A Brother to Ride the River with
My heart is heavy. I’ve lost my twin, my beloved brother. For nearly 70 years, he was always there for me.
Only 19 months apart, Rhys and I were on the same wavelength from the first—playing trucks and cars in the dirt under a tree, exploring the woods, spending hours taming wild cats, coming home late for dinner. Though we weren’t actual twins, we looked like we were. Born with a hole in his heart (successfully fixed at age 7), Rhys may not have grown as much as he might have, so as children we were the same size for a long time. And same color hair, same eyes, same gentle spirit.
As teenagers, we became hippies together, embracing the counterculture in all its glory. In 1969, at the huge anti-war March on Washington, we carried candles for dead soldiers. Both of us remember the demonstration as a life-changing experience. At our high school in St. Croix in the US Virgin Islands, where my parents moved us in 1970, we started a chapter of the Committee of Responsibility, raising money for war-wounded Vietnamese children. We also spent a lot of time snorkeling, body surfing, climbing the drive-in screen, partying on Grassy Point, and playing with our dog, Shalom. We graduated from high school together (I managed to skip two grades in my school career; subconsciously, I’m sure I did it so I could graduate with Rhys!).
Throughout the rest of our lives, we most often lived near each other, beginning after high school when Rhys went to the University of Maine and I went to Franconia College in New Hampshire. After he graduated with a two-year degree in forestry and I decided to take a break from school, we moved to Portland, Oregon, hitching a ride across country with a driver we got through an underground radio ride board. In Portland, Rhys worked construction and I waitressed. We hung out at Quality Pie (a 24-hour dive), celebrated holidays and birthdays, and bought a portable radio for music, which we later passed back and forth when we lived in separate places, hiding it for the other to find.
We lived together in San Francisco too, on Russian Hill—Rhys, Mary, and I. I was very sad when they moved to St. Croix and then Wisconsin. In those years, we flew to visit each other when we could. I was thrilled when they moved back to California. We have shared our lives ever since.
I’m remembering conversations I had with Rhys, from life issues to the state of the world to jokes. Everyone who knew him knows he had a great sense of humor. His favorite protest sign at the anti-Trump demonstrations was “I’ve seen smarter cabinets at Ikea.” Injustice and nonethical behavior incensed him. His thoughtful approach to the world was reflected in his goal for interactions with people: “that they walk away feeling good.”
I talked to him almost every day and now I’m facing life without him. The pain of the loss is difficult to bear, but I feel incredibly blessed to have had the kind of brother-sister relationship Rhys and I had. It was truly remarkable.
Rhys, thank you for riding the river with me. I’ll love you always.