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Strengthen Relationships > The Strength of Families

Meeting a Grandson I Wasn't Sure I Had

Picture of Tyr HawalukThree weeks ago, I gave a welcoming hug for the first time to my eighteen-year old grandson, Tyr (pronounced tier), who likes to say that he is his own uncle. Since that opening line requires a little explanation, let me tell you why he identifies himself that way and how events have brought together two families and two fathers.

A Complex Family Genogram

It might help if I could draw you a genogram of our relationship, but I’m not sure how our family diagram would look. Until grandchildren and the reality of Tyr entered our lives, my genogram could be laid out in fairly straight lines. I was raised by a Lutheran minister and am the granddaughter of a minister from the Church of the Brethren, so the idea of living without benefit of marriage was not an option that I, or my siblings, would have considered when I began dating a hundred years ago.

Divorces and unmarried alliances were rare in our family and if there were children given up for adoption, I didn’t know about them. Today, relationships with half-sisters and step-brothers seem to be more common in more and more. In any case, Tyr and our oldest son put a twist on the term “complex family relationship.”

Birth and Death in Northern California

The role that my family plays in this drama began nineteen years ago when our son lived for several months with Julie Hawkaluk, a young woman he met in Northern California. Sometime during their relationship, she became pregnant. However, before the baby was born, she reconnected with Eric, a boyfriend who had signed up for the Army but decided the military wasn’t for him, and left.

Rumors that our son had possibly fathered a child floated around the family for awhile, but faded as the years went by. Since I have always believed that the person who raises a child is the true parent of that child, and since he was not in touch with his son, I assumed the story was probably not true. Even if it was, his child was not part of his life. We didn’t feel we should take the initiative to search for him because we didn’t know what unintended complications would have been created in the life of the family in which the child lived.

In any case, about a year and a half after Tyr was born, Julie and Eric had a boy named Keith. The four of them were living in a small house they were building near the Hoopa Valley Indian Tribe when a fateful accident occurred four days before Tyr’s second birthday in 1992. The tar paper covering the wall caught fire from a candle and a large piece of the wall came down on the bed where Tyr was sleeping. Julie grabbed him, ran outside, handed him to a neighbor girl standing there, and rushed back into the house to rescue Keith, not realizing Eric had already taken the baby outside. Unfortunately, she was killed for her bravery.

Tyr was burned over 80% of his body and spent more than a month in the burn center in San Francisco. Eric then took the boys to Colorado to live near his mother.

An Angel of the Highest Order

Just as the characters in Russian novels enter the story from different periods of time, we now need to go back to 1976 and meet Mike Hawkaluk. His role in this story began that year when he married Maryann, who had two young children, Julie (Tyr’s mother) and Allen. Although they didn’t have any children together, he adopted Maryann’s two children and life seemed to hold great promise. They bought fifteen acres ten miles outside of Ronan, Montana, and planned to build a house on it. Unfortunately, shortly after then, when Julie was fifteen years old, Mary died in a motorcycle accident, leaving a bereft husband and two children.

Losing a mother when you are a teenager is always tough and, apparently in reaction to her loss, Julie went to live with her grandmother to finish high school and then took off for California, planning to enter Humboldt State University. Instead, she met our son.

Now let’s bring our story up to one year after the fire. Eric was unable to adequately care for the boys and his mother, realizing Tyr and Keith would be put into foster care if someone in the family didn’t accept responsibility for them, called Mike and told him the situation. Immediately, Mike got in the car and drove to Colorado to get the boys.

But now there was a big problem. How would he raise them without someone who could take care of them while he was at work? Fortunately, for a couple years Mike had been dating Ginny, a woman with whom he worked at a lumber mill. So he asked her if she would marry him, quit work, and raise the boys. “Crazy idea,” she replied, but was willing to take on the role of mother, even though she had already raised four children of her own.

Since Mike intended to adopt Tyr and Keith, he put a legal notice in the newspaper. However, because it was a local Montana paper, our son didn’t see the notice and the adoption went through.

Before explaining how we finally connected with Tyr, I’d like to share two challenges the Hawkaluks faced that demonstrate their resilience. When Tyr was five-years-old, they lived in a trailer while planning to build a house on their property. A propane tank exploded and the trailer burned to the ground. Moving back to town and staying with friends, they sold all but five acres, leaving room for some horses they kept as a hobby, and gradually built another house.

