Nick Noland, as an adult, was a distant awareness for me as our paths of life had diverged by the time he went away to college. So, the Nick Noland alive in my memory is the boy of of 7-8 years old and the next 10 years or so. Nick came into the life of our family and plugged himself in as though he was us, which he was. Our son, also Nick, and Nick were only 8 days apart in age and thus they became like twin brothers in some aspects - from the ability to fully lose themselves in some game of being professional wrestlers to intense rivalry in some competitive situation, to constantly challenging each other to be better versions of themselves. Jeff and I saw, in our Nicks, the method by which we could do many of the things that we, as simply older boys at heart ourselves, wanted to be involved in. Hiking, camping, seeing a movie in a theater starting at midnight, more hiking and camping, indoor rock climbing, more hiking and camping, going to a road race in Atlanta, more hiking and camping, starting a church activity called Real Men's Camping where we would gather as many as eighty fathers-and-children and mothers-and-children several times for a big group overnight campout at Croft State Park, more hiking and camping, getting the Nicks into Cub Scouts, more hiking and camping, coaching some AYSO soccer along the way where both Nicks found that soccer was not to be their professional future, more hiking and camping, realizing the Boy Scout Troop we wanted our boys to be involved in would require us to start it up ourselves and doing it, more hiking and camping, living out the Scout life with our Nicks into their middle teen years with plenty of hiking and camping. Training, planning, preparing for, and participating in an 11-day high-altitude backpacking expedition in 2000, at Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico. It was at Philmont that I realized our Nicks had become men - rugged, rough if needed, responsible, reliable, and ready. My heart pumps hard as I recall now looking into their faces on those trails above 10,000 feet and seeing them for what they really were and would become. Then, soon after Philmont, swelling up just a bit with pride when they each earned and received the rank of Eagle Scout, ... and by then ... the hiking and camping had begun to subside. High School found both Nicks running Cross Country on their separate teams, yet at least once competing against each other. By then we would bring us all together for pizza or burgers or something now and then after church on Sunday night or at other times. Nick and Nick would compare notes on stuff they did not share with their parents, and we were okay with that. Any hiking or camping in those later teen years if it happened has moved into cloudier memory. I have hundreds of other specific memories with Jeff and Nick, and with Susan and Caroline. Many of those memories are hilarious. Many of them mundane. Many of them life-changing for all involved. Lynne and I along with our family, were, and are, blessed with our friendship with the Noland family and Nick was no small part of that blessing. Somehow to imagine that such a blessing could now be stated in mere words seems nearly impossible. I can feel it, but don't really know how to say it. Our families were intertwined willingly for a while. For us, that intertwining was for the better. As families, we all experienced it is as fathers, mothers, daughters, sons, sisters, and brothers. But, for me specifically as a father and friend, my eyes swell with unholdable tears as I think of my gratitude that this life let me make a significant part of my own father-and-son journey alongside and locked arm-to-arm and heart-to-heart with Jeff and Nick Noland. Nick Noland, my son and my brother, I loved you then and I love you now. Peace, peace, peace ... my young friend. Tommy