A Mother’s Worst Fear: Twin Toddlers Found Unresponsive After Brief Moment Out of Sight.3009
Nineteen-month-old twins Locklyn and Loreli Callazzo had lived every moment of their short lives as if they were one heartbeat.
They slept side by side in the same small bed, their tiny bodies curled toward each other like two halves of a single soul.
They ate together, played together, followed one another from room to room, and refused to sit in separate seats even when adults gently tried to encourage them.
To them, togetherness wasn’t simply comfort — it was their entire way of being.
Their godmother, Dawn Lemons, had often said that they seemed to breathe in sync, laugh in sync, and even mischief together as if planned in whispers only the two of them understood.
“They just wanted to be together all the time,” she told PEOPLE.
“They didn’t know how to be apart.”

On the morning of March 16, the world that had always held the two toddlers together would come undone in the most devastating way.
The Callazzo home in Oklahoma City was calm, quiet, and carrying the familiar rhythm of family life.
Inside, 37-year-old mother Jenny was homeschooling an older child, her focus split between worksheets and the sounds of little ones playing nearby in the living room.
It was a routine moment — ordinary, safe, and identical to countless mornings before.
There was no warning in the air, no shift in the home’s rhythm that could have hinted at the tragedy about to unfold.
The twins were in the living room.
Their grandmother was also in the house, moving between rooms, helping with daily routines.
Somewhere in that sequence of ordinary actions, the back door — the one that led directly to the backyard pool — was left open.
No one noticed.
No one could have imagined that a few inches of open space could become a chasm that swallowed a family’s world.

Jenny continued guiding the older child’s lessons, trusting that the toddlers were playing safely as they always did.
Minutes passed, though to her they must have felt like seconds — the sort of unnoticed time that slips by when a parent believes everything is fine.
Later, she would insist, through tears and shock, that it could not have been longer than ten minutes.
Ten minutes that would carve a wound no amount of time could ever heal.
When Jenny realized the toddlers were no longer within earshot, her heart jolted awake with a primal fear.
She looked around the living room, called their names, checked behind furniture, lifted blankets, scanned corners where children often hide.
But there was no answer.
No patter of little feet.
Only silence.
A silence heavy enough to choke.

She moved quickly through the house, her breath growing sharper with each unanswered call.
Something pulled her toward the backyard — a mother’s instinct, a dreadful tug she could not ignore.
When she reached the doorway, the sight before her shattered her world.
There, floating in the pool, were her babies.
Locklyn and Loreli.
Side by side even in this.
Their bodies still, their curls wet, their innocence swallowed by the water that glittered under the sun as if mocking the horror it held.
Jenny screamed.
She waded into the pool without thinking, lifting their small bodies into her arms, the weight of them both unbearable and unreal.
She carried them toward the house, her breaths collapsing into sobs, her mind refusing to accept what her eyes saw.
She dialed 911, her voice trembling, her hands shaking so violently she could barely hold the phone.
The call was logged at 10:43 a.m.

Police arrived first.
They found Jenny at the back doorway, collapsed in anguish but forcing herself to be strong enough to hand over her children to the responders.
Officers immediately began performing CPR on both toddlers.
The front yard, the doorway, the quiet street — they became an emergency room.
Within minutes, fire department responders arrived and took over, working desperately, rhythmically, refusing to surrender even as the seconds stretched painfully long.
But the twins had no pulse.
They were not breathing.
Their small bodies did not respond to the lifesaving measures that, in any other moment, might have been enough.
Despite everything the first responders tried, they could not undo the irreversible.
The twins were rushed to a nearby hospital, but the verdict was already silently written in the stillness of their bodies.
At the hospital, they were pronounced dead.

Fire battalion chief Scott Douglas later said, “We did our best to revive them, unfortunately we were just too late.”
He also shared that Jenny was adamant the twins were only out of her sight for a short time — no longer than ten minutes.
The family’s attorney, John Boozer, emphasized that the exact timeline was still unclear.
“The family is still putting the pieces together,” he said gently.
The backyard pool, just ten feet from a door leading inside, had never been enclosed by a gate.
It was an open invitation for curiosity — the kind toddlers often cannot resist.
Their deaths immediately triggered an investigation, as is protocol whenever a child’s life is lost.
Captain Valerie Littlejohn of the Oklahoma City Police Department explained that the case would remain open until the Medical Examiner’s Office completed the toddlers’ autopsies — a process expected to take months.
“Anytime there’s a child death, we investigate until we know exactly what happened,” Littlejohn said.
But no investigation could mend the hole left in the Callazzo home.

Inside the house, grief hung like a heavy fog.
Jenny and her husband Sonny, who had not been home during the accident, were surviving “minute by minute,” according to Dawn.
“They have a lot of friends and support here to help them, thank heavens,” she added.
“But it’s tough.
It’s so tough.”
This heartbreak was not Jenny’s first.
Seventeen years earlier, she had lost her infant son Preston, who died at just five months old due to complications following cancer treatment.
That wound had long scarred but never fully healed.
Now, it had been torn open again in the most unimaginable way.
Jenny also had a 14-year-old daughter, whom Sonny adopted after they married, and together they had an 8-year-old son.
The home that once overflowed with children’s laughter now echoed with loss.

“Jenny feels naked without her babies to hold,” Dawn shared.
“She carries their stuffed animals everywhere because she says she doesn’t know how to walk without holding them.”
Jenny had told her, “Dawn, I don’t know how to move without my babies in my arms.”
The image was shattering — a mother clutching reminders of the children she could no longer carry.
Dawn herself broke down after visiting the family.
“I went home and bawled my eyes out,” she said.
“I don’t know how to help them.”
Her voice cracked when she spoke of the twins, describing how their presence had filled every room with joy.
“They were the most beautiful babies,” she said.
“And everyone who met them just loved them.”

