The Road To 100

September 2, 2010

The Reminder

Filed under: Observation,Reflections — coachbogey @ 12:13 PM
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I didn’t want to go.

It was a beautiful Tuesday night.  The temperatures on this last day of August had hit the mid-nineties, and by the time early evening had rolled around the weather was perfect for an evening ride on the motorcycle.  I hadn’t been riding much as of late, so to pass up this evening felt like a crime.  But I had made a committment and I was going to honor it.

Earlier this summer, a church group of which I am a member had decided to spend an evening serving and sharing dinner with the residents at the Dismas Family Farm.  The Dismas Family Farm is a self-supporting, working farm for former prisoners of the Massachusetts’ Penal system trying to transition their way back into society.  Being a working farm, the residents all share the chores that go along with operating the facility.  A stroll through the barn reveals everything from chickens to llama.  Crop production includes fruits, vegetables, and even popcorn.  There is also an extensive woodworking shop that was producing bird feeders at the time of our visit.  The Dismas Family Farm, designed to be a stop on the road to recovery for these nonviolent former prisoners who all seemed to have drug addiction in common in their past, is nationally recognized as one of the top reentry programs in the country.

During a presentation made to our church group earlier this year, we were told by one of the volunteers that a big part of the reentry program is to have groups such as ours come to the farm, prepare a meal to share with the residents, and to spend time getting to know them.  The volunteer brought with him that evening one of the residents who briefly shared his story with us.  He made it clear how important it was that the former prisoners get to spend time with local residents.  He also told us of the importance that these men get the opportunity to see that people do care about them and want to help them succeed.  Only the most selfish of individuals would not want to take part in such a positive program.

Meet Mr. self-centered himself.

Putting aside my selfish feelings, I loaded up the macaroni salad and headed to Oakham.  The trip out was a time for me to study the perfect riding weather while experiencing some trepidation.  How on earth is a salesman like me going to fit in with ex-cons?  I’m not a wimp, but I am certainly not carrying the edge necessary to survive in a Massachusetts’ prison. 

As I made the final left turn onto Lincoln Road I remember thinking how out-of-the-way this place is located.  Seriously, I think this is where crickets go when they need peace and quiet.  The farm was a typical old New England farm.  The farmhouse sat next to the road, complete with farmer’s porch overlooking some of the fields.  Opposite was a red barn that appeared to be well maintained.  The setting immediately began to settle the uneasy feeling lingering in the pit of my stomach.

What nervousness remained was quickly dashed as I began to meet the men who resided at the farm.  They were quick to shake my hand, offer an introduction, and thank me for coming.  They obviously had done this before and knew how to make an uneasy visitor feel welcome.  After helping shuck some corn, I headed out to the porch to mingle.  It was here where God, with a gentle slap to the back of the head, reminded me why He wanted me to put away my needs for the evening.

I met a young man named Brian.  Brian is 26 years-old, although his energy and enthusiasm had me originally thinking he was younger.  Not knowing how to start a conversation with this young man with whom I shared very little, I simply asked, “How long have you been here?”  After informing me he arrived in April, I followed with an inquiry as to how he arrived.  He told me he had been born in Cambridge to parents who were addicts.  A move to Roxbury saw him starting to get into trouble, which didn’t subside following moves to Winchendon and eventually Gardner.  He told me of how he got hooked onto heroine and that he has been trying to get clean since he was 18.  Brian proudly stated that he had gone 11 months without any drugs before a relapse restarted the clock.  You could see in his eyes that he was truly disappointed with himself that he had used again and that he truly wanted to be clean.  Brian spoke of his little daughter with whom he is not very close.

“I need to change that,” he said.  “It is going to take time, but I do want to build a relationship with her.  I am ashamed to say, I sold my daughter for drugs.” 

The fact that he didn’t mean this literally took nothing away from the depth of that statement.  In fact, I think it added to the importance of what he was saying, that the consequences of his actions have broken his heart.  Early on he spoke like he was a victim of his upbringing, but then shifted gears and made it clear he no longer believed this to be true.  He wants to take responsibility for his actions and is working hard to do what is right.

