Another big day for the birthday brothers, as one hits a milestone and the “baby” hopes to celebrate with him — if COVID doesn’t stop us

Sixty-three years ago this week, a smart, handsome, athletic teenager named Crys Workman turned 17. He and his family were from Huntington, West Virginia, but on his birthday Feb. 28, 1961, Crys was near the end of several months living in nearby Ironton, Ohio, where he attended school and played basketball as a junior for the Ironton High Tigers. His 39-year-old pregnant, divorced mother Betty, 13-year-old brother Robin and 6-year-old sister Terry had also been with Crys in Ironton for a few months in 1960 before moving back to Huntington that fall.

On Crys’s 17th birthday, Betty didn’t get to celebrate with her oldest child and his siblings. Instead, she was at Cabell Huntington Hospital going through five hours of labor before giving birth to her fourth child, a boy who arrived at 5:15 that Tuesday afternoon.

The baby was me, and a few days later I went home to 1221 Kanawha Terrace in Huntington with Minnesota native Clark Christlieb and his Panamanian wife Olga, who already had another adopted son, 18-month-old Isaac.

Top left: My brother Crys Workman at age 15 in 1959 behind the family’s rented home on Maple Avenue in Huntington, West Virginia. Crys had already reached 6 feet — the peak of his height. I’m sure this photo was taken by our father, Bob Workman. Bob and our mother Betty divorced in April 1959 but conceived me 13 months later before Bob moved to Florida, not knowing about the pregnancy. Betty gave birth to me 2/28/61 and placed me for adoption. Top right: Crys, born 2/28/44, sits on a Borden’s truck as a young boy outside the family’s home in East Huntington across from the floodwall by the Guyandotte River. Our father Bob, who died homeless and tragically in Tampa in July 1962 when he drowned in a drunken brawl, was a photography buff and likely took this photo. He was a refrigeration mechanic and must have been working for Borden’s at the time. We know he later worked for Borden’s when Crys, our brother Robin (born in 1947), and Bob and Betty lived in the Logan area south of Huntington from about 1948 to 1951. Lower right: Crys in a track pose at the family’s home on Maple Avenue in Huntington. I’m sure this photo was also taken by Bob.

When 17-year-old Crys moved back home to Huntington the following month and asked his mother Betty what had become of the baby she’d been carrying, she gave him an answer that he took to mean I’d died during childbirth. What else could a teen make of the words “I lost the baby”? But in our mother’s heart, she had lost her baby just as surely as if I had not survived.

When I found my three full sibs in June 2005, though deeply disheartened to learn that Betty had died of lung cancer at 71 in 1992, I was stunned but thrilled to find out that my oldest “new” sibling and I shared a birthday.

After my family traveled to the Denver area to meet Crys and sister Terry and their families that summer, then later our brother Robin (who passed away in 2009), I flew up again the following February for a first-ever celebration together of Crys’s and my shared birthday. I did the same in 2018 and wish we’d been able to make it more of a routine since we became a family.

So here we are in 2024, with another double birthday upon us. On Wednesday, Crys will hit his milestone 80th birthday while I’ll turn 63. I have a plane ticket to fly to Denver out of Dallas Love Field after work Tuesday evening and have been anticipating this for months.

Crys and me Crys when we went to breakfast with our sister Terry and her husband Rick during my visit to the Denver area last summer.

However … our 19-year-old tested positive for COVID on Saturday, so my trip is in limbo. We’re taking every precaution — isolation for our sick teen, masking for everyone else, hand-washing, bleaching, you name it in hopes that no one else gets sick. I’ve told my family in Colorado that I’ll take a COVID test Tuesday, but even if it’s negative, they should be the ones to decide if they feel comfortable with my visiting. I sure don’t want to take a chance on getting anyone in my birth family sick as we celebrate the birthday brothers.

So, everyone please cross your fingers for us. And while you’re at it, please wish my wonderful big brother Crys a happy 80th birthday.

Happy birthday, Crystal Edward Workman! We all love you very much! ☺️🎉❤️


4 thoughts on “Another big day for the birthday brothers, as one hits a milestone and the “baby” hopes to celebrate with him — if COVID doesn’t stop us

    1. Thank you, dear Vicky! I sure hope so too. So far, no one besides Alex has gotten sick, and he’s doing OK with congestion, sore throat, headache. I really appreciate your kindness and hope everything is OK w/you and your family, especially your folks. 🙂 ❤

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