11/17/2025
"I tried to heal myself’.
Eric Clapton lived as a recluse in Antigua for a year after his son Conor, four, suffered a fatal 53-story fall from New York skyscraper.
The musical icon, now 80, told about the profound, crippling grief that followed and the extreme measures he took to survive it: he spent nearly a year living in total isolation on the Caribbean island of Antigua.
Distraught and searching for a way to cope with the horrific freak accident, Clapton flew to the island, seeking to become a recluse. His primary, desperate attempt to "heal" himself was to throw his entire being into writing and playing music.
Clapton first recounted the painful process immediately following Conor’s death, which involved bringing the boy home from New York and navigating the funeral alongside his son's Italian maternal family.
After the funeral concluded, Clapton retreated entirely. He rented a small cottage in Antigua, armed only with a Spanish string guitar—an instrument he clung to as his only comfort and companion.
“I had this little Spanish string guitar, I became attached to that, I went off to Antigua and I rented a little cottage there in a community and I just swatted mosquitos all day and played this guitar and stayed there for almost a whole year, without much contact with the outside world, and I tried to heal myself,” he shared.
His days became a relentless cycle of artistic expression born from pain. He played, wrote, and re-wrote songs, performing them “again and again and again and again until I felt like I had made some sort of move towards the surface of my being and then I was able to come out.”
Adding to the crushing sorrow was the revelation of Conor’s final contact with his father. Just days before the accident, Conor had learned to write a few words and insisted on writing a letter to Clapton.
Conor’s mother, Lory, helped him compose the short, simple message. “‘Oh mummy, I want to write a letter to daddy, what shall I write?’ I told him, ‘Well, write, I love you’. He wrote that and we posted it like a regular letter,” Lory recalled.
In a twist of fate that magnified the tragedy, the letter arrived at Clapton’s London home just after the funeral. Lory described the unforgettable moment: “I was there when Eric received his mail just after the funeral and he opened it up and it was Conor’s letter. That is a moment I cannot forget.”
The deep sorrow Clapton endured eventually led to one of the most powerful and enduring songs of his career: “Tears in Heaven.” The song, written as a dedication to Conor, became an immense success, winning three Grammy Awards for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male, Song of the Year, and Record of the Year.
The initial reality of losing a child is often described as a chasm—a sorrow that stretches beyond the capacity of language and is truly beyond measure. Yet, for those who navigate this deepest pain, a quiet, profound moral truth begins to emerge.
True love is immortal. It is the force that takes a broken heart and strengthens it into a vessel capable of holding both immense sorrow and enduring, transformative light.
Love does not end; it transforms into an eternal light that guides us.
"TEARS IN HEAVEN" by Eric Clapton
Would you know my name If I saw you in heaven? Would it be the same If I saw you in heaven? I must be strong and carry on' Cause I know I don't belong here in heaven
Would you hold my hand If I saw you in heaven? Would you help me stand If I saw you in heaven? I'll find my way through night and day' Cause I know I just can't stay here in heaven
Time can bring you down Time can bend your knees Time can break your heart Have you begging please, begging please
Beyond the door There's peace, I'm sure And I know there'll be no more Tears in heaven
Would you know my name If I saw you in heaven? Would it be the same If I saw you in heaven? I must be strong and carry on' Cause I know I don't belong here in heaven
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