Current:Home > reviews"Love is something that never dies": Completing her father's bucket list -Core Financial Strategies
"Love is something that never dies": Completing her father's bucket list
View
Date:2025-04-19 15:17:31
In her small apartment in Montclair, N.J., Laura Carney's dreams are coming true, just like her father always knew they would, even if unaware of exactly the role he'd play. Laura's first book – "My Father's List: How Living My Dad's Dreams Set Me Free" – was just published, a dream born of a nightmare 20 years ago, when Mick Carney was killed in a car crash at the age of 54.
"I remember thinking how angry I was that he didn't finish his life," Laura said, "that he didn't get to do all the things he set out to do."
He was, she said, the best dad – a sensitive, sentimental, and, like so many of our fathers, complicated man. Laura said, "'You're the best thing I've ever done' – that's what he said all the time."
But he also left her a lot to sift through, as when he split from her mom when Laura was just six years old. Axelrod asked, "Was there something you had to overcome?"
"Oh, of course," she replied. "I believed he abandoned us for a long time."
What she's sifted through the last six years is a list of all those things Mick Carney set out to do – sixty items he wrote down when he was 29. He'd only had a chance to try six when he was killed.
Axelrod asked, "What do you think the value of writing a bucket list is?"
She replied, "Not only are you writing down your intentions for your life, but you're also committing to showing the world who you are authentically. So, even if you don't finish it, maybe your kids find it someday, and then they know what you cared about, and that matters."
When her brother found the list in 2016, Laura said, "I couldn't help but notice 'Talk with the president' right away!"
Mick's bucket list also included "Correspond with the pope." "Run 10 miles straight." "Swim the width of a river." "Surf in the Pacific Ocean." "Go to the Rose Bowl."
It was, she admitted, intimidating: "And then I just got this image in the back of my mind of my dad's face smiling and nodding; that never happened before. So, that was the thing that really made me feel like, Oh, I need to do this."
But when she and her husband, Steven, headed to Georgia, at Jimmy Carter's Sunday service, daunted turned to inspired. "I said, 'President Carter, my father wrote down that he wanted to meet you on his bucket list, and I'm checking that off for him today.' And he said, 'Oh, very good!' This was the most impossible list item, and we did it. And I think everything changed after that, because if I could do the most impossible one, then what was to stop me from doing the rest?"
Ever since, she's been checking them off: "Have five songs recorded." "Go sailing by myself." "Skydive at least once." "Own a black tux."
Axelrod asked, "Was any part of you, as you would read this, be like, 'Come on, Dad'?"
"Yeah!" Laura laughed. "But when I would be in the middle of doing them, I just had this feeling that my dad wouldn't let me fail."
Maybe the most challenging for this reluctant driver: hopping behind the wheel of a Corvette. "I took it slow," she said. "I knew it was the same highway where my dad's crash had happened."
But the challenge was where the healing was. Laura said. "I felt like I now could associate a new memory with driving. And the car phobia went away. Then all of a sudden, I was taking long trips and driving myself! I changed the narrative. My dad and I weren't victims of something anymore."
With the help of her long-gone father, Laura was learning to re-think her approach to life.
Axelrod said, "Underpinning this entire list is, do things to enjoy doing them."
"That's right, which I wasn't doing."
"Your dad was teaching you, through this list, that you derive pleasure from the doing, not how well you do it, from the doing of it?"
"It opened my heart, which had been shut down," Laura said.
So, now Laura Carney is sharing what she learned by completing the list: how she made her connection to her father's memory 54 times tighter, and found peace in the process.
She said, "I'm not stuck in that day when he died anymore. Now I'm living in the present. And I'm going and doing all these incredibly fun things.
"Everybody has that possibility to still have that connection" she said. "Because even though people die, love is something that never dies."
For more info:
- "My Father's List: How Living My Dad's Dreams Set Me Free" by Laura Carney (Post Hill Press), in Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- Laura Carney (Official site)
- Photographer Adrian Bacolo
Story produced by Young Kim. Editor: Mike Levine.
Jim Axelrod is the chief investigative correspondent and senior national correspondent for CBS News, reporting for "CBS This Morning," "CBS Evening News," "CBS Sunday Morning" and other CBS News broadcasts.
TwitterveryGood! (72)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Republican Will Hurd announces he's running for president
- Britney Spears Reunites With Mom Lynne Spears After Conservatorship Battle
- Ariana Madix Claims Tom Sandoval and Raquel Leviss Had Sex in Her Guest Room While She Was Asleep
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- He helped cancer patients find peace through psychedelics. Then came his diagnosis
- Journalists: Apply Now for the InsideClimate News Mountain West Environmental Reporting Workshop
- How Boulder Taxed its Way to a Climate-Friendlier Future
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- South Carolina Has No Overall Plan to Fight Climate Change
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- A woman is in custody after refusing tuberculosis treatment for more than a year
- Boston Progressives Expand the Green New Deal to Include Justice Concerns and Pandemic Recovery
- Some Utilities Want a Surcharge to Let the Sunshine In
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- Climate Tipping Points Are Closer Than We Think, Scientists Warn
- She's a U.N. disability advocate who won't see her own blindness as a disability
- How the Harvard Covid-19 Study Became the Center of a Partisan Uproar
Recommendation
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
N.C. Church Takes a Defiant Stand—With Solar Panels
Jack Hanna's family opens up about his Alzheimer's diagnosis, saying he doesn't know most of his family
Supreme Court rules against Navajo Nation in legal fight over water rights
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Solar Breakthrough Could Be on the Way for Renters
A new nasal spray to reverse fentanyl and other opioid overdoses gets FDA approval
Rules allow transgender woman at Wyoming chapter, and a court can't interfere, sorority says