Ben Lee Warburton

2007 - 2007
LocationCastleford
Age1 month
Date of Birth5/2007
Date of Death6/2007
Visitors8,239 since 26/06/2007
Creator
Helpers

Ben Lee Warburton

Born 10th May 2007.
Died 4th June 2007, 10.30pm.
Aged 3 weeks and 4 days old.
Home for 12 days.

Son of Lee Warburton and Kim Travis.
Sister's Ashleigh 4, Lucy 2 and twin sister Holly 1.
Grandson of Dot and Pete Travis.
Nephew of Sean and Kay, Peter and Katie, Katrina and Chris and Patrick.
Cousin of Alex, Annie, Oliver and Kiera.
Ben was much loved and will never be forgotton.

Passed away peacefully in his mummy and daddy's arms.

PLEASE TAKE A MOMENT TO LIGHT A CANDLE FOR MY LITTLE MAN IF YOU FALL UPON HIS PAGE-IT IS A GREAT
COMFORT TO ME TO KNOW SOMEONE HAS THOUGHT OF MY GORGEOUS LITTLE MAN, EVEN IF JUST FOR A SMALL MOMENT
OF TIME. I'M SO PROUD OF MY LITTLE FIGHTER AND LOVE SHOWING HIM OFF. THANKS, KIM (MUMMY TO BEN)
XXX

Ben was a twin, born at 37 weeks and 5 days gestation.

I was booked in for a planned casarean section, due to the breech position of Ben, at 38 weeks and
2 days, but the twins had other ideas and for the first time in my three pregnancies my waters
broke! We were taken to hospital by ambulance for an emergency c-section.

We were not aware of any problems with Ben and although he was scanned regularly, as twins are,
nothing was or could have ever been detected.

After a delivery (that we later found out had it's difficulties, when theatre staff told my mum
i was lucky to have the highley skilled man i had deliver-as others would have struggled even more
than him due to the twins awkward positions) we were all in the recovery room, my partner Lee and I
and my mum, with the twins.
I had wondered at the time why they had shown me Holly first when Ben was born first, but when they
explained Ben had a cleft pallette i just put it down to that reason. We wern't worried about
the cleft pallette-knowing it could easily be corrected by simple surgery. I was in that magical
just after birth daze, where the pain and tiredness is overuled by joy and elation. My twins were
here, a little princess and a much wanted first son for mummy and daddy.

At the 20 weeks scan doctors had confirmed we were having a boy and possibly a girl. I was
delighted to be having a boy at last and also pleased to be having another girl too-unable to
imagine a pregnancy without a girl. Ben's daddy had even joked with me that if i was having
another two girls he wouldn't be collecting me from the hospital!! Lee was so proud-he even
asked for one of the scan pictures to be of just Ben's 'male parts'!! I immediatly
began to stock up on boys clothes-particularly little tank-tops!!

I planned to try breast-feeding the twins, pleased that Holly took to it straight away. However, Ben
showed no interest in feeding. We started noticing small things such as Ben not being as alert as
Holly, not moving as much etc. And was that blue tinge just down to all the blue he was wearing?

At five hours old the nurse suggested a cup-feed, as i still wished to breast-feed Ben and
didn't want to try him with a bottle. During the cup-feed Ben turned blue for a short time. The
midwife was very calm and just suggested he needed monitoring in special-care for a while. We still
wern't very worried and they even let Holly go with him to keep him company. Throughout my
pregnancy i'd prepared myself for the possibility of the twins needing to spend time in scubu,
as most twins do. I didn't want the twins seperated. I loved the whole
'twin-thing'-even having identical pink and blue outfits. Having different sexed twins
wasn't going to stop me!

That day the first of many doctors came to see us. We were firstly told Ben was blind. Confirmed
full blindness in one eye and at the most very blurred vision in the other. Devastated we cried,
wondering how our little boy would ever play football.

Looking back i feel so shallow. What I'd give to have a son who's only problem was being
blind.

Later that day we spoke to a doctor in special care. She explained they suspected that due to
Ben's facial abnormalties on one side of his face, a small eye,a deformed ear, collapsed
nostril and out of line jaw and chin, that he may have some sort of syndrome, possibly Golden Har.
CHARGE syndrome and Di Georges were also mentioned but later we found out Ben had all his
chromosones complete and no faulty genes, ruling out thoses syndromes.