Brian then took me for a tour of the barn.  I commented on how different this must be for him to be around the animals after growing up in the environment of his youth.  He made it clear that this farm was about as far away from that as he could possibly get.  His words were obvious, but watching him around the animals provided a glimpse into the changes taking place while at Dismas.  As he spoke, he petted a couple of the sheep and rams through the fence of their pens.  The animals approached Brian and genuinely seemed to want to be near him.  There was a mutual respect that I couldn’t help but notice. 

Brian continued to give me a tour of the barn, concluding by showing me how to determine if an egg is appropriate to be sold.  What struck me most about my guide was the level of enthusiasm this city kid was displaying for his temporary home.  These men are not forced to be here, and Brian made it clear through his words and his actions that he was thankful for the opportunity to spend healing time as a working resident.  Brian also informed me he worked at one of the local pizza shops.

Over dinner there was friendly banter back-and-forth between the residents and their guests.  I had the opportunity to get to know a couple of the other residents, who were equally as warm and open.  The range of ages struck me as I spoke with young men like Brian as well as men quite a few years my senior.  Their stories were all different, but the results were the same.  I couldn’t help but wonder if I had been born under different circumstances, raised in the tough streets of Southie then ruled by Whitey Bulger as one resident had rather than the quiet ways of Paxton, if I too could have been dining at this table each night sharing my story with visitors? 

Thankfully, I haven’t been put through that test so we will never know.  But I took away from that evening a reminder that there are people who have paid their debt, and with the help of people who care, want to become whole again.  For men like Brian, reaching out for help while helping themselves as well, we owe it not to turn our back on these ex-cons, but to embrace these people fighting for their lives.  The government can’t, and shouldn’t, be responsible for helping those working so hard to pick themselves up.  That responsibility lies with the people who will be sharing their communities with these souls with a troubled past but a bright future.

As I left the farm I reflected on the evening, and the difference between my feelings then as opposed to the feelings I had driving to the Dismas House.  I was truly moved by these men and thankful that, once again, I had been reminded of just how wrong stereotypes can be.  These were men who had stumbled but weren’t looking for a second chance, instead they were men earning a second chance.  Then I thought about how thankful I was that I had been a part of this evening, and how glad I was that I hadn’t decided to ride the motorcycle instead.  Just the thought of my not wanting to go earlier in the evening reminded me of one thing.

No matter how much I try not to be, sometimes I can still be a selfish ass.

May 7, 2010

Happy Mothers’ Day

Filed under: Observation,Reflections — coachbogey @ 1:21 PM
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For all my readers who are moms, happy Mothers’ Day!  Enjoy!

March 30, 2010

Say Goodnight, Bogey

Filed under: Reflections — coachbogey @ 1:13 AM
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I have always been able to connect with people younger than myself.

Age has never bothered me.  I often joke about my age because I am usually the oldest in the group.  As a teacher, joking about my age made perfect sense.  I was always considerably older than my students and it provided me the opportunity to demonstrate to my students that it is OK to laugh at yourself.  I was able to teach them how to joke around with an adult without crossing “the line.”  My students have almost always said that they didn’t think of me as old, even though I was older than most of their parents.

A team I coached 17 years ago. I still hear from these players.

As a basketball coach, I have always related well with my players.  I taught my players how to show respect for people older than themselves and that trust and friendship can stretch between generations.  Many of my former players, whether in their thirties with families of their own or still in college, still keep in touch.  Even with the age difference, they always know they have a friend in their former coach.

It is with my friends that I like to joke about my age the most.  Often my response to the inquiry of how I am is a half-hearted, “Not bad for an old guy.”  Again, I hear repeatedly that I am not old.  I have always felt that my friends were sincere in their words because we got along so well, despite their youth in relation to my experience.  Ok…Ok…despite their being so much younger.

Tonight my age crept up on me like a runaway train!

