better off now than he was in the body.” She briefly paused, then continued. “And she said that Scott told her that he was surprised that he went so quickly.” Though those last words could not have meant much to Daviea or to Dee, they immediately struck me to my core and reverberated there as true. On the deepest level of my intuition I felt that I was being handed a real communication from Scott, experiencing a genuine sharing. It suddenly dawned on me that he had chosen to communicate that specific message not only to penetrate my veil of rational skepticism, and to touch my heart that way, but also for the purpose of greater healing.

crockett-in-the-glades1

During his last days, Scott and I had become of one mind. Even as his physical challenges mounted and his body tired, and we fought battle after battle side by side, we grew in our love for one another and our souls melded. Given one last opportunity for union in this lifetime, each second became precious and an experience to be savored. The night before he died, we sat on the sofa together as usual, just talking and watching Thursday night T.V. By that time the infusion lines disappearing into the port in his chest had become part of the scenery, no longer any big deal. To us it was an ordinary evening, yet we both recognized it as sacred time.

We were easy together, having spent enough time together of sufficient quality to make words unnecessary for communication. I knew that Scott had made plans for the next day as the ones before, to simply survive. I knew that his death had taken him by surprise, and on some level that was part of my shock at his parting. Thus, in hearing Scott’s message third-hand, I intuitively felt that this was true, that Scott had effectively answered my prayers and made contact. My heart flooded with joy, flush with the dawning realization that Scott’s beautiful consciousness, his soul, had not died along with his battered body. The implications were staggering.

On a deeper level, Scott’s brief communication offered a message of healing in another important way. During the years we made our way through life together, we had faced everything as a team. All of life’s joys were made sweeter in the sharing, and the inevitable slings and arrows softened by the shield of our love. But yet there I had been on the morning of Scott’s passing, left unable to share this most momentous of experiences with him. I had seen him all the way through, bearing witness to the crowning “experience of a lifetime,” but now felt keenly the depths of my isolation. More than ever before I longed to be with him in this experience, to talk it through with him, to somehow help soften its impact in the sharing. But death had slammed the door shut on me, and hard, leaving me unable to do so.

Not until I heard Daviea speak those words did I realize how deeply frustrated and out-of-balance I had been left by my experience of Scott’s death. Even if I couldn’t have him back, I’d burned with longing to find at least a measure of closure with the event of his passing. In hearing Dee’s simple words through Daviea, I began to feel that an important circuit had been completed. More than ever before, I felt ready to start letting go of the bottomless pain I carried within like a heavy stone.

Feeling lighter than air, full with the dawning realization that my journey with Scott was not over, I literally laughed and jumped for joy after telling Daviea that I loved her and hanging up the phone. In spirit, Scott smiled.

A Window Opens

A few days later, I ran into a friend during a lunchtime workout at the gym. I had found that trying to return to my prior exercise routine, jogging one day and working out the next, helped to lift my sadness more effectively than any prescription medicine. My friend, who had not seen me since the memorial gathering, asked with sincerity and warmth how I was doing. It had been a tough journey, I told him, about as dark as I could stand, but I felt that maybe I might be just beginning to heal. I was proud of the small steps I had been able to take. I was proud, and somewhat surprised, to find myself surviving, to find myself still here. And even, at times, starting to tentatively embrace life if I wasn’t paying attention.

And I shared with my friend my fledgling awareness of a spiritual connection to Scott, my dawning feeling that maybe part of his consciousness had remained with me though his body had not. “I’m not exactly sure what’s going on,” I told him, “but something is definitely happening here. I’ve been writing him every day in my journal, and it’s like my sacred time. I still feel like I need to communicate with him; death hasn’t changed that.” Looking into my friend’s eyes, deciding I could trust him, I said “But that’s only part of the story. The weird thing is not that I’m writing him, but that I get the strong sense he’s listening. And sometimes, I swear, I’ve felt like he’s really been there with me.”

My friend listened spellbound, not sure exactly what to think or how to respond. “In fact,” I continued, I’m not sure why, “I feel like he’s here right now.” Feeling a chill pass through me, in pure desire, I said “Come to me, baby!” Standing with my back to the wall of large metal windows behind me, I saw my friend’s mouth suddenly drop open. Turning around, I saw one of the large, vertical windows lining the wall of the upstairs gym standing open. “That window,” he said slowly, “just unlatched itself and flew open.”

At the time I just smiled, not making much of the incident. No big deal, I figured, it must have been the wind. The timing was just a coincidence. But when I walked over to the wall a few minutes later, all of the other windows were latched shut. They were all several feet tall, framed in metal and quite heavy. And the day was still.

To Chapter 9