We began to dread when a doctor came to speak with us. They always brought bad news. We seriously
considered locking ourselves in our room at one point!
However throughout we kept our spirits high-even making a joke of how every doctor had the same
routine of entering a room, shaking our hand and saying "Hi, i'm doctor...".

When Ben was born they'd detected a heart murmer. We wern't worried-as they explained most
babies were born with heart murmers that healed themselves, my brother Patrick for one.

On the Friday, the day after the twins were born Ben went to Leeds General Infirmary for a heart
scan. I didn't go with him as we thought he'd be straight back and i was struggling with
the recovery of the section and also had Holly to care for.
Around lunchtime they told me Ben was being kept at LGI so me and Holly were to be transferred
there too.

Looking back i think i was no longer taking anything in as i really wasn't overly worried when
maybe i should have been. Also when you've previously had two healthy children i think you take
it for granted that all your children will be born healthy. You don't expect to have ill
children, you don't expect your children to die-that only happens to other people-doesn't
it?

Tired from the birth, transfer and past 24hrs i was desperate to see Ben. I didn't expect to
see him in an incubator, covered in tubes. I fell ill with shock, not taking in anything the doctors
were asking or telling me. I had to be taken back to my ward. I was sick all the way along those
corridors.

Ben needed an heart operation. The doctors were to take scans then present his case to the surgeons.
We prayed they'd agree to operate.

It was hard juggling family-life. I was discharged from hospital and offered accomadation at the
hospital but decided i needed to establish a routine for my three young girls at home. When i was at
the hospital i missed the girls, when i was at home i missed Ben.

Throughout we NEVER thought we'd loose Ben. We stayed positive throughout, talking about the
future. I'll always wish I'd have spent more time at the hospital with Ben, had i have
known from the start i would have just held him constantly.

The time came to meet with the heart surgeons.

It's there we found out just how complex Ben's heart condition was. Ben faced a life of
high-risk surgery and medication, his first operation holding just a 10% chance of survival. Yet Ben
wouldn't survive without this operation.
Ben had a complex heart condition known as Truncus arteriosis with leaky valves and an interrupted
aortic arch.

We knew we couldn't live with ourselves if we didn't give Ben every chance though-even if
the odds fell to 1% we had to do all we could for him. Odds didn't mean anything to us-our boy
wasn't going to die, things like that only happen to other people, not us. Besides i already
had three other healthy children. We didn't even need to discuss what we wanted to do.

The next day Ben was sent for a brain scan as he was having what was known as apnoeas which is the
term used when someone stops breathing temporarily. Often Ben would need resusitating, sometimes in
intensive care.
Apnoeas can be caused by the medication Ben was on for his heart, but another cause can be when
something is wrong with the brain.

Once again we met with the doctors.
It's there, in that room, that our world was turned upside down.
Ben was severly brain-damaged.

Ben wouldn't have had a very high quality of life-he faced being blind, deaf, epileptic-having
80-90 fits a day, which could have possibly been controlled with medication but could have made him
extremely sleepy and i don't like the idea of someone being pumped with so much medication.
Ben's spine hadn't fused together properly so over-time it would have curved making chest
infections even more of a risk than the high risk they were minus the spinal problems. Ben would
have been unable to move his arms and legs, unable to speak or swallow, be fed through his tummy and
have servere learning difficulties and possibly autistism. He would have been classed medically as
severly retarded. He would have never progressed past the stage of a four/five month baby and had he
overcome all this miraculasly his life expectancy was a mere twelve/thirteen years. The parts of
Bens brain that were missing and affected included feelings, memory, learning and development.

How would any child, let alone Ben cope with the recovery and pain of these operations, trapped in
his own little world in his broken little body. And did we really want to loose Ben on the operating
table, surrounded by strangers?

We had to choose-did we want to operate or not.
Ben wouldn't survive without this operation.
Who was we to play god?
To choose whether Ben lived or died?

24hrs earlier we'd laid in bed saying whatever the odds we'd give Ben a chance. That night
we lay in bed knowing the scales had tipped.

I just wanted to take my baby home.

The next challenge was actually getting Ben home, we'd already takn him off his medication and
agreed he wasn't to be resusitated.
Ben hated any interference and would often have an apneoa as if to say "i'll show
you", we were so scared of losing Ben on the journey home and never actually getting him home
alive.
This is why we'll always be grateful to Ward 10 at LGI for giving us the support and confidence
to care for Ben. We stopped on the ward for several days until we were confident to go home. We
experianced his apneoas knowing any one could be his last, this prepared us for when Ben's time
would come.

