Danny's Writings
THE
GREATEST LOVE OF ALL
AN
EMPTY CHAIR
ALAN'S ROOM
CHOCOLATE ANGEL
FOREVER ON MY MIND
TEARING DOWN WALLS
AS I REMEMBER HIM
A YEAR TO REMEMBER
THE DAY THE MUSIC DIED
THE CITY THAT ALAN LOVED
THE WORST LOSS…MY GREATEST JOY
I walked slowly into Philadelphia's Society Hill Playhouse.
It wasn't my first time. I had been there many times before to see shows
that my brother, Alan, had publicized.
Until shortly before he died, Alan worked full time as a publicist for
an agency for the aged. He also juggled many freelance projects
simultaneously, and donated much of his free
time to a variety of community organizations. He would have been
shocked at the eleven obituaries that were published. Those came from
two Philadelphia daily papers, two weekly papers and the others in
newsletters from various organizations where Alan had volunteered.
This October night, the 26th of 1992, we returned to Philly for his
memorial service. My entire family was there‑except for my twin
brother Alan. I was fine‑until I saw the bulletin board displaying
his pictures. We had asked to videotape the service but his friends said
it would make them uncomfortable.
We
needed to have something else
to remind us of Alan. So, unknown to anyone, except my family, I slipped
a tape recorder under my seat.
Although Alan's friends had designed a postcard with a picture and a
favorite quote, I felt he deserved a Playbill for all of the shows he
had promoted. After being turned down by Playbill I designed my own
program, including his biography.
I
remember playing in the sandbox with our matchbox cars I
remember getting up early on Sundays to walk to the bakery for chocolate
chip cookies. I
remember our walks back to Alan's apartment after the movies. I
remember our trip to Hershey by bus, at age 14. I
remember staying up late to help Alan get his mailings finished, I
remember when we would go to see Grandma Sloane, sometimes at 2AM. I
remember how Alan would give me support when I was worried about him.
My twin brother Alan, who died of AIDS on June 25, 1992, knew that his
illness was terminal but managed to enjoy life to the fullest. I have
chosen to remember him this way, enjoying life as best I can, and
getting involved, as he did.
Daniel
Yoffee's twin
brother died in 1992. Helping
with two TCF chapters, Daniel does
newsletter layout for the
Bergen-Passaic,
NJ TCF chapter and is treasurer of the Rockland County, NY TCF chapter,
and is on the steering committees for both chapters, He is also involved
with an AIDS service provider in Rockland County assisting with fund
raising, as well as being newsletter editor and creating a web page.
|
The first wedding was two years after Alan, my twin-brother, passed away. My second oldest brother was getting married. I was waiting for the question, "When was I going to get married?" I was never asked so I couldn’t use my prepared response, "When Alan could be my best man." I thought if I did get married I would have an empty chair next to me. If Alan couldn’t be my best man, I didn’t want anyone. My brother’s name would appear in the program (that he would have designed) as honorary best man. This year I turned thirty-six, it was my sixth birthday without Alan. At the restaurant we had made a mistake, the reservation had been made for one too many. I had ended up sitting next to an empty chair. Although I thought, I was doing better, no longer crying at family events. I now realize that I will not have an empty chair at my wedding, if I can ever bring myself to get married without Alan being there. The loss I feel will always be there but it’s much worse seeing an empty chair. |
After my twin brother Alan passed away I was constantly looking for ways to keep his memory alive. Soon after the funeral I helped design the gravestone. When the first anniversary neared l started the scholarship his friends had long promised. I often worried that besides having his name on a cemetery stone that Alan would be forgotten. I wanted his nieces and nephews to be able to know him. Alan, a Philadelphia resident, worked full time for the Philadelphia Corporation for the Aging doing public relations. He also was a freelance writer and volunteered for many arts and AIDS organizations. With another brother married we had an empty room, which I wanted to be about Alan. The room includes articles that he wrote and articles about him, posters for projects he promoted and some he helped design. Above the double windows are Playbills for shows he promoted, each listing his name. One had a post-it note "Save this, this is my first"; I saved them all. Included are interviews with Phyllis Diller, Lucie Arnaz and a Diana Ross biographer. An article, with his picture, at a Special Olympics event he coordinated, publicized and wrote about is also displayed. One project he developed was the "Senior Great American Smokeout". All of the Philadelphia nursing homes participated on the same day the American Cancer Society had their annual "smokeout". At the time of his death the project was nominated for an award. The one item I am most proud of is the press release announcing his last job. He was asked to write his own press release. He once said he couldn't believe he got paid for a job he loved so much! The room, 130 square feet, contains 55 framed items, which tell of Alan's career, interests, and love of life. His nieces and nephews will get to know their uncle, who-as his oldest brother said-did more in his thirty years then 95% of us do over an entire lifetime. |
I attended my first Compassionate Friends conference in Philadelphia during the summer of 1997. The fifth anniversary of my twin brother Alan’s death had just passed a few weeks earlier. Until that year I worked nights and was unable to attend TCF meetings. Philadelphia was the place Alan called home after college. He lived only a few blocks from our grandmother who had passed away three years after him. I remember walking around in a town where I had once felt so much happiness only to realize that the people who made it enjoyable were gone and that left me feeling even sadder. I was very anxious as I pulled into the hotel parking lot. I had heard that people had found past conferences most helpful, but what if I didn’t?