Their second significant challenge came when, a few weeks after moving into their new house, a tornado came through and two large pine trees crashed through the roof before the family could get to the storm shelter. Fortunately, Tyr and Keith escaped injury because they just happened to be standing under sturdy cross beams. But the insurance company cancelled the Hawkaluk’s policy because they had trees near the house. So, taking a deep breath and determined to rebuild, Mike and Ginny had the roof repaired and removed all the remaining trees just in case they got unlucky with another tornado.

Our Son Creates a Family

Now it’s time for our story to return to California and catch up with what happened to our son while Tyr was growing up in Montana.

Some time after Julie left, he met a woman who was raising her two children by herself. They were married in an outdoor ceremony overlooking the Pacific ocean and two years later they had a son, Ki. We saw the family about once a year, accepted all the boys as our grandchildren, and were pleased four years ago when their oldest moved past his rebellious teenage years and entered college, where he was doing very well and showed great promise.

Unfortunately, on July 5, 2004, our grandson was a passenger in a car driven by a friend (whose life he had twice saved while surfing) when the friend fell asleep at the wheel and crashed into a tree, killing him instantly. This tragedy was very difficult for everyone in the family, not least of which were his two brothers. They needed an older brother who could show them how to avoid some of the snares and boulders that lie on the path to adulthood.

MySpace Connects Two Brothers

Even before his half-brother was killed, Ki wanted to meet his other half-brother. After the accident, it became more important and Ki spent several years searching for information. Finally, a Google search for the name Tyr Hawkaluk turned up an article about his winning a speech or debate contest and information about his high school was the first big break he had. Trying to reach the school through email was, for some reason, not possible.

Then Ki turned to MySpace and last January asked if anyone online went to Ronan High School in Montana. Several said yes. Do you know Tyr Hawkaluk? Yes, a girl replied, and provided Tyr’s email address. That very evening Ki wrote to Tyr, informing him that he was his half-brother. Though Tyr at first thought someone was playing a joke on him, when he realized it was true, he was excited to know about his other family, even though he was happy in the family where he had grown up.

Over the next half year the two boys built their relationship through emails and in August Ki drove to Montana with his mother and father, meeting Tyr for the first time face-to-face. After several days there, Tyr drove with them back to their home to visit before beginning his senior year. Then my husband and I invited the Hawkaluks to come to our house this summer. (Though only Mike and Tyr came this year, we hope that next summer we can meet Ginny and Keith, for the Hawkaluks are now extended family.)

That is why, two weeks ago, I greeted Tyr with a hug and welcomed him into our family. During the next seven days — as we went to a Reggae concert at the Hollywood Bowl, saw Venice Beach (that's Tyr talking with a street performer), spent a day at Catalina Island, and played hosts at other Southern California attractions — I was very pleased to get to know an open, intelligent, personable young man who just happens to be my grandson.

A Great Addition to the Family

I suspect that Tyr has turned out so well in part because he grew up in a secure and loving family, with horses, camping, and encouragement of his interests. His outlook on life also comes from having to deal with more than sixty operations in his eighteen years, all thanks to the Shriners. Such an experience has given him a chance to know what is important in life and what is not. He has developed an understanding of why people do and say what they do that is more mature than one would expect from someone his age. Out of all his experieces has also come an acceptance of the scars he can’t hide. If you are bothered by them, that is your problem.

It helps that he seems to have been born with a happy disposition and is very smart, with a wry sense of humor and love of puns. He’s also a little cocky and opinionated, as eighteen-year-olds are allowed to be, but he is open to new ideas and enjoys the challenge of learning.

Perhaps one of the reasons I connected so easily with this new grandson in my life is that he also likes to write. In his case, it is poetry, song lyrics, short stories, plays, and school newspaper articles. Later this month he will enter the University of Montana with a full tuition scholarship in creative writing, possibly becoming a journalist. Since he received numerous high school awards, from math to history, and is the winner of several regional and state speech and debate contests, it’s interesting that the roommate assigned to him is also a debater. Should be an interesting year for them both.

Relationships Built on Happenstance

In order for each one of us to be alive, every single ancestor, from the beginning of time, had to have survived long enough to pass on his or her genes so we could be created. What is often not considered is the fact that random connections build the structure out which our genes express themselves.

