It has been a year of firsts for Stephane Sarrade; the first Christmas without his son Hugo, the first birthday, the first holiday, and tomorrow the first anniversary of his death.
Mr Sarrade has been dreading the day for a couple of months, as he fields requests for his attendance at various memorial events.
“It’s very hard for me to attend these events,” Mr Sarrade said.
“In fact, I decided to do nothing.”
His son, 23-year-old Hugo Sarrade, was one of 89 people killed when three Islamist terrorists stormed the Bataclan theatre on Friday, November 13 last year during an Eagles of Death Metal concert.
Mr Sarrade said his priority now was to “prepare to live another year”.
On the anniversary he will either stay home with his second wife and young son avoiding news broadcasts, or he will get out of town entirely.
As of a few days ago he was still undecided.
He is in touch with other victims’ families and says many of them feel the same.
They are all, he said, “looking for a place to be emotionally safe”.
Mr Sarrade said he prefers, “being in the action … rather than attending some event”.
“My son Hugo was really a part of me and is still a part of me and every day, every hour I feel that I miss him, but I think also that he wants me to go further,” he said.
A father’s search for answers
“Going further” for Mr Sarrade means trying to understand how it came to be that a “French guy, the same age as Hugo” came to murder him.
As part of that process Mr Sarrade has reached out to French parents whose children have become radicalised and gone to fight for Islamic State, including Laurent Amar, whose son Raphael was killed in Syria in 2014.