My basketball team, in an over thirty league, had a game against our nemesis the green team.  This team has been able to find a way to beat us in many close games over the past couple of seasons.  Tonight looked like it would be different as we jumped to an early advantage.  Unfortunately, they switched their defense to man-to-man and cut into our lead.  Finally, in the second half, they claimed the lead before we were able to wrestle it back.  A late three-point shot by their shooting guard forced an overtime period.  In the extra three minutes, we outscored them by two points and secured the exciting win.  I was extremely proud of my team.

Problem is, it didn’t feel like I was part of the team.

Many of the players  on the team are closer to thirty than forty.  I of course am closer to fifty than I am forty.  We have a player on our team who has made himself the unofficial coach.  “Dr. J” is not the most knowledgable member of the team, but he is the loudest.  Tonight, he made the conscious decision to play “the old guy” as little as  possible.  I can’t say I blame him, these are young, competitive guys and the lead in the standings of the exercise league was on the line.  I too am competitive, but young is not a term I would use to describe myself.

At least, not after tonight.

“Dr. J” made it clear to me tonight that he wanted young people on the floor and that my services were not needed nor wanted.  Tonight, I was truly, no kidding around, the old guy.

As I drove home, I couldn’t help but wonder if others are feeling similar but just too nice to say anything.  It could be what I took as a rude slap in the face may have actually been a kind way of letting me know that I need to find more friends my own age.  Funny how quickly one goes from being one of the young crowd to one the young crowd puts up with.

This a lesson I will take with me in my journey through life.  It makes me wonder how people much older than myself must feel.  Clearly Bogey at 46 is much wiser than I was at 26.  Life’s experiences have taught me so much, and I am a better person for each lesson I have learned.  I must remember this when provided the opportunity to spend time with the elderly.  Their bodies may be weaker, and their voices may not carry the volume they once did, but there is no substitute for life experiences.

If I can take the lesson of tonight, the humiliation of being cast aside, and make it a part of me going forward, then I will be the better person for it.  I never want to be that person who doesn’t appreciate what experience has to offer.

I hope I can say that I relate well to the young and old.  I hope that I will not get to be so full of myself that I forget the feelings of others.  Whether a rookie or a seasoned veteran, I don’t want to be the coach that makes anyone feel forgotten on the bench during the game of life.

After all, young or old, everyone has something they can teach me on my road to 100.

March 26, 2010

Running For My Life

Filed under: Reflections — coachbogey @ 10:37 AM
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You never see someone jogging with a smile on their face.  That was the excuse a person with whom I used to teach provided while explaining why she never took up jogging.

This past weekend, the northeast finally saw some spring like weather.  It felt great to finally get off of the treadmill and jog outside.  I love to jog, but time on the treadmill seems to drag.  I think it is the fact that the timer is right in front of you, reminding you just how much longer you will be running in place.  More than once I have looked down, read that I had twenty minutes until I am done with my run, looked up at the TV, and the next time I looked down I had twenty-five minutes remaining.  Then when those numbers do finally reach zeros, the distance may read five miles, but when you look at the space in which you just spent 43 minutes of your life, you realize the actual distance covered was approximately two-and-a-half feet!

Jogging outside is different.  The fresh air, the change in scenery, the near misses of tractor trailers driving by too fast…ok, two out of three ain’t bad.  The point is, after being stuck in my cellar all winter, jogging outside is a nice change.  Besides, jogging outside is much more than just getting exercise.

Like most people these days, I am a very busy person.  I have two teenage sons who keep me going all the time.  I am vice president of a regional facility services provider that keeps me on the go starting at 6 AM each day.  I serve on three different committees in our church and at times assume extra roles such as helping with the youth groups.  I coach an AAU basketball team which practices a couple of times a week and plays in tournaments on the weekends.  Oh, just to make sure I was left with no idle time in which to get into trouble, I have been elected a selectman for the town in which I live.  Needless to say, I don’t get much down time to just turn off the brain and relax.  Jogging provides me that down time.

Once a jogger hits the road, there are no distractions, discounting the occasional loose dog who helps you pick up your pace.  The rhythmic pounding of your feet provides the perfect backdrop to just drift for a while.  There are periods when I will think about something that may be bothering me, and that time on the road allows me to work things through and keep things in proper perspective.  Other times I may be reconnecting with God, having a frank and honest discussion with the Lord about what is happening in my life.  Sometimes there are no organized thoughts at all, instead just taking in the surroundings of the beautiful town I call home.