We feel life would have been too cruel to keep Ben alive.
We had to put Ben first. Although our loss would have been unimaginable, we had to put Ben first.

It's a decision no parent should have to make.

We chose to let Ben spend his last few days at home, with his family, pain-free.
Ben was comfortable, the only tubes being the one to feed him a constant supply of warm milk.
Ben had many cuddles and even walks in his pram. We took hundreds of photos, dressed him in lots of
different outfits and took hand and foot-prints.
Ben continued to have these apneoas, where he would turn blue and stop breathing. We never knew
whether each one would be his last, but we just cuddled him through each one.
Sometimes i'd get the urge to rush him back to the hospital, tell them i'd changed my mind
and i wanted them to do everything they could. But that would have been cruel to Ben and i had to
put Ben first, not me and my feelings.
Often we'd think was Ben going to prove the doctors wrong?
In our hearts we hoped, in our heads we knew.

On that Monday Ben noticably deteriorated.
We knew his time had come.
Throughout we'd wanted to be together, as a family of six when Ben's time came but
Ashleigh and Lucy were still quite young to fully understand so they left to spend the night at
nanna and grandads. Holly being newborn stayed with us, it was only right that she was there with
Ben as he passed just as she had been when he was born.
Ben had never had a bath, as any shock could bring on an apneoa and we didn't want to loose him
that way. That night Ben had a bath with his daddy-the one thing is daddy had so desperatly wanted
to do. I fluffed up his gorgeous little hair, clean and fluffy for the first time-even showing what
daddy called the colour brown-but mummy called gingery-brown!
We dressed him in the most gorgeous little outfit. He looked so 'cool' in his little hoody
and jeans.

We cuddled Ben that evening as his heart slowed and breathing stopped.
Ben's daddy listened carefully to his sons heart through a stephascope.
Ben passed away in our arms, peacefully and not alone, just as we'd hoped.

Ben was such a brave little fighter-he kept fighting right to the end. We even gave him a dose of
antibiotics for his little cold shortly before he passed-part of us hoping he had longer with us and
part of us, especially Ben's daddy, just needing to do something for his son.

People always told us Ben would 'choose' his time and he chose well. I hate to use the
word perfect but it was-we couldn't have asked for a better passing for Ben. Our biggest fear
had been that Ben would pass away in the night, all alone.

He stayed at home with us until the next evening-it was such a surreal experiance. Holding our baby
who had passed away. But Ben was our little boy and it all just felt so natural to have as many
cuddles as possible.

I'd dreaded the undertaker coming for Ben since we knew he was terminally ill and it was the
most painful thing ever-letting my son go through that door, knowing i would never see my son alive
again, even though he'd already gone.

Ben went to a local chapel of rest. We were nervous about visiting him but happy once we had. Ben
had never looked in pain during his short life yet looked so peaceful and out of pain in the chapel
of rest,. dressed in the last special little outfit we'd bought for him to wear.

When you loose a child you cry like you've never cried before. All the hurt and pain throughout
your life is so minimal in comparison. This is a cry that physically hurts, your heart genuinly
aches. It breaks and from then is only held together by sticky-tape.

We feel so lucky though. We had Ben for three weeks. We got to take Ben home from the hospital. We
were with Ben when he died. We knew Ben was going to die. We got to say goodbye. A lot of parents
arnt that lucky.

During Ben's life we were reluctant to let people visit and i do now wish i would have let more
people visit as the amount of people Ben touched is overwhelming, but i hope they can understand
that at the time we did what was best for us. We wanted Ben's passing to be private and i was
scared Ben would pass away whilst people were visiting.

We also had to do what was best at Ben's funeral. We kept it so private, just immediate family
as we wanted people to come and cry for Ben, not just for 'a baby'. I also didn't
want to feel as though people were watching me and my grief. Ben's dad is not religious in the
slightest so we chose to have a small ceremony around the graveside. We had a vicar, Ruth, who did a
beautiful service-short but said everything we could have wished it to.Afterwards we went to a nice
country pub with a beautiful beer garden for the children to play in. We invited a select few people
and the idea was to share a nice afternoon together, a few drinks, sandwiches etc.

