tallyho8
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2004
- Messages
- 4,999
- Tractor
- Kubota L4400, Kubota ZD326
I can't just let him go without mentioning something about him. I've been a member of TBN for many years but he had his own life and never posted here. I was just 20 when my son was born and had never had much money since my father was a disabled veteran. I wanted my son to have things I never had and worked long and hard to earn enough to supply these things. Probably a little too much work and not enough time with my son. However, I did teach him the value of a dollar and that he could do or be anything that he wanted if he just tried.
It took me many years and a lot of hard hours to start up a successful business but I had to put all my profits back into the business to keep it growing, leaving not much to raise my son with but the knowledge that someday I would leave him a very nice inheritance.
As a teenager he started fooling around with electronics and took to it like a duck takes to water. He knew this would be his future vocation. When a senior in high school, riding on back of his friend's motorcycle, he was badly injured in an accident that kept him out of school for 2 years. During this time he studied electronics and computers on his own and eventually managed to graduate from Tulane in computer engineering. He built me my first compute back in 1990 and it was so advanced I used it over 5 years before it became the least bit dated.
He worked for different electronic firms for a few years and was electrical engineer for Confederate motorcycles when he designed led taillights for them making Confederate the first motor vehicle to ever have led lights. He had an offer for a large raise and went to work for another company starting out great but then slowing down as he started forgetting things. His company insurance paid for him to see the company doctor who could find nothing wrong with him and informed the company that he was just lazy. He got fired. No insurance and now his condition was getting worse. He couldn't get up some mornings making it impossible to hold a job and with no medical determination Social Security refused to give him disability so he had to live off his wife's meager earnings and what I could afford to give him.
He went through his savings fast then sold his Mustang GT and his new Ducati motorcycle to help pay bills. One day he fell on the floor and couldn't get up and his wife called an ambulance that brought him to Charity Hospital where after a few days he was diagnosed with progressive Multiple Sclerosis. After another year and a half fighting with Social Security we finally got him disability benefits to help pay his medical bills but by then his disease had progressed rapidly leaving him unable to walk or even sit up. The disease got worse and worse till he finally passed away a few weeks ago. I thank God that he left me a Grandson to love and cherish.
I was quite young when my beloved parents passed but everyone usually expects to see their parents pass someday. Losing your only child is something much harder and venting about it seems to help somewhat. Tell everyone in your family how much you love them and forget about the little things that annoy you and try to spend a little more quality time with them because you never know what tomorrow will bring.
It took me many years and a lot of hard hours to start up a successful business but I had to put all my profits back into the business to keep it growing, leaving not much to raise my son with but the knowledge that someday I would leave him a very nice inheritance.
As a teenager he started fooling around with electronics and took to it like a duck takes to water. He knew this would be his future vocation. When a senior in high school, riding on back of his friend's motorcycle, he was badly injured in an accident that kept him out of school for 2 years. During this time he studied electronics and computers on his own and eventually managed to graduate from Tulane in computer engineering. He built me my first compute back in 1990 and it was so advanced I used it over 5 years before it became the least bit dated.
He worked for different electronic firms for a few years and was electrical engineer for Confederate motorcycles when he designed led taillights for them making Confederate the first motor vehicle to ever have led lights. He had an offer for a large raise and went to work for another company starting out great but then slowing down as he started forgetting things. His company insurance paid for him to see the company doctor who could find nothing wrong with him and informed the company that he was just lazy. He got fired. No insurance and now his condition was getting worse. He couldn't get up some mornings making it impossible to hold a job and with no medical determination Social Security refused to give him disability so he had to live off his wife's meager earnings and what I could afford to give him.
He went through his savings fast then sold his Mustang GT and his new Ducati motorcycle to help pay bills. One day he fell on the floor and couldn't get up and his wife called an ambulance that brought him to Charity Hospital where after a few days he was diagnosed with progressive Multiple Sclerosis. After another year and a half fighting with Social Security we finally got him disability benefits to help pay his medical bills but by then his disease had progressed rapidly leaving him unable to walk or even sit up. The disease got worse and worse till he finally passed away a few weeks ago. I thank God that he left me a Grandson to love and cherish.
I was quite young when my beloved parents passed but everyone usually expects to see their parents pass someday. Losing your only child is something much harder and venting about it seems to help somewhat. Tell everyone in your family how much you love them and forget about the little things that annoy you and try to spend a little more quality time with them because you never know what tomorrow will bring.