Memory submitted by Mark Wilson

When did you meet Mickey?
2011

Where did you meet him?
Only knew him through his blog

Memory of Mickey
His writing showed the clarity of his thinking and his deep caring for people. Some of things he wrote helped in practical ways (in particular, his pieces on group theory) and others deepened my understanding of what we know about the human mind. His commentary on his profession (that had moved away from him in many ways) was and is a needed corrective to the pharmaceutical biologicalification (new word there) of the treatment of distressed people. I am sad he is gone and grateful that I got to know him in this small but important way. I am sorry for your loss.

Memory submitted by Jennifer Vance

When did you meet Mickey?
1983

Where did you meet him?
Through his daughter, Abby

Memory of Mickey
My heart hurts. Because Abby’s father is gone from Abby and Sharon’s life (as well as from the lives of many others for whom, Mickey was an integral part such as Caitlin and joyfully, many others).

I didn’t have a part of this relationship — only coming to know Abby in middle school, and for reasons too foolish to have relevance now.

For me, Dr. Nardo is Abby’s Father, and Sharon’s Partner in life. I never knew about the myriad kindnesses he and Sharon showed to many people while they were growing, hurt, changing and surviving and ultimately, thriving. I am so glad to know of these goodnesses through this group. I love everyone’s stories posted here.

On a self-focused level — because this is a time of “our time” — my heart aches keenly because of the loss of parent. While the loss of a parent rips a hole in the Universe for many (and probably all), regardless of who we are and what our circumstances may be, what kind of person our parent may have been, and what person we may be or may not have (yet) become; AND because “becoming” continues to the last breath: I have many wonders about what any person’s last developmental thought may have been.

So on the selfish “me, me, me, us, us, us,” level: I keen the stress/severence of any chord that has been tempered and frayed between familial bonds. Whether they were strong or fritzed bonds — there are so many threads in the wool — some are not as powerful as others, but they all spin into thread — the quality of the yarn is borne across a landscape. I hold these threads in my hands, and I wonder, and I weep, and I gnash, and I rejoice. (Not necessarily in that order)

Six years ago, I faced similar. My father had a stroke and his life was guaranteed as a DOA. Fortunately and against any prognosis, Dad not only survived, he beat every odd in the books. But: This is not a story about my dad; I simply wonder at the workings of Things.

This is a story about those who continue: those who bear the grief and even the joy of the individual who transcends (whatever “transcend” may mean to anyone). Those who lift up. In sorrow. In song. In Peace.

I met Dr. Nardo exactly once. In the eighth grade when he came to the Challenge Class with Ms. Spurlock to talk about Freud. That’s it.

I grieve for Abby and Sharon and EVERYONE who sheltered in the warmth of what sounds like a wonderful haven of Grace. This is the gift of good people.
I am warmed by the stories of those who intimately knew.

For me, tangential empathy is real and all encompassing for all of you — and all of us.

I am having much of the Feels about this. I have lived in this ICU room. I know the salt. I know the heart. I know the end.

To Sharon and Abby and Mickey, and to you and your clearly extended family — I hug you with the heart of family — with its unbound meaning, depth, and scope.

Memory submitted by James O’Neill

When did you meet Mickey?
2011

Where did you meet him?
his blog

Memory of Mickey
i visited his blog everyday. His writing was like a beacon for me, it illuminated issues and ideas. He seemed to be a master teacher. I scan the internet everyday for information related to mental health and i forwarded many articles to him. From his blog posts i saw him put some of the articles to use. I have always felt like he and i were in a personal dialog and that seems like a wonderful thing to attribute to his writing.

Memory submitted by Kate Cronin

When did you meet Mickey?
1989

Where did you meet him?
Uncle Mickey 🙂 He is my mother, Anna Nardo's brother.

Memory of Mickey
Uncle Mickey was fun. And unpredictable. And kind. I have two favorite memories of him. The first is from a visit my family made to Uncle Mickey and Aunt Sharon when they were still living in Atlanta. Uncle Mickey suggested we go to see Ace Ventura Nature Calls (so this must have been 1995 which would make me 6 at the time). Much to my mother's chagrin, we climbed into the back of Uncle Mickey's truck and went to the mall. Uncle Mickey decided that he wanted to run DOWN the UP escalator which I thought was terribly brave and fun. He and my brother Patrick (my sweet mother very smartly held her 6 year old daughter back) gleefully ran down the up escalator. I think this memory stuck with me because running down an up escalator just seemed like such a perfect encapsulation of Uncle Mickey's personality.

My other favorite memory of Uncle Mickey came years later. I was living in Argentina and involved in an emotionally abusive relationship. My mother was anxious for me and asked Uncle Mickey if he would contact me and maybe talk me through some of my confusion. We didn't know each other very well, (I think it might have been a harder, less helpful conversation if we had known each other very well), but Uncle Mickey helped me sort through a very painful time in my life. I'll always remember him telling me about how much he loved Aunt Sharon and thinking to myself (well I definitely don't feel that about this clown I'm dating).

I'm sad Uncle Mickey is gone. I'm sad for my sweet mother who is grieving the loss of her brother. I'm sad for my Aunt Sharon and my cousin Abby who I have always looked up to.