EDITORIAL
Last week’s tragic car accident that left three teenagers dead is a
painful reminder that life can be shockingly and brutally short.
As if we all needed that reminder.
The loss of two 19-year-olds, Jillian Baedeker and Chelsea Toma, and
18-year-old Nancy Le has devastated the wide web of family and friends
the three had woven over the course of their too-short lives. The
memorial constructed at the site of the accident, Beach Boulevard and
Edinger Avenue, the funeral services held and the words that have been
repeated about them have all been testaments to the lasting impact the
trio had here in Huntington Beach, as well as far beyond its city limits.
There always is little to say at such times. Words are vastly empty
because there is too much unfettered emotion to package in a phrase or
thought, no matter how honest and heartfelt. Loss like this is the very
definition of unspeakable, of unconscionable.
The solace that can be found is in the coming together of that web of
loved ones, when the best of humanity rises to meet the deepest horrors
of life. Action fills the holes that words cannot touch. We saw that to
an unimaginable extent following the unimaginable catastrophe of Sept.
11. We are seeing it again now, in the aftermath of a perhaps smaller,
but no less unthinkable, tragedy.
And that welling of support proves two things. Jillian, Chelsea and
Nancy will be missed. But they also will be remembered.
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