Throughout my little mans life he was associated with giraffes. The reason being they popped up
everywhere! From gifts of teddies and clothes to murals above his hospital bed. His coffin was
specially designed with giraffes on it. Ben's headstone also has giraffes as a theme. Giraffes
continue to offer me a great source of comfort-i like to think that when one pops up somewhere
it's Ben's way of saying hello to me.

I since found out that there was a possibility Ben wouldn't have even recognised me as a mother
figure which is heartbreaking. However, i strongly believe he looks down now and knows just who his
mummy is.
I asked the doctor would Ben have been a person stuck in a body, unfortunatly Ben was
'nothing' in a broken body. I don't disagree with this but Ben you will always be
someone to us xx

A Message To Ben

We knew we couldn't keep you forever
Although perfect to us on the outside
Your poor little body was so broken on the inside

But thankyou our brave little man
For fighting as long as you did
And giving us the chance to get to know you
To build all those special memories
That we will cherish forever

Ben, forever they'll be part of us missing
We'll never forget you and love you always

Now sleep tight little man
Your fight is over

x x x

We have since met with the Genetics team who are pretty confident Ben had Golden Har Syndrome, on
the servere end of the scale. Unfortunatly there is no test for this so we will never be able to
confirm this as definate.
They believe Bens problems probably occured due to a blood clot in my pregnancy. This is something
that yet again will never be able to be proved. The blood clot would have be so minute and happened
in the first few weeks of pregnancy, got into Bens blood stream and just set things off down the
wrong path of development. Nothing could have prevented this.
Fortunatly Bens condition is not genetic so future generations needn't worry nor need we worry
about Ben's sisters-particularly his twin Holly.
I remember being slightly disapointed the twins wern't identical-but had they have been i
wouldn't have Holly either. Also throughout my uncomfortable pregnancy i moaned that my twins
were in the 25% minority of twins that didn't arrive before 36 weeks. I feel Ben, being twin
one, was something to do with this-had i have had the twins earlier Holly may of been poorly due to
premerturity and we may not have had Ben as long had he been smaller and weaker. I was in such a
state of shock to discover i was even pregnant with twins in the first place-but i know Holly was
sent to help me through this.

A special thankyou to PGI and SCUBU. I wish i remembered the lovely lady doctors name and the
midwife Gill who cared for us during the delivery and recovery.

A huge thankyou to all on ward 56 at LGI for spoiling me!!

And, well, thankyou just isn't enough for all the staff on ward 10 at LGI. Your all amazing
people doing an amazing job and without you we wouldn't have had the confidence to take Ben
home, the one thing we so badly wanted. You gave us the confidence and support to do this,
particulary Steph who gave us so much support. Always there to talk to us. You told us to take our
little man home and 'love him', which we did. Who'd have thought we'd have
stayed so calm but you helped prepare us for Ben's time. We only got one chance at it and
thanks to you you helped us make it as perfect as we could have hoped for. Thankyou.

I hate when people ask if i'm going to sue the hospital, nothing could have been detected and
even if it would have been-nothing more could have been done for Ben.
If i'd have know anything was wrong with my little man i doubt i'd have carried the twins
as long as i did due to stress, therefore having premature twins-putting Holly at risk, and we have
to ask ourselves would we have had Ben at all had he have been born any earlier and weaker.
How i could even concemplate suing a hospital that has done so much for us and needs all the money
it can to continue with the amazing care it provides. If anything i wish to raise as much money for
them as possible-starting with a charity skydive.
You take for granted the services that are out there until you need them.
No amount of money is going to bring our little man back or stop us missing him as much as we do.

And of course Christina-gold medal for putting up with Lee and his demands hehe (he has recently
purchased a washer and dryer hehe). Thankyou for all your support-you've been our
'rock' throughout and more like a friend. I know i've found a friend for life.
Ben's last days with us wouldn't have been as specail as they were without all you did for
us. I'm glad you were part of Ben's life.

Thankyou Dr Mike, even though Lee has called you every other M name apart from Mike!
And Martin House-what a wonderful place, yet again another service you are not awre of until you
need it.

Thankyou to Ruth for the beautiful service and all your support, and just being there when i need a
chat.

Thankyou to all the staff at Henry Moore Clinic for your ongoing support.

Thankyou to all the May Bounty girls-your kindness as overwhelmed me.

