As most of you know, on December 26th, 2023, I lost my best friend and what most considered as my older brother Declan Kyler to a cardiac event. After thinking about it for the last five days, I realized that Declan and I never actually called each other a friend but only really βbrotherβ since the beginning so please understand why I refer to him this way throughout. Big Dec was definitely a Kyler but he was also a Farnworth through and through. Some didnβt know the true extent of how close we were throughout the past 15 years. In third grade at just seven years old, I was in Mrs Moores classroom and they decided we would have a project pairing with kids from another class (Mrs Howardβs). Both Declan and I were the only ones not in a pair and honestly at first, thatβs all I could focus on until I realized that I had found the most loyal and caring brother / friend anyone could hope to find. He almost immediately invited me to hangout at his house, asked his dad for an Xbox because I had one and that was the beginning of the best years of my life thus far. Over the next almost decade, Declan, Spencer, and I would play more video games than any healthy human should (it was sometimes 12 hours or more straight for multiple weeks or days in a row), more midnight candy/snack runs, have more than a few camping adventures, and create more memories than I ever thought possible. These memories are ones that I will keep with me until the day I see him again.
Over his college years, we spent more time building our own lives as we each battled with responsibilities piling up but that didnβt mean we didnβt reach out at least once or twice a week to make sure things were headed in the right direction still. In the last few months, Declan and I were talking a lot more as he had graduated and had a break until his new job he had just accepted started up.
In the past week or so I have had almost every side of pain I didnβt know was truly possible. The one side I have yet to experience is time. Time without the laughter that Big Dec brings to the family room. Time without his bear hugs. Time with knowing I can no longer login to the games to play a couple of siege matches just for an excuse to sit and talk. Time without the opportunity to call him as I always did for the tough take he gave on life advice. Time without the memories we all expected were coming like my best man speech, going camping for numerous more hilarious sitcom moments, our kids growing up together, and most importantly going through the pain of loss together that comes naturally.
I also just want to put my apology in here to one of my greatest allies in the game of life. Declan, I want you to know that I will always carry my guilt for never having been up to Minnesota to sit with you. You invited me plenty of times, and I always found some reason I could not fly out whether it be work, family, or some other reason. While these reasons were important at the time, they did not matter more than the additional time I couldβve spent learning all I could from you about keeping positive during adversity because those closest to you know you mastered that skill from a very young age. I cannot lie I am lost and even more scared to find out what the rest of my life looks like without you to hold me up.
On a more optimistic note, I want you to know that the group that you, Spencer, and I started all those years ago will continue on growing to create more stories for when we get a chance to sit around the campfire and tell you everything. I say that last part even though I know youβll be right there watching over us while laughing at the good, and finding subtle ways to remind us weβre not alone during the bad.Β
On Christmas Day, I had a deep bad feeling in my stomach. I made sure to send each of my six closest friends a personal voice message detailing how grateful I am for their form of guidance over my life and how much I truly appreciate their lifelong friendship. Declan had responded that night with βMerry Christmas brother, love you too manβ.
To Tiffany, Pat, and Maddie, I want to say that if you ever need anything or want to talk to someone who knew little Dec like you knew him, please call me at anytime. You will always be a second family to me. I have just had a hard time wording what I want to express. Declan, Spencer and I all had our own demons in one form or another. With that being said I think video games just gave us all an escape from the harsh realities of the issues we were all facing and a brotherhood we could all realistically rely on should we need too. I will never be able to repay you for the ability you gave me to experience having an older brother to turn to when I had no one else.
To Kora, I know you and I have talked more in the past week than we have in four years but I want you to know that you can always call. I really do believe after speaking with you that the two of you were made for one another as your sense of advice and humor show more Declan than he ever did. I know I already told you this but Iβm going to say it again. Iβve known my brother for a very long time, and while he did get happy it seemed to me everyone rarely saw the true excitement he got when he was jumping up and down for something. He would ramble faster and you could feel the love he was channeling. It reminded me of a kid on Christmas after receiving their main item from their letter to Santa. I would have to tell him to slow down so I could understand. This only occurred maybe ten to fifteen times while Iβve known him; half of which were about you and how lucky he felt to have found someone that really saw Declan for him. Not the exaggerating football playing bigger than life persona he put on with most but instead he knew you would love him while also knowing his fears, his true doubts, and his real ultimate struggles. You knew Declan how I knew Declan and Iβm glad you reached out as I now know some of his spirit lives on. Thank you Kora for giving my brother a safe unconditional rock and a space he knew the real and sometimes vulnerable Big Dec could come home too.