Saturday, August 24, 2013

Mom and Loretta  Graduation Day UF 2005

Grandma, Rich, Loretta, Karen celebrating--notice moms hand...

Waiting to go to Graduation

Karen, Grandma, and Bev--Graduation dinner

Karen, Grandma, and Darlene--Graduation dinner

Grandma and Budd (Loretta) back home after Graduation


Budd, Karen, Grandma, and Dar--after graduation dinner
Grandma and her granddaughters

Mom and Rick at Sea World Orlando 2010


Mom and Bev at Sea World

Mom and Rick @ Sea World--Kind of late in the day...

Saturday, August 17, 2013


 When I think of Mom’s life 

When I think of Mom’s life one cannot actually fully understand what all she experienced.  When I look at the world we live in today and the world she was born into in 1923…Wwwow.  When I think of some of the stories she told of her childhood days, I really do not understand how she, Larry and Helen or Walter survived.  I would put money that most in the US today would not make it through what she and her siblings did.  We are so absolutely spoiled today… we just would not survive.  Mom told stories of her and Larry and Helen all sleeping in the same bed during the winter.  Not just because that was their only bed, however, to stay warm together as heat was at a minimum.  She told me of how she loved a mustard sandwich.  Yes 2 pieces of bread with a squirt of mustard in the middle.  I do not believe any of us can fathom going to bed with only having a “mustard” sandwich.  And she talked about how excited her and Helen would get when their father, after a particularly good week at work would bring home a chunk of bologna  and they each would get a thin slice for their mustard sandwich.  From what I could understand they did not complain or cry, they just understood and were happy for the special moments, such as a slice of bologna to add to a mustard sandwich.  Mom would grow up having something less than what any of us would consider a normal childhood.  Her mother, Mable Voss Winegardner would die of complications from surgery, thought to be the result of childbirth two years earlier, at the tuberculosis hospital in Kansas City when mom was just 10 years old.  From there she and Helen and, I am assuming, Larry, and I know Walter went to orphanage, bounced around from various living arrangements with mom finally living with Tom and Elizabeth May while in high school.  She tell the story of going by herself to the hospital to show her mother a new dress she had for some occasion and that she traveled to the hospital alone.  The location was considered quite a distance from town as hospitals that treated certain diseases were not located close to any populated areas. If memory serves me correctly, this was the last time she saw her mother.  I know that when Carol, my late wife passed away, it brought back some unpleasant memories of her childhood and her own mother passing.  She expressed to me on several occasions how helpless she felt and how she wished she could have been more of a comfort for my children, especially Loretta, as she felt a special kinship with Loretta due to the similarity of ages at the times of their mother’s deaths.   

Despite her childhood mom became a lady’s lady.  Prim and proper under almost all circumstances. She had an appreciation for life and the things in life that really can only be obtained by living through life’s situations and becoming better because of those situations.  She earned everything she ever had and was always so appreciative of having earn what she had.  Maybe to the extreme as she took impeccable care of everything to maintain things to the best of possible conditions.   She literally lived with the theory "Cleanliness was next to Godliness." 

When I think back on my mother’s life and her accomplishments, I believe that she is one of the smartest people I have ever encountered.

Oh no, she did not have one of those huge pieces of paper from a university, not that she would not have wanted one.  She just had a very hard earned  high school diploma.  If fact, when you consider her childhood, the disruption of her family, her mother’s passing, the state of the world at that time, war, economic disaster, being moved from home to home, working for literally pennies, and having to take care of herself during most of her high school years.  For her to even have received her high school diploma is just truly amazing.  She was always so proud of having it and she did have some good memories from high school, as I found out in my adult life.  Actually, a high school diploma in the late 30’s and early 40’s and into the 50’s was very similar to today’s college degrees.    A high school diploma back then opened a lot of doors of opportunity to its holder just as a college diploma does today. 

 

Mom appreciated everything she would ever acquire and her greatest possessions were not any item that could be purchased or seen in a store.  It was her family, her three sons, and later their families and now their families, families.   Oh, yes there are situations that would make that comment hard to understand, however, I know it to be true.  Mom’s happiest moments were just being with her family and watching them laughing, talking and growing.  It was the little things that made mom the happiest.  Fried Chicken, not Fillet Mignon; fried catfish, not poached salmon; bacon and eggs, not eggs benedict; a potluck dinner, not a black tie affair.  However, she knew how to handle herself at any affair, potluck or black tie, she was a lady, not snobbish or false however a lady.

 

Despite being what most of us today would call almost or totally destitute in her youth, mom and all of her siblings grew up to be fine, contributing, respected, hard working decent individuals who always held their heads high.  And they became educators as only their generation would attempt.