For example, had Mike’s family not been displaced persons who migrated to Montana from Ukraine when he was eight, he likely would not have met Tyr’s grandmother. If Maryann had not been killed, Julie may not have gone to California and met our son. If our son hadn’t gone to the same town, he likely wouldn’t have met Julie.

If the candle hadn’t burned the tar paper, Tyr wouldn’t have been burned and Julie wouldn’t have died. If Eric had been able to raise the boys, things would have turned out differently and we may never have met Tyr. If our son had read the newspaper announcement of Mike’s pending adoption of Tyr and Keith, he may have raised Tyr himself, and that would have resulted in yet another outcome. It is clear to me that both nature and nurture shape the person.

Of course, we can reach back even farther and note that if I had taken the teaching job I was offered in Ohio when I graduated from college, rather than come to California to work as a parish worker, I wouldn’t have met Bob. And if Bob hadn’t gone to Caltech after graduation from Carnegie Mellon and hadn’t come to church one day and sat down next to me (even though he claims I tripped him as he walked along the pew), we likely wouldn’t have met, married, and had four children, one of whom became the biological father of Tyr.

The circumstances of every life stretch far back into history. How many of us have not wondered how things would be different “if” such-and-such hadn’t happened? Yet they have.

We may want to believe that each of us is the captain of our fate and master of our soul. We may have been told that all we need to do to reach our destination is to keep our compass set on a steady course. But it is a rare person for whom unforeseen events beyond his or her control do not play a major role in determining what happens in our lives, and in the lives of our descendants.

Welcome to the Family, Tyr

By now you may have figured out why Tyr says he’s his own uncle. After all, if the children of your grandparents are your aunts and uncles, and you are a child of your grandparents, doesn’t that make you your own aunt or uncle, in a roundabout way, of course? In any case, his adoption makes him the brother of his mother, an interesting arrangement to place on a family genogram.

When I had known a daughter or daughter-in-law was about to have a baby, I awaited the birth with great anticipation and welcomed each grandchild with joy and hope for their future. Now I find that knowing about and meeting a grandson I didn’t know I had is also an unbelievable joy. I am sure that our connection will both stretch and strengthen our families.

Welcome to the Harder family, Tyr. We know you will do well whatever path you choose to take.

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SUPPOSE YOU HAD
A PEN 

When I needed to choose a sidebar for this article about my grandson, I wondered what would be appropriate. Then, while going through some old papers, I came across this poem from an unknown author and decided it was exactly right. It offers the metaphor that while none of us know how long we will live, or what circumstances we will have to face, we do have a choice of how we will write our story.

Since Tyr is a budding writer, I wonder what he would write if someone gave him a pen.

— Arlene Harder

section bread

 

Suppose someone gave you a pen -- a sealed, solid-colored pen. You couldn't see how much ink it had. It might run dry after the first few tentative words or last just long enough to create a masterpiece (or several) that would last forever and make a difference in the scheme of things. You don't know before you begin.

Under the rules of the game, you really never know. You have to take a chance! Actually, no rule of the game states you must do anything.

Instead of picking up and using the pen, you could leave it on a shelf or in a drawer where it will dry up, unused.

But if you do decide to use it, what would you do with it? How would you play the game?

Would you plan and plan before you ever wrote a word?

Would your plans be so extensive that you never even got to the writing?

Would you take the pen in hand, plunge right in and just do it, struggling to keep up with the twists and turns of the torrents of words that take you where they take you?

Would you write cautiously and carefully, as if the pen might run dry the next moment, or would you pretend or believe (or pretend to believe) that the pen will write forever and proceed accordingly?

And of what would you write:

Of love? Hate? Fun? Misery? Life? Death? Nothing? Everything?

Would you write to please just yourself?

Or others?

Or yourself by writing for others?

Would your strokes be tremblingly timid or brilliantly bold?

Fancy with a flourish or plain? Would you even write? Once you have the pen, no rule says you have to write.

Would you sketch?

Scribble?

Doodle or draw?

Would you stay in or on the lines, or see no lines at all, even if they were there? Or are they?

There's a lot to think about here, isn't there?

Now, suppose someone gave you a life...

— Anonymous

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