I have found running can help me with the challenges of parenthood.  It is while on the open road that I can think through the latest escapade of my teenage boys and how to deal the fallout.  Being a quick-tempered individual, a five-mile run allows me the time to cool off, calm down, and come up with a rational response to a less than stellar report card or the wise ass answer to my last request.  Of course, sometimes this requires an eight or nine mile run.  If you see me in the midst of a twelve-mile run…well, don’t ask.

As I turn onto my street and sprint that final hill back to my house, I push myself as hard as I can.  It’s like a reminder that I am not only out here for my mental health, and some would question whether or not that’s working, but also for my physical health.  Once I reach the edge of my driveway, I finish with a brisk walk around the block.  While on my walk, I reflect on how great the run was for me; physically, mentally, and spiritually.

And that my friends, is when you will see this jogger smile.

December 15, 2009

Still Going Strong At 70

Filed under: Reflections — coachbogey @ 8:05 AM
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Gone With the Wind premiered 70 years ago today.  On December 15, 1939 in Atlanta Georgia, movie goers got their first look at the epic film depicting life during the Civil War and Reconstruction from a southern perspective.  In the seven decades since its release, Gone With the Wind is the number one grossing film of all time when figures are adjusted for inflation.  The love story starring Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O’Hara and Clark Gable as Rhett Butler has brought in more than 1.2 billion dollars.

1939 was a great year for Hollywood!  Here is a partial list of other films released during the year that many film historians call the greatest in the history of Hollywood:  The Wizard of Oz, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Dark Victory, Beau Geste, Gunga Din, The Women, Goodbye Mr. Chips, Wuthering Heights, Golden Boy, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Roaring Twenties, Stanley and Livingstone, Of Mice and Men, and Stagecoach.

Gone With the Wind will air on Turner Classic Films on December 15, 2009 at 8:00 PM.

December 11, 2009

Happy Chanukah

Filed under: Reflections — coachbogey @ 7:30 AM
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Happy Chanukah to all my Jewish friends. 

Here is a little Adam Sandler to kick off the Festival of Lights.

December 10, 2009

A Holiday Gift

Filed under: Reflections — coachbogey @ 3:58 PM
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Sometimes a holiday gift is not something you unwrap, but instead just sit back and enjoy.

Straight No Chaser is an a capella group formed in 1996 on the campus of Indiana University.  They have performed all over the United States, but for me the holidays wouldn’t be the same without listening to their version of The Twelve Days of Christmas recorded in 1998.  I hope this clip enhances your holiday spirit.

Praying I’m Wrong

Filed under: Observation,Reflections — coachbogey @ 3:27 PM
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You win some, you lose some, and some get rained out.

Everyday I read a blog written by my friend Marty Holman.  Marty is a popular minister in a local church and a heck of a basketball player.  He and I have become friends after playing together on a basketball team for the past few years.  There are many reasons I enjoy being around Marty, among them is the fact that he challenges me to think.  Don’t take that the wrong way, Marty does not push nor even wear his religion on his sleeve.  Instead, he lives his life trying to be more Christ-like without telling everyone how virtuous he is.

This past Tuesday, after reading Marty’s reflection on a game we had lost the previous evening, I began to think about losing.  In life, losing is inevitable.  While coaching at Wachusett, we put together a forty game winning streak.  My players gained so much confidence that we wound up winning games even when it looked for sure like we would lose.  The streak started toward the end of one season, continued through an entire season the following year, and into a third season.  It just felt like we would never lose again.  Of course, we did.  I didn’t sleep for two nights.  I hate to lose.

Marty’s post made me start thinking about losing in areas other than just sports.  As I have grown older, my interest in politics and the world around me has grown.  Age has also found me becoming more conservative than in my younger days.  Officially registered as unenrolled, lately I have been supporting Republicans more than Democrats.  While I respect everyone who steps into the political arena for the right reasons, I lean more toward smaller government and less spending.  I have moved to the right of the younger Bogey.