I
think one of the highlights of the conference was the AIDS workshop. I was really looking forward to meeting people who had been
through what I had been through. At
that time I didn’t personally know anyone else who had lost someone to
AIDS. The workshop
presenters had found out at the same time that their son was gay and
that he had AIDS. They were
fortunate to have a year to spend with him and take care of him.
The workshop started with an “ice breaker”, an activity where
we were given a list. It
was the job of the participants to find out from each other who had done
similar things or had similar traits.
The point of the activity was to show how easily people could be
segregated.
Although the workshop wasn’t as well attended as most, I found it to
be most helpful. It helped
to hear what had helped others and what they had gone through.
I had people to call upon if I ever wanted to talk.
Upon leaving the workshop I got very nervous. The leaders of my chapter were sitting in the back of the
room. I asked how
long have you been sitting here, they replied, not very long. At the
time I didn’t realize they didn’t know what the workshop they had
walked into. I said, “I have something to tell you. At our chapter meeting when it is my turn in the big circle I
say that I had lost my twin brother Alan on June 25, 1992.
He died of cancer, but he didn’t, he died of AIDS.”
I thought they would be angry and tell me not to come back.
They said what difference does it make how someone dies.
They couldn’t understand why I would be afraid to say that Alan
died of AIDS.
The following year I took the same workshop, in Nashville; there were
only three in attendance. The
presenter knew of someone at the conference who lost a child to AIDS but
was saying the cause of death was cancer.
After Alan’s death both my parents told me they would tell
people that he died of cancer. I
understood why they were doing this as I had told childhood friends, a
month before he died, that Alan had cancer.
I was afraid of losing life long friends.
Alan never told those friends and relatives of his sexuality and
I didn’t feel that I could tell them about that as well as the AIDS.
Alan and I, as Alan said, shared a “womb with a view” until we were
born in 1961. While walking
home from a movie he came out to me, he told me he was gay.
He was very surprised and relieved that I wasn’t going to
disown him. Three years
after his death I made a panel, in Alan’s memory, for the AIDS quilt.
This was one of the first things I did to commemorate his life.
I was asked to write a letter to accompany the panel, telling how
he would like to be remembered. One
of the things I wrote was “The making of a quilt for my brother will
come as a surprise for many people when they find out about it:
The friends from Philadelphia who were surprised that AIDS
wasn’t mentioned in his obituary, and the relatives and family friends
who never knew of his lifestyle, because Alan had chosen not to say
anything. We never talked
about why, but I think that was what he had wanted.”
|
Growing
up, my twin brother Alan and I had a scrapbook of the memorable events
in our life – school certificates, community awards, autographed
pictures and news of our favorite television shows.
Sometime after his death to AIDS in June of 1992, I would create
a scrapbook about Alan.
This one contains notes of sympathy, pictures, as well as the
notes that Alan had sent to me.
Because music was a very important part of Alan’s life I
included a list of Alan’s favorite songs.
I was very fortunate to have Alan in my life.
He was a writer who liked to express himself, and I was wise
enough to save each postcard, letter and greeting card.
