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Beverly Ann Kegley

Beverly Ann Kegley
Senior Year - Narbonne High School

Beverly Ann Kegley

Beverly Ann Kegley
Beverly in Junior High School

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Dear Beverly


Just stopped by today 
to say that you 
are remembered.

           Mi Amor, you remembered me.

Always.

During the afternoon of June 4, 2012 
my friend Beverly called 
me on my office phone.  


She was upset.  


Beverly Ann Kegley Carvajal
The money that her mother 
had left her was gone. 


She couldn’t account for it; 
she was unable to remember 
where it had gone.


Her brother, as I was to learn, 
in the aftermath of their mother’s death 
offered to help her set up a trust, 
but was prevented from doing so.   


It came as no surprise that 
she couldn’t remember 
what had happened to 
the approximately $150,000 … 
she was heavily medicated and, 
as later revealed in her autopsy report, 
Beverly was suffering from heart, kidney and liver failure. 


Although denied an email account
and even a rather mundane thing like 
a facebook page (forcibly deleted), 
Beverly was given access 
to all of the alcohol she could consume.  


She was destitute and felt 
very much alone.


I said to her that 
we could figure it out.  


Calm down.


Those words ring hollow now.


She had already
made up her mind.


We talked for a bit and concluded 
with a reminder that 
she was not alone.


“I love you,” 
is all that I could offer.  


A minute later 
the phone rang again.


She said, 
“I just wanted to hear 
your voice one more time.”


I thought nothing 
of it at the time.   
She had done that before; 
it was her nature.
 
The phone rang again.    
It was a hang-up.


Again … another hang-up.


Again … another hang-up.


It then went silent.


Beverly then proceeded 
to take her life.


Her body was found 
the next morning … it was too late.


The Orange County Sheriff-Coroner 
ruled her death a suicide 
from the combined effects of: 
quetiapine (brand name: Seroquel), 
levetiracetam (brand name: Keppra), 
fluoxetine (brand name: Prozac) 
and norfluoxetine (brand name: Seproxetine).


No one called me 
to give me the sad news.


Her funeral was on June 21, 2012.


No one called me.


On her birthday, July 16, 
I did not receive 
a phone call from her.

It was her nature to do so.


I was worried, 
but without email 
(her account hacked, 
monitored and then 
eventually deleted) 
and a phone number, 
there was little 
I could do but wait.


By the evening 
of August 13 
I had grown frantic.


I went on line in hopes 
of finding a “home phone” 
in Irvine, or failing that, an address. 
 

As I typed her name 
in google: 
B E V E R L Y  C A R V A  … 

suddenly google completed 
the inquiry with 
Beverly Carvajal Obituary.  


I was stunned.    
I could not get my head around it.


Then I looked at 
the date, June 5, 
and realized, 
much to my horror, 
what she had done; 
what the phone call 
was all about.   


Beverly Ann Kegley Carvajal, Ralph Tribbey
My friend had called 
me to say goodbye.


During the days 
that followed 
I was inconsolable.


I cried 10,000 tears.  

I was angry.

I was hurt.

I was furious 
at what had been 
done to her.

I would pull over 
to the side of the road 
and just break down.

I was going insane 
from the grief. 


My wife tried to help, 
but I was helpless 
to help myself.

The pain was 
so much to bear.


I signed the 
remembrance book.

I googled her name 
and only one picture showed up, 
that atrocious one used with her obituary.

It didn’t do her justice.

She must have been 
so alone at the end.

I cried.


It was out of this pain 
and grief that I decided to start 
a blog that I would visit 
every day for one full year 
and remember her.   

Each and every day 
her life would be celebrated 
and I, as one who loved her, 
would find in that celebration 
a path for my heart to heal.


Everything that was 
inside of me flowed out 
upon these pages 
during the past year.

I had to let it go. 

The anger.  

The hate.  

The bitterness.  

It had to all go.

It consumes.


The process was cathartic.


I kept the promise.  

Beverly Carvajal Los Angeles Dodgers Fan, Beverly CarvajalEveryday for one full 
year I posted comments, 
tunes and pictures.  

I celebrated her life.
I said everything I had to say.

But there is so much more 
to say about Beverly; 
about how wonderful 
and loving she was.


When you google her name now 
there is a flood of pictures of her.


The anger.

The hate.

They are gone.

The heart is healed; 
the tears have dried; 
the grief subsided.


Her memory lives 
here in my heart.


And now it is time 
for these daily posts 
to come to an end.


Beverly Ann Kegley, Beverly Carvajal, Ralph Tribbey
Important updates 
and celebrations of her life 
will be noted on the page below.

Others who loved her 
are free to add their 
own pictures and comments.

I suspect that none will, 
but nevertheless 
you are welcome to do so.


Whatever you knew her by:

Bev
Sam
Beverly
Beverly Ann
Beverly Ann Kegley
Beverly Carvajal
Beverly Ann Carvajal
Beverly Ann Tribbey


Her life is to be celebrated 
and remembered.

She was not alone.

She is not alone.  

She was loved.

She is loved.






He called you Sam. 
How odd a nickname for such a pretty girl.

“Hey Sam, go out and play.”

“Sam, clean that room.”
“Please,” he didn’t have to say.
Reluctant for the chore, but you adored the man.
So off you’d go for the one who called you Sam.

Beverly Ann Kegley aka Sam, Ralph Tribbey
“Sam, such a lovely smile you have today.”
It would grow brighter with his voice.
“I love you daddy.”

“I love you, Sam.”
That’s all he had to say.

And then the cancer came.

Gone and you just a child of twelve.
It could never be the same.

No one to call you Sam.
No sound of “Sam” to bring a smile.
No “Sam, clean that room” today … or any other day.

One day there.  One day gone.
Lay bare the heart ... and cry you did.
Such a heavy load to bear.

No one to keep the boys at bay.
No one to teach you this or that.
No one to say: “I love you, Sam.”

“I love you, Sam.”

The loss, it marked you well.
A wound not seen, but there, a heart not whole.
A week?  A month?  A year? 
Could he have tarried just awhile?

Only those who took the time,
Who stopped and sought to listen.
They too could hear the whisper in your heart.
The need.  The need.  The need.

The need to be just Sam.
And hear without condition,
“I love you, Sam.”

“I love you, Sam.”

He called you Sam. 
How odd a nickname for such a lovely woman.









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