By EMILY RAPP
My son Ronan died on February 15th of this year, just shy of his third birthday. For two years he suffered from Tay-Sachs disease, a genetic neurological condition with no treatment and no cure.
When I was in high school, long before I became a mother, my father gave me a 1978 Ford Fairmont for my sixteenth birthday. This rollicking boat of a car guzzled gas, struggled to start in the cold Midwestern winters, and was constantly hungry for oil, which I dumped in using a funnel that my theater group had painted with my nickname: Rapp Star.
I loved this car, red and white, rambling and adorable, and outfitted with a stereo system from the decade in which I was born: an eight track player.
On the weekends I scoured garage sales and quickly collected, sometimes for only 5 cents each, an impressive array of 70s musical hits: John Denver, The Carpenters, Cat Stevens, Abba, and best of all, the Eagles. I barreled around my small Nebraska town, windows down no matter the weather, smoking the occasional cigarette and belting out songs with girlfriends as we cruised down Main Street on a Saturday night, changing the lyrics to There’s a girl my Lord in a Fairmont Ford, slowing down to take a look at me. C’mon baby; don’t say maybe. You’ve got to know that your sweet love is going to save me.