This past year was the 10th anniversary of Alan’s death. My mom and I would make our annual trip to the New Jersey
shore. Our
family and friends marked the anniversary with a trip to Hershey,
Pennsylvania. Both of these places were favorites of Alan’s. Another big event was a milestone birthday for my mom.
With the planning of a party I began to stress out, mainly
because Alan wouldn't be there for a "major" family event -
until I realized that this was a chance to remember Alan as well!
My
mom is always telling me to write a book with my articles about Alan.
I reply that I need a lot more articles. For the party I made a
birthday card booklet that included articles and pictures. I made a
HAPPY BIRTHDAY candy wrapper (since Mom loves Hershey Bars).
On the back it says Happy Birthday from all of your children
and grandchildren -- it included all of the names.
When we videotaped messages to Mom I was standing in front of an 11
X14 picture of Alan.
We had a dozen roses with a note that read “Remembering
Alan.” They
would have been the roses he would have gotten her.
For the nieces and nephews I made up goody bags. I got
all of Alan's favorites. I had to special order Wizard of Oz
coloring books; I got Crayola crayons, etch-a-sketch, a mustang
matchbox car and a package of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups for each
one. I also got a CD burner and made Mom a CD of Alan's favorite songs.
Our
closest childhood friend was given a copy of the CD for her support
and help in setting up the party. She plays the CD each and every
day. One
day, months later, on a trip to the post office, she had the CD
playing with her car windows open.
She was at the mailbox and didn't realize how loud the music was. The next
thing she knew this man came out of a restaurant a few doors down.
He started dancing on the way to the parking lot. His wife told him to stop, that he was making a fool of
himself. He said he hadn’t heard that song in years. My friend apologized that the music was so loud and he said,
"You don’t know how happy this song makes me" and began
dancing in the street and singing the song, “It Had To Be You”.
After
ten years the articles about Alan are less frequent and harder to do.
Its true, we reach a point where our grief isn't as intense as
in the first few years, but we still grieve. We still
remember.... We still have our bad days.
It's ok to still tell stories and remember.
As
long as I can create new memories and make someone happy doing
something in Alan’s memory I will be here to share the story.
I am getting on with life, doing the things that I enjoy but
remembering Alan as well. |
On February 3, 1959, parents would lose children, siblings would lose brothers and grandchildren would die. This was the day a plane crash took the lives of singers J.P. Richardson (The Big Bopper), 28, Buddy Holly, 22 and Ritchie Valens, 17. Since all three were so prominent at the time, February 3, 1959, became known as "The Day The Music Died." At the time of his death Ritchie Valens was a young man with superstar potential who, even though was still in his first year as a recording artist, had already made a name for himself in the music industry. Growing up music would become a large part of my twin brother Alan’s life. His interest in “The Wizard of Oz” would lead to an admiration of Judy Garland and in time Liza Minelli. He had seen many of Liza’s concerts often sending her mail-grams of well wishes much to my mother’s disproval. It was her fear that he would get arrested for harassment. We would travel often to other concerts as well including Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Diana Ross, Whitney Houston, Kenny G and even Yanni. Alan's interest in music and the arts began in high school with the artistic productions. After graduation from Temple University he would become entrenched in the Philadelphia cultural scene. Much of his free time was spent volunteering for arts, dance and theatre organizations. His name would be listed in the credits of many artistic productions. He, like Ritchie Valens, was just starting to realize his dreams. Then came June 25, 1992. Alan had died of an AIDS-related brain tumor that had started not more then two months earlier. This was-for me-the day the music died. Don McLean immortalized the February 1959 tragedy with his 1972 hit “American Pie”, a song that took Alan and I years to understand and memorize. I would mark my personal tragedy by constantly changing the radio station. So much that I thought I would break the buttons. A break-up song would remind me too much of my loss. While in a friend’s car I had him turn off the radio rather then risk crying. Then one day a few years later, upon leaving the cemetery, on the radio I heard Whitney Houston’s “The Greatest Love of All”. Alan and I had recorded an awful rendition at a Hershey, PA amusement park recording studio. We agreed that no one else would hear the dreadful outcome. I switched stations twice only to hear the song two more times. It was my reflection that Alan was telling me to enjoy the music once again. To take pleasure in life and to do what we enjoyed doing together. I hear Alan’s voice saying the words inscribed on Ritchie Valens grave "Come On, Let's Go."
