Australian baseball player Chris Lane was brutally gunned down in a drive-by shooting by three teenagers in Oklahoma in 2013. Two of his killers have been given life sentences; this week, a third was sentenced to 25 years in prison. Chris was a young, promising athlete who’d simply gone out for a jog when the shocking event took place. Here, his sister Andrea explains the profound impact the shooting has had on her life – and that of her family – in the years since.
My life changed forever on August 16, 2013.
That day, my beautiful brother died.
Death is not the finale you believe it to be when you’re a kid. When you’re a child, death is always explained as something that happens to old people. When it’s an older adult, someone who has lived a fulfilling life, celebrated milestones, become wise with age and seen the world change over decades, death seems like the final step in a journey, one that gives them eternal peace.
But when my brother died, everything I had even been told about death was turned on its head.
My heart shattered. I felt more sadness in that moment than in my whole 29 years. When someone is ripped from you at a young age, without warning and in tragic circumstances, death is not so final. Death becomes something that lingers.
Like many 29 year olds, I didn’t consider myself a fully grown adult. Yes, I had a house and a baby and another on the way. I always felt part of a community. But I wasn’t an adult in that circle just yet. The ‘adults’ were around to guide me, give advice and be role models.
In the moment we were told Chris was gone, I was thrown into the unknown. I became a stranger in my community. The people around me didn’t know what to say or do.
Grieving has no bounds, no rules. It is surprising and gut wrenching, and can render you childlike in just minutes.
Top Comments
I just wanted to say thank you for sharing your grief journey. Having lost my younger brother tragically less than a year ago, I can unfortunately relate to most of your article. It provided some comfort that I am not alone in my feelings as I continue on with life without my brother by my side. So thank you for your eloquent and honest words. They have helped me and my family more than you could ever know.
May the memories of your Chris bring you light even in the most darkest of times.
My heart goes out to you and your family. I am from Duncan Ok and I completely understand what you have gone through. I lost my brother when he was 29 to gun violence. Our daughter was only a year old when it happened. I was unable to drink the problem away either because I had to take care of my daughter. In December it will be 8 years since my brother died and it is hard to move on with your life without your sibling. You have to take it one day at a time and focus on the positives in your life. I focused on my daughter and my son, who we named after my brother. Hearing their laughter bring joy into our life and we know that my brother is looking down on us smiling. I pray for your family and our focus in our family has always been on Chris.