During one school year I lived with Eleanor during the
week. It was a special time to get to
know each other and I leaned so much from her about aging gracefully. She
shared family stories and bank stories..(never leaving until balanced…never!)
As a young man Eleanor’s brother Don had new white suit for
a special occasion. As he was returning
home in the rain he wanted to spare his suit.
He pulled the car under a nearby gas station canopy. He took the suit off and put it in the car,
climbed in and drove home, pulled into the garage and then sprinted to the house
in the dark in his skivvies leaving the white suit dry in the car for the next
morning.
She remembered her niece Carol saying, “Are you sassified?”
(satisfied).
Her family lived close enough to hear the train and in
Carol’s mind the sound of the whistle was tied to when the grownups had
coffee. When she would hear the whistle
Carol would pipe up and say “Gwanma, it’s the coffee train!”
We would play cribbage and Eleanor would have the count
before I picked up my hand. She found
all points and beat me regularly. She
and her friends would play Shanghai and if it were an evening I was included.
We watched together her set of Johnny Carson videos and laughed
and laughed. She could watch a movie
with Sidney Portier and shed tears, along with the flag being raised and the
national anthem sung.
She loved feeding the birds and knew the right seeds to
attract cardinals especially.
Her four season room was an oasis and indeed in our next
home I tried to replicate it.
At Christmas she baked 12 kinds of cookies to meet the
standard of a good Swedish woman.
Eleanor had miles and miles (thousands) on her stationery
bike…she rode it every morning while watching a morning TV news show. At one point she was encouraged to go for
some rehab and she reported she was “shamed” into acceleration.
At Augustana we had an intern Mauricio Haake from
Brazil. He and his wife Christine had
two children Mateus and Raquel. Eleanor
became Grandma to them and for other children.
She had also collected daughters and I considered it an honor that I
achieved that status.
She worked the daily crossword puzzle, created beautiful
counted cross stitch and when she couldn’t sleep she didn’t fret or fuss. but
got up and played computer games…sharpening her cribbage skills and routinely beating
the computer.
Bless you Eleanor.
May 7, 1925 - April 29, 2017 |
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