I met Morgane about two years ago, in a club in Second Life. She was a dancer, I was a lone visitor. We spoke, we IM’d, we connected. We became very close friends.
A few months later, Morgane told me she was diagnosed with cancer. She had good medical care; she would get all the treatments; she would fight it and win.
Still the most intense time I’ve ever had in SL was when I came to her one day in my mermaid form. I pulled her close to me, and I told her to visualize herself focusing all of her energy on the cancer cells within her; surrounding them, and then pushing them out of her body and into mine. A mermaid is immortal (as everyone knows), and we both imagined the cells being destroyed within my body. We did this for over an hour, until we were both exhausted. The next time I saw her, she told me how much better she felt afterwards. She said, in fact, that I had saved her life.
Perhaps I did help add some time to her life. I like to think so.
She was getting better after that. But then she disappeared for several months. None of her friends knew where she had gone, and we feared the worst. But then she made a contact; she’d gone to the country to recuperate, far from Internet access, but she was back.
I lost touch with Morgane for a while; we just kept missing each other. And then, back in fall 2009, I discovered she was managing a club called Amouresque. My alt KaTrina was looking for a place to work, and Amouresque was beautiful and welcoming. It was wonderful seeing Morgane again, even for very brief moments, as our schedules still didn’t match.
And then, shortly after, she disappeared again, without a trace. Once again, we feared the worst, and this time our fears were founded. Amouresque’s owner contacted the employees and let us know that Morgane had lost her battle with the disease, and was gone from us.
What do you do, when someone whom you knew only through their avatar, dies in the real world? There is nobody to wrap your real arms around; you do not know the family; you can not visit their home or place a flower on their grave. And yet the pain is every bit as real as if losing someone you have walked with on a beach, or had dinner with, or laughed with. Because we did all of those things, even though only on a screen.
(If you are reading this, but have never been involved in a virtual world like SL, this may all sound completely strange or insane to you. But please believe me, I’m not alone in becoming so close with these virtual friends who, after all, have real human beings behind them.)
Trying to get some closure
I was aware of the American Cancer Society’s work in Second Life, and that their Relay for Life fundraising project for this year is underway. I went to the ACS building; there were staff members there who directed me to a donation kiosk. Giving something to the kiosk in her memory was cleansing; it felt good. And I talked with the staff for just a moment; letting them know this was being done for a friend.
And then one of the staff flew me to a beautiful place; their Memorial Garden, where anyone can place a photo of a departed loved one, and then buy a candle or flower to place there. She gave me a candle; I set it on what would be her space, and it warmed me.

Memorial to Morgane Kirax at the American Cancer Society garden in Second Life.
KaTrina then send the word to the Amouresque employees and owners who had been her closest friends. When I returned a few days later, her memorial was lit with the glow from many candles and adorned with a photograph of her in real life; a vision I had never seen.
Now it is a few days later, and the pain is less severe, although still very deep. But I am heartened knowing that Morgane lives on, through all the people whose lives she touched, all the love she gave, all the beautiful things she did.
Should you, reading this, be someone who knew the real world Morgane, please give yourself and others around you a hug that comes from me. I have no arms to do that myself, only a screen, and my words, and my tears.
With love,
Trina
SLURLS TO HER MEMORIALS:
At the American Cancer Society Garden: http://slurl.com/secondlife/American%20Cancer%20Society/84/224/25
At the Remember Our Friends island: http://slurl.com/secondlife/ROF%20Coalition%20Island/45/204/25