Daniel Yoffee, TCF Board of Directors Sibling Representative. Reprinted from the summer edition 2003 of We Need Not Walk Alone – The national magazine of The Compassionate Friends. |
I find it very important to spend each anniversary going somewhere or doing something that my twin brother Alan enjoyed. This year for the 11th anniversary my Mom and I, after visiting Seaside Heights, NJ, went to Philadelphia - Alan’s second hometown. At the shore I remembered Alan by buying raffles tickets for a Mustang convertible, eating a steak sandwich and getting a temporary tattoo with his initials. I was told the tattoo would last ten days - it lasted one. In Philadelphia we decided to eat in the places where we had shared meals and return to see the places where Alan lived. Our hotel faced Alan’s very last apartment building. I remembered the times we had spent looking in the direction I now stood in - eleven years later. I frequently gazed at his bedroom window, thinking of all that Alan - the writer, publicist, AIDS activist, volunteer and advocate for the elderly has missed, and what might have been. A Bette Midler song talks about places remembered, “some have changed, some forever not for better.” Alan, who enjoyed many of his meals at various restaurants, would be surprised to see that some had closed ten years after his death due to the poor economy. The Savoy, Houlihans and IHOP (all places where we spent numerous times talking about college, careers, family and life) are also now just memories. Alan had moved 11 times in 12 years for a variety of reasons. I realized there wouldn’t be any new memories and I worried about forgetting the old ones - so I took pictures to remember each apartment and some of the memories they hold. As I looked through the camera I remembered many special moments –his hosting a neighborhood coffee-klatch for a mayoral candidate; moving from a duplex apartment to a studio; staying up late to help with volunteer projects; dropping a box containing hundreds of pennies while walking across the street which Alan gave to a homeless person and the Wizard of Oz mural he had painted on his last living room wall. As the years go by I think of Alan each and every day and feel life has become easier - except for some moments at family gatherings. As a recently bereaved father told me "the wound can heal but the scar is always there." With each move since 1988 an ad for the movie Beaches was affixed to Alan’s refrigerator. It says, “Once in a lifetime you make a friendship that lasts forever.” My greatest joy is being Alan’s twin-brother –keeping our friendship and his memory alive. |
The worst loss that I will have ever suffered took place on June 25, 1992. I lost my twin brother Alan to AIDS that June morning at 5:10 am. I had spent the previous four days at his bedside, 24 hours a day. Even though he had been HIV+ for almost six years, I thought he would be around when he was 80. Until two months before his death he was still working full time. I was in complete denial until a few weeks before his death. He died of an AIDS related brain tumor. Later that June morning I went back to his apartment, the one with the Wizard of Oz mural painted on his living room wall. I wouldn’t let anyone else in until I took pictures of everything just the way that Alan had left it. Those items included many family pictures, Hershey memorabilia, Alan’s large music collection and posters for events he publicized. Photography was my hobby and this was my most difficult assignment. It wasn’t until I was finished that I would have my brothers and Alan’s friends over to give them each something of Alan’s. For some time after Alan’s death, hearing the music that we enjoyed would bring great pain. Any love song reminded me of the loss of my brother and greatest friend. It took some time to enjoy the music again. I attended a recent Simon & Garfunkel concert mainly to hear the song Sound of Silence, a song Alan and I perform as youngsters with our graduating class. The words “Hello darkness my old friend” remind me of all that he is missing. An interest of mine (and Alan’s) since the age of nine was Hershey, PA and the history of the man who created it all, Milton Hershey. An article on Alan after Alan’s death said that “He was like the man behind the curtain in his favorite movie - behind the scenes, working miracles that have nothing to do with magic and everything to do with good will.” It was written about Hershey “He had persevered, refusing to quit. In spite of his struggles, he stayed true to his passion…” This was also very true of Alan, who knew that he was going to die. I think an inscription on the base of the Statue of Milton Hershey that reads "His deeds are his monument, his life is our inspiration" describe Alan as well. It has been said “If you never loved, you never cried.” I realize that I would gladly endure the hurt to have had Alan in my life. It is my hope that my obituary will read that being Alan’s twin brother was my greatest joy. |
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