Thankyou Heather-i don't think you realise how much you've helped me through this. Your
always there, a truly remarkable person who puts aside your own pain to always be there for me, a
complete stranger. And like i've said before-i truly believe Rosie and Ben are together,
that's why their mummies had to become friends too!! Rosie couldn't ask for a better
mummy. Rest in peace beautiful, cheeky little princess xx

And most of all thankyou to all my family for everything.
Ben has brought everyone so much closer as it's things like this that make you realise just how
much you take life for granted and how lucky you are to have what you have. Material things
don't matter as much as family and love, whether it be that of a parent, sibling, partner or
child.

Thankyou Lee for being such a great dad to our children.
I love you all around the world and back again, plus more...lots more xxx

Ben's SPECIAL angel friends:
Rosie Tingey
Baby Dumpling Tingey
Daisy Mai Whittall
Myles Samuel Squirrell
Jamie Anthony Henderson-Long
Angel Baby Henderson-Long
Ethan Michael Norman Perry
Steven Paul Moore (superstar)
Abigail Jade Haley
Ethan and Emily Morris
Bradley Wickings
Bobbi Louise Morgan
Lola Helena Catherine Rice
Amy Nicole Liddle
Jamie Paul Wicks
Jayden Jeffkyns Danby
Paula Tomney
Jamie Statham West
Alfie Allwood
Liam Coombs
Olivia Perkins
Olivia Rose Hoon
Emmie-Lee Louise Hill Dempsey Burns
David
Enzo William Fiore
Daniel Joseph Unsworth
Coist John Freeburn
Hannah Lomacks
Lucy Dunnes


Recent Gifts

Recent Tributes


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Mummy loves you so, so much little man

My darling Ben, not a single day passes when you are not in my thoughts. I love and miss you more than i could ever put into words. My little man, my gorgeous son, my brave little fighter. You'll always be a part of my life. I'll love and miss you for the rest of my life. Sweet dreams, till we meet again x

Kim Travis (Mother) March 3, 2009

When it seems that hope has gone
And there is nowhere left to turn
It is then that you will find
That you are never alone.

There may seem to be despair
And nothing left to dream for
No wishes to come true
But it is then that you discover
That you are never alone.

There is hope in the hopeless
And light in the dark
There is someone you can turn to
For you have discovered
That you are never alone.

Love Always ~~ Jane...x♥x

Jane Steven Moore Mummy (Friend) February 19, 2009

This Tribute Is For This Weekend

Candles Will Be Lit Again As Usual For Monday


LITTLE ANGELS

When God calls little children
To dwell with Him above,
We mortals sometimes question
The wisdom of His love.
For no heartache compares
With the death of one small child
Who does so much to make our world
Seem wonderful and mild.
Perhaps God tires of calling
The aged to His fold.
So He picks a rosebud
Before it can grow old.
God knows how much we need them
And so He takes but few
To make the land of heaven
More beautiful to view.
Believing this is difficult,
Still somehow we must try.
The saddest word that mankind knows
Will always be 'goodbye'.
So when a little child departs,
We who are left behind
Must realise God loves children
Angels are hard to find.

If roses grow in heaven,
Lord Please pick one for me.
Place it in my Loved ones hand
And tell them it's from me.
Tell them that I love them
And when they turn to smile,
Place a kiss upon their cheek
And hold them for a while.
Remembering them is easy,
I do it every day.
But there's an ache within my heart
That will never go away.



I looked towards the clouds today
And for a moment saw your face.
I wondered just where you have gone
With hope it's a better place.

Did you show yourself to me today,
To tell me you're all right?
Or was it just a daydream
Playing tricks upon my sight?

We will always feel the void inside
Because you are not here.
But each new thought you send our way
Lets us know you're near.

So until our journey nears its end
And we hear the angels sing,
We'll face each new day as it comes
And live off the love you bring.



If tears could build a stairway,
And memories were a lane,
We would walk right up to heaven
And bring you back again.

Our hearts still ache in sadness
And secret tears still flow.
What it meant to lose you
No one can ever know.

But now we know you want us
To mourn for you no more.
To remember all the happy times,
Life still has much in store.

Since you'll never be forgotten,
We pledge to you today:
A hallowed place within our hearts
Is where you'll always stay.