Then came President Obama.

There has not been a political leader I have feared more than President Obama.  His beliefs are opposite of mine on almost every major issue.  President Obama was recently quoted that he believes our government must spend our way out of this recession in which we are currently mired.  Combine that with health care reform and Cap and Trade, it won’t be long before we will be reflecting on the days when our national debt was only 12 trillion dollars.  Sorry, I don’t mean to preach. 

The point is this, on November 4, 2008 conservative thinking Americans, such as myself, had to face losing. 

Watching how people face losing has interested me for as long as I can remember.  When I was growing up, I was what one might call a very poor loser.  I hated losing and let everyone know it every time I found myself on the losing end of any contest.  It appears many adults today are much like the child I once was.  There are people attacking the president on every front, including personal.  Let’s face it, nobody likes to lose.

I don’t pray nearly enough, but I have turned to prayer to help me deal with losing.  I pray for our new president and the people with whom he has surrounded himself.  I pray for our nation to recover from this recession and to return to the glory we once enjoyed.  I pray for our military personnel putting their lives on the line each day for the safety of American citizens around the world. 

Most of all, I pray that I am wrong.  Maybe the president’s ideas are the right way to go.  Maybe he can pull us out of the recession and then reduce the national debt without inflation going through the roof.  Perhaps we can strengthen our position in the world while not being a big supporter of the armed forces.  He is my President and I will pray his decisions are correct.

If not, I’ll pray he loses on Tuesday, November 6, 2012!

Speaking of sore losers, take a look at the clip below.  Is this really how some people pray?  Let’s pray this guy’s prayers are not answered.

December 8, 2009

Climate Change Debate

While the climate debate rages on, one thing remains certain; World leaders are being pushed to take action now.

As world leaders and climate change proponents gather in Copenhagen, Denmark starting December 7, debate will rage on about what to do about the earth’s changing climate.  A global cap on carbon output and trillions of dollars for under-developed nations will be at stake, but climate change proponents are not real confident a global agreement will be reached.  As reported in Newseek:

Climatologists are pessimistic that political leaders will take any positive action to compensate for climactic change, or even to allay its effects.  They concede that some of the more spectacular solutions proposed…might create problems far greater than those they solve.

Part of that pessimism may be because the earth has stopped warming.    According to data attributed to the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit located in Britain, the world’s leading climate research center, the planet’s temperature rose sharply (0.7 degrees celsius) from the 1970s through the 1990s.  Since the 1990s the earth has stopped warming.  From Spiegel online:

“At present, however, the warming is taking a break,” confirms meteorologist Mojib Latif of the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in the northern German city of Kiel. Latif, one of Germany’s best-known climatologists, says that the temperature curve has reached a plateau. “There can be no argument about that,” he says. “We have to face that fact.”

Part of this pessimism may stem from the fact that there is still debate about whether or not climate change is taking place and whether or not it is caused by mankind.  Britain’s Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research released their latest calculations of global average temperatures.  Their findings indicate that the earth has not warmed by .02 degrees celsius between 1999 and 2008 as assumed by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, but instead only 0.07 degrees celsius.  Then the British experts go on to report that when you adjust the temperatures for naturally occurring El Niño and La Niña, then the temperature change is reduced to 0.0 degrees celsius.  This is important because the summit in Copenhagen will be driven by the numbers assumed by the United Nations panel.

Part of this pessimism may come from Climategate, or the what is being called the “the worst scientific scandal of our generation.”  Thousands of emails and documents were hacked from the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit which show that leading climate change scientists have acknowledged that their own data collection is inadequate, that they altered data to prove their theories, and worked to suppress scientific opinions which differed from their own.  Excerpts from the hacked emails:

From Phil Jones (head of the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit):

I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) amd from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline.

From Kevin Trenberth (Head of the Climate Analysis Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research):

The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on 2008 shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our observing system is inadequate.

