The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

In Memoriam: John Timothy Ater April 10, 1953-January 20, 2026

Outside my Mother and Father, few people had a more profound, wide-reaching and persistent impact on my life than John Ater.

I met John when I was 16. I was a deeply troubled youth. Still wickedly angry at my parents, their divorce and how they used me (and my little sister) as a weapon to hurt each other. I was on probation–convicted of juvenile delinquency–and still engaging in bouts of mayhem. Add to that far too much experience hoping chemistry might improve life, plus a penchant for late night theft and I was a handful. I’m not ashamed to tell y’all John was my therapist. I hated him the first time I met him. I hated him a good long while. He had one rule for me. He said, “I will treat you like an adult so long as you act like one. If you don’t I’ll treat you like a child.” For some reason, something unrecognizable compelled me to return week after week. I wasn’t aware of it yet, but I wanted change. I yearned for it from a place I didn’t recognize. But that soon changed.

His undivided attention to me while in therapy was profound. Without doubt, I was never an afterthought by my parents, but John’s ability to listen to me and cut right to the matter at hand was attention from an adult on a whole new level for me. For the first time in my life I was seen by an adult willing to see me as I was, not as a parent would have me. While I wasn’t mature enough to recongize this as liberating, I felt heard and I felt a growing sense of nurture. (Although I only saw this in the clairvoyance of hindsight.)

My dislike of him soon grew into genuine fondness. So, I stuck with him for eight years, from 16 to 24, years old I saw him weekly until I graduated university. By then I had grown to love him. After that we were friends. He was my confidant, a sounding board and a shoulder to cry on. He never asked for anything in return. He gave of himself, that he might receive from others.

He was fond of telling me, “Sean Paul, I am here to comfort the disturbed and disturb the comforted.” And that is what he did.

San Francisco, May 2010

When I was up and full of myself–which happened a lot in my late 20s and early 30s, he called me on my bullshit. When I was down he lifted me up. I would not have survived two major depressive episodes in my life were it not for his patience and love.

He was also fond of saying, “when you point the finger at someone, do realize you’re pointing three back at yourself.”

My personal favorite was, “evolution gave you two ears and one mouth, use them in their proper proportion.”

They say a mother teaches her son what is expected of a man. And a father teaches his son how to live up to his expectations.

But John taught me something entirely different. He taught me how to be an adult. He taught me how to be kind. How not to hold grudges. How not to second guess myself. He taught me that it was much more difficult to admit when I was wrong or had made a mistake than to deny or ignore it, but that I had a moral obligation to do so, regardless of how I felt. He taught me the difference between morals and ethics. He taught me how to walk into a room and read it, painful introvert that I was. “The people in the room want your attention just as much as you want theirs. Go, ask questions of them, open-ended questions and you’ll make more friends than you know what to do with.” He was right.

John drilled into me that color, creed and sexual orientation–he was openly gay–meant not absolute zippo in the grand scheme of things, that we were all divine children of the Cosmos. And he taught me how to stand firm when my principles or integrity were questioned. To never start a fight, but be damn sure to finish it. Another crucial lesson John imparted upon me was the necessity of asking for help when in over my head, or even when I just didn’t know something. And he always added, “just because someone said no, does not let you off the hook. You can’t stop asking for help.”

He was also fond of saying, “the universe answers prayers in three ways only, ‘yes, no and not yet.’

More than anything John ever taught me, it was the immense amounts of time he sat listening to me at coffee shops and then on the phone when he moved to San Francisco. He never asked for anything in return. All he said was, “be as good as you can to others, at all times.”

I spoke to John a few weeks before he died. He said it would be the last time we spoke. I told him how much I loved him and how responsible he was for me becoming the human being that I am.”Imperfect,” he said, “but fundamentally decent.” These were his penultimate words to me.

John died on January 25, 2026. It was not unexpected, but it hurts like hell. He was 73.

The Cosmos broke the mold when John was created. And I am diminshed by his loss.

John is survived by two sons.

His last Facebook post epitomizes John:

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13 Comments

  1. marku

    ”Imperfect,” he said, “but fundamentally decent.”

    Can anyone aspire to more than that? But keep on trying.

    Beautifully said SPK. You were blessed to have known him

  2. Buffalobob

    What a better place the world would be if everyone had a guy like John in their life. Mine was my grandfather.

  3. John

    I used to tell my students, young teenagers, “I will treat you as an adult unless by your actions you prove not to be one.” That was the one thing that most of them remembered.

  4. Sean Paul Kelley

    @John: It’s stuck with me my whole life. Someone finally treating me, not as an equal, but as someone with agency.

  5. Chuck

    I read this one slowly, and twice. I wish I could have known John. I hope to some day be like him. Thanks for sharing the meditation on your loss. The world truly is diminished by his death. I’m just some stranger, but I’ll stop and feel it with you.

  6. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Chuck: I can only say thank you. The outpouring of condolences and sympathy has been merciful salve for a wounded heart.

  7. Joan

    Oops I think my comment evaporated, but if this is a repeat, feel free to delete.

    Thank you for sharing John’s impact on your life. His investment in you really shaped you for the better. What a wonderful legacy to leave to the world. His life makes me hope reincarnation is real, so that we’ll get the chance to learn from him again.

  8. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Joan: I could not agree more. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

  9. Feral Finster

    Memory Eternal.

  10. Mark Level

    Thanks for a thorough tribute, that showed all the good (at least in your individual life) that JT did as a mentor.

    In my early-mid-20s I had 2 mentors in N’Awlins, both teachers, both gay men. Most likely inspired me into going into teaching (though I already had strong motivations), one came through for me after I returned from Central America, close to homelessness after my mentally disturbed girlfriend kicked me to the curb.

    Reminds me of the lyrics to Lennon’s Instant Karma. These people make the world a better place, against the odds. Always fortunate to cross paths with them.

  11. Egoculexegonos

    Every human mould is systematically broken but some of their casts manage to mould us into finer, more wholesome casts. They live in us and we are blessed when we can pay it forward.

    A heartfelt toast on John from across the ocean and across the times and another one for all the past, present and future Johns.

    Big hug, Sean Paul.

  12. Edmund

    Well that moved me to tears. Thank you for bringing me into this state of realness.

  13. mistah charley, ph.d.

    This is heartwarming. Thank you, SPK.

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