Thoughts Today Memories Forever
Angela(Christopher-John Rowe)Mum

Marie-Angela Rowe January 23, 2009

Do you ever sit in an empty room
do you appreciate an open bloom
do you smell its sweet perfume

Do you feel the need to talk out loud
but theres no one there to hear
do you hear a voice call out your name
so close up to your ear

Have you ever felt a sudden chill pass by
and the hairs on your neck stand up
have you gone to pour a cup of tea
but someones moved your cup

Do you believe in angels
do they make you smile
have you felt on on each shoulder
as you walk that wiery mile

Do you know that all these things
are messages to you
do you believe that they exist?
I'll tell you...YES they do

Love & BIG ((HUGS)) ~~ Jane...x♥x

Jane Steven Moore Mummy (Friend) January 21, 2009

♥Miss you loads♥

♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~ ♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~
We miss you now, our hearts are sore,
As time goes by we miss you more,
Your loving smile, your gentle face,
No one can fill your vacant place.

♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~ ♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~

Our thoughts are ever with you
Though you have passed away.
And those who loved you dearly
Are thinking of you today.

♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~ ♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~

Those we love don't go away,
They walk beside us every day,
Unseen, unheard, but always near,
Still loved, still missed and very dear.

♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~ ♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~

We can't have old days back
When we were all together.
But secret tears and loving thoughts
Will be with us forever.

♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~ ♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~♥~

Love Always ~~ Jane...xxx

Jane Steven Moore Mummy (Friend) January 5, 2009

Each year I resolve with the strongest intent
To be better this year than the last.
And I work very hard; the rules hardly get bent,
But this discipline gets old so fast!


But with this new year I just know I’ll win out,
Just watch how I do and you’ll see!
I’m not going to have yet another blowout;
I’ll be good as I know I can be.


But, if wicked things beckon, and I’m not so strong,
If I weaken and fall on my ast,
I’ll be thankful again that you’ll help me along
As you have during all new years past.


I’m so grateful that you’re my (gts friend)! Happy New Year!

Tania Coakley (Friend) January 1, 2009

merry christmas xx
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+ . . * + . + * . * + .*
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+ ....* + . + * . * +

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Jane Steven Moore Mummy (Friend) December 18, 2008

flowers for an angel

hi sweetie im so sorry i havent got to come see your garden till this week. we have been so busy with your naughty cousin melody moo been in newcastle for 6 months. we are starting to get her sorted now and i know thats because you and nanna and grandad watch over us all down here. josh had a party last week and your sisters come. they are gorgeous you must be so proud of your big sisters!! i wish you could have come to even out the amount of boys to girls he he. i know you were here in spirit and i hope you enjoyed it. have fun in the clouds this christmas and send lots of strentgh to your mummy and daddy and sister and lots of hugs and kisses too!!!!! i will then send you lots of kisses to help you!! i brought you your christmas flowers to your garden this week, i know they are a bit early but i know your mummy if i would have fetched them next week there will be no room!! she fills it he he. hope you liked them and we always think about you and the strength you give to everyone. love you lots your cousin lolly and half cousins shayne, posh and melody moo oh and scott he he xxxxx

Lauren Travis (Cousin) December 18, 2008

*
___________________H ello
__________________I Have
_________________Com e Here
________________To Wish You
_______________Merry Christmas
______________And Also, A Happy
_____________New Year To You For
____________2009... I Hope The New
___________Year Brings You Loads Of
__________Happiness And Lots Of Fun.
_________I Hope You Have A Nice Day On
________Christmas Day, Filled With Lots Of
_______Angel Time.......And Of Course Eating
______Lots Of Nice Foods, And Candies. I Hope
_____That Santa Is Good To You As Well And He
___Brings You Loads Of Presents On Christmas Day
_________________XXX (\ ●♥● /)
_________________XXX ( \(_)/ )
_________________XXX (_ /|\ _)
_________________XXX ../___\

sending you lots of love and hugs for christmas xxxxxxx

Sharon Xxx (Friend) December 8, 2008

thinking of you and your family always

An eternal memory of a special angel!

Today it would be wonderful
to see you play or smile
but heaven lent you to this world
for just a little while
and in that short but precious time
you brought along much love
and all that love is with you now
in heaven up above
your leaving caused so many tears
and such a lot of pain
but god needed one more angel
so he took you back again

sorry i havnt been on in a while i am having a bad time at the moment but you and your family are always in my thoughts loads of love always Emma(kyle hares mummy) xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Nanna Sam December 3, 2008
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From Kim
From Lauren
From Sharon
From Marie