When I think of mom, I remember one of the most educated individuals I have ever known and I have had the pleasure of working with some very fine individuals and some highly “educated” or book learned people.   No mom was not a degreed person or even had a highly booked learned intellect.  As I said she just barely had a high school diploma.  No degreed shingle ever graced the walls in her office or house.  However she was degreed with an education that a vast number of scholared, booked learned or educated people would or will never be capable of understanding or obtaining that knowledge.  It was her education that did not come from books or places of learning that made mom so intelligent.  Oh yes, she might have had problems with technology or new advancements in our fast paced world late in life.  But she knew the things about life that no school or book or computer will ever teach you.  It was her little sayings that would stick with me.  Ones such as:  “He don’t even have the common sense to come in out of the rain!”  I know some people today that this still applies to.  Or, “People who live in glass houses should not throw stones.”  Or here’s one that most people in our country really need to think about today, as I am not certain of their answer:  “If everyone jumped off a bridge are you going to?”  It always seemed that mom had a question or saying for whatever wrong I was doing or situation she wanted me to understand her way of thinking.  Oh yes, I cannot forget, “I’ll give you something to cry about!”  Glad I never used that with my children!

Mom taught me things that are never taught in our schools today.  Things our society feel infringes on our rights and therefore do not need to be taught to our children. Our society is wrong and mom was relentless in her determination that I understood right from wrong and what proper behavior was, and as a child I spoke when I was spoken to not because she wanted to stifle me nor my development however out of respect for any adult that might be present.  Mom was also an excellent judge of character.  She knew almost immediately when I was in with the wrong crowd.  One time much to my dismay, she forbade me from running around with a boy who I claimed to be my friend.  He came from a family a bit worse off than ours and I just thought that mom thought they just were not of the social set for the son of a doctor to run with.  And true to her suspicions before I graduated from High School this boy had been arrested and would spend time behind bars.  No he did not become a bartended either.  She told me she did not like a girl I was dating after the first time she met her.  For a reason I will not mention however a reason I could not believe at the time she picked up on.  She highly recommended I not date this young lady and sure enough this girl never finish high school due to becoming pregnant.  Not by me, thanks to my mother.   Mom also knew the good people that came into my life.  One girl I dated in high school was a particular favorite of hers and mom knew that this girl was a wonderful person and her family, mother, father and siblings, was where her genuine quality came from.  I believe mom was as upset as myself when we broke up. Mom’s judgment of character always amazed me.  She could pick out someone who was not sincere immediately.  She was always on the lookout for people that would or could do harm to her family.  And when someone would use one of her family member wrongly it upset her terribly.  She did not appreciate her sons being played for pawns for someone else’s gain.   

There is so much more to write and I will continue this in the days and weeks to come.

____________________________________________________________________________________

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Happier times in Dorothy's life with her sister and 2 brothers.
Dorothy, Larry, Helen, Walter...Sometime in the late '60's or 70's.
This picture was taken at Walter and Joy's home on Beacon in Southern KC.

Dorothy's Glamour Shot for Mothers Day 2013

The ladies at Brookstone and the staff had fun doing these photo shoots.
Dorothy had fun with this although she would not have wanted this published anywhere.
I just had to though 'cause of that smile and those eyes.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Bev and I continued to Celebrate Mom's life on Friday 8/9/2013 with one of mom's favorite dinners
Fried Green Tomatoes above.

And fried catfish in these two pictures.  Since we're in Florida full size catfish seem harder to find so we settle for catfish fingerlings or baby catfish.  Ummmm--good.


And of course corn bread and steamed cabbage and fresh fritters to round it all out..

Great Grandma Dorothy with her first Great Granddaughter Elisabeth

Elisabeth was the first of 14 Great Grandchildren and certainly a few more to come in the years ahead.
Dorothy will live on into the next centuries through her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren and so on.
She so loved her babies...

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Mom/Grandma/Great Grandmom at Curve's

Dorothy enjoy CURVE'S with Bev a lot!


She tried and did all of the machines.


She usually had to be told it is time to stop!



Run Dorothy run...

Love that smile!

Friday, August 9, 2013

A Glow Lantern for Dorothy.



Her lantern rises to the sky at 10:55 AM 8/9/13




Richard Cernech Family at Grandma's Grave



Our Bereavement Lunch at Arthur Bryant's---Yummm

St. Ann's Catholic Church in Fairmont

The Cernech home in the 50 and 60's

Looking up the hill from the Cernech House



Rick and Mom Mother's Day 2013

Rick, Mom and Bev--Mother's Day 2013




Mother's Day Dinner 2013


Dorothy opening Mother's Day gift 2013


The Cernech's