The twins’ arrival into the world had been unexpected in the most extraordinary way.
Jenny and Sonny had not known they were expecting twins until 30 weeks into the pregnancy.
An ultrasound revealed not one heartbeat, but two — a discovery that shocked the family.
“They thought they were having one baby,” Dawn recalled.
“Then suddenly there were two.”
Born on August 1, 2021, the twins quickly became the heart of the family.
They were bright, lively, expressive, and endlessly curious.
Locklyn adored playing the harmonica, producing off-key but enthusiastic melodies that filled the house with laughter.
Loreli loved to dance and sing, twirling in small circles, her smile wide enough to warm any room.
Locklyn had just begun forming full sentences.
Loreli had just learned the word “sissy,” which she used lovingly for her older sister.
They played hide and seek behind curtains, their tiny feet sticking out beneath the fabric — a giveaway they never understood.
The adults always saw the feet, but pretended not to, letting the toddlers squeal in victory when they were “found.”
Their innocence was pure, untouched, unshadowed by fear or sorrow.

To lose them both on the same day, in the same moment, was a cruelty beyond measure.
It was as if fate had taken not just two children, but one whole light from the world.
Grief counseling began that week for the Callazzo family.
Friends showed up with food, prayers, shoulders to cry on, and long embraces that never felt long enough.
Even strangers reached out — parents who had also lost children to drowning.
They sent messages, shared their stories, and offered the only kind of comfort that didn’t feel hollow.
“It helps them feel like they’re not alone,” Dawn said.
“Other people have lived through this, and somehow that brings a little comfort.”
But it was comfort in the smallest, most fragile measure — like a single candle flickering in a dark, cavernous room.
Nothing would ever replace the twins.
Nothing would ever fill the empty spaces where their laughter once lived.
The family now faced a long, aching journey — one step at a time, one minute at a time — learning to live in a world that had taken away two of its brightest smiles.
Their home would forever be changed.
Their memories would forever carry both warmth and unbearable sorrow.
And the love they held for Locklyn and Loreli would remain, timeless and unbroken, bound together just as the twins had always been.
Remembering Bryson: A Little Boy Who Fought With a Smile and Taught the True Meaning of Strength.2081

“Everyone is afraid of dying, until you lose a child… then you’re afraid of living.”
Those words have taken hold of Lilian McGrath, who just laid her five-year-old son, Bryson, to rest.

After 1,027 days of courage, laughter, pain, and unshakable spirit, Bryson gained his wings — but not before showing the world what it means to fight with joy in your heart.
Bryson Scott McGrath, lovingly known as “Goose” or “Goosie,” passed away peacefully in the arms of his family on September 26, 2025.
Though his time on this earth was heartbreakingly short, the joy, love, and light he brought into the world will ripple through eternity.

Goose was the silliest (and sometimes scariest) goose in the pond.
His personality was as colorful as his vocabulary, and his sense of humor often surprised adults around him.
He was vibrant, his antics unforgettable, and his heart pure gold.

Bryson’s spirit was larger than life.
He loved trains — especially Thomas and Friends — and could spend hours building endless tracks with his beloved Dada.
SpongeBob was another favorite, and he never missed a chance to laugh at the nonsense of his underwater friends.

He had the soul of a performer, and a heart that beat in rhythm with music.
Bryson loved to sing and dance, often putting on shows for anyone lucky enough to be near.
His playlist was as unique as he was: from “Pink Pony Club” to “Chop Suey,” every song became his stage.

Food was another great love in Bryson’s world.
He delighted in steak quesadillas, Spanish rice with refried beans, spaghetti, and Caesar salad.

But nothing rivaled his passion for “white milk,” a request he never asked but demanded.
Bryson was most at peace at home, in the comfort of pajamas and soft blankets.
He cherished going to baseball games and became the world’s biggest Dodgers fan thanks to Shohei Ohtani.

He also loved playing Roblox and Minecraft with his “bro,” laughing and creating together in the digital world.
To know Bryson was to know joy.

His smile was magic, his laughter was music, and his tender heart left an imprint on everyone, even those he never met.
Even in the face of illness, he showed a strength and courage that humbled those around him.

He is survived by his devoted parents, Lily and Sebastian McGrath, and his loving big brother, Paxton.
His memory will forever be cherished by grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins.
Though he was preceded in death by several family members, his spirit lives on in the hearts of all who loved him.

A Celebration of Bryson’s Life was held on October 12, 2025, inviting family and friends to share memories, favorite foods, and the joy he brought to everyone.
In honor of his bright spirit, guests were asked to wear gold, yellow, or any bright color reminiscent of Bryson’s joy and the awareness of childhood cancer.

In lieu of flowers, donations were encouraged to pediatric cancer organizations and research initiatives, supporting other children facing similar battles, ensuring that no family has to endure this heartbreak alone.

Bryson’s story is not measured in years, but in impact.
Even the smallest life can leave the largest legacy of love.

Every train whistle, every song, every silly moment continues to shine brightly in the lives of all who had the privilege to know him.
He taught the world courage, joy, and the purest love a child can offer.

Though gone too soon, Bryson’s spirit continues to guide, inspire, and fill hearts with hope.
His life reminds us to cherish every moment, to love fiercely, and to live fully in the face of adversity.

Bryson McGrath will be profoundly missed, but never forgotten.
Every memory of him — his laughter, his antics, his tender heart — is a gift that lives on.
