Adam Havrilak usually had a golf club in his hand, swinging it as he walked from room to room, launching imaginary drives that flew straight and true off the tee and landed far down the fairway, perfectly set up for a shot at the green.
He lived life that way, too.
A big, sunny kid with golden locks, a great grin and a passion for adventure that had taken him to Hawaii and China by the time he was 21, Adam attacked life like someone always thinking about the next shot, and having the confidence that it would be another good one. So his death last month, in a traffic accident in China where he was teaching English, learning Chinese and narrating travel videos, exploded through the lives of his family and friends in Minnesota.
It just couldn't be true.
Adam's mom, Beverly Egeland of Hopkins, had just received her visa to visit her son in China when she got word that Adam's motor scooter had crashed into a truck in Haikou City, the capital of China's island province of Hainan. The news wasn't good: Adam had a broken neck and was on a respirator. But the reality turned out to be worse: Adam was on life support and wasn't going to make it. The accident happened Jan. 10. Four days later, with Adam surrounded by Chinese doctors and his father, Bob, at his bedside and his mother and sisters, Emily and Barbra, listening and crying on the phone from Minnesota, Adam was taken off life support, and was gone.
It still doesn't seem right.
Adam would've graduated from Hopkins High in 2004, but he got an itch to get going on life. He quit school his senior year, passed his GED, grabbed his golf clubs, flew to Hawaii and never looked back.
He plunged into life in Honolulu, enrolling at the University of Hawaii, working on his golf game until he was just a stroke or two from becoming a pretty good scratch golfer. Then, he took up the triathlon.