From Phil Jones (witholding of data):

The skeptics seem to be building up a head of steam here! …  The IPCC comes in for a lot of stick. Leave it to you to delete as appropriate! Cheers Phil
PS I’m getting hassled by a couple of people to release the CRU station temperature data. Don’t any of you three tell anybody that the UK has a Freedom of Information Act !
 

As a result of the released emails and documents, a request for the raw temperature data was made under the United Kingdom’s Freedom of Information Act.  Clearly, having this raw data available for the scientific community around the world to be able to study would go a long way to proving climate change theories.  Unfortunately, once the request was formally made, the scientists at the University of East Anglia had to confess that much of the raw data upon which their predictions are based were thrown away.  This means the only data still available are the figures adjusted for variables by climate change scientists.

Climate change science is not cut and dry, which is why using adjusted data makes theories and predictions so cloudy.  In 2007, NASA recalculated its data and found that 1934, not 1998 as had been reported, was the hottest year on record.  NASA later changed their data again, and now 1998 and 2006 are back in first place for hottest year, with 1934 dropping to third in the standings.  Don’t worry, if the past is any indication, there is plenty of time left in the season for 1934 to catch the new leaders.  What data did NASA use to change the data more than once?  According to the Washington Times, “NASA has refused for two years to provide information under the Freedom of Information Act that would show how the agency has shaped its climate data and would explain why the agency has repeatedly had to correct its data going as far back as the 1930s.”

What does all this mean?  It may mean that after 100 years of debating climate change, sometimes global warming and sometimes global cooling, scientists still aren’t sure what is going on with our planet.  The internet and instant news sources, as well as money, has allowed the current climate change push to gain steam.  The debate doesn’t mean that climate change is or isn’t occurring, it just means that there are very intelligent, reasonable people on both sides of the aisle.  Check out the web site Climate Debate Daily for a comprehensive guide to the debate.

If you followed the link to the report in Newsweek cited above, then you read how climate change scientists were urging governments around the world to stockpile food to prepare for widespread food shortages caused by the upcoming ice age.  The article was published by Newsweek in 1975 to report on the impending disastrous results of the upcoming ice age.  Time Magazine had published a similar article in 1974.  Read both articles as they could have been written this year, only substituting today’s global warming for the past’s global cooling.  From the Time Magazine article:

Man, too, may be somewhat responsible for the cooling trend. The University of Wisconsin’s Reid A. Bryson and other climatologists suggest that dust and other particles released into the atmosphere as a result of farming and fuel burning may be blocking more and more sunlight from reaching and heating the surface of the earth.

While the climate debate rages on, one thing remains certain; World leaders are being pushed to take action now.

October 22, 2009

Sunset

A star disapperaed from view this week.

Wendi Baron-Willette, my friend since we were 14 years old, passed away this week.  Wendi was one of the brightest stars I have ever met.  She was the most positive, upbeat person I knew.  Things didn’t always break Wendi’s way, but she always seemed to make the most of every situation.

Through high school and college, Wendi was like a sister to me.  I knew that she was the one person I could turn to who, without judgement, would always be there for me.  It never mattered how bleak things looked, Wendi always found a way to see the positive side of things.  When my brother passed away, she was the one person who picked me up, brushed me off, and pushed me onward.  Every time I needed her, she never disappointed.

I remember the night Wendi told me she had been diagnosed with breast cancer.  Having recently lost my friend Steve to cancer, hearing Wendi was beginning her own battle choked me up.  Wendi, being Wendi, told me that everything was going to be fine.  She explained to me what her prognosis meant and how she would be treated.  By the time she was done, Wendi had made me feel better.  Imagine that, she told me she had cancer and she spent the evening making me feel better.

To truly understand Wendi, you need to hear it from her husband, Keith.  Keith, like Wendi, is one of the kindest individuals one could know.  Shortly after Wendi began her battle, Keith wrote an essay about his wife and entered her story in a contest sponsored by CVS called For All The Ways You Care.  The contest involved a nationwide search for inspirational stories of caring.  The contest drew thousands of stories, but Keith’s inspirational essay about his wife was selected as one of the nine finalists.  Here is her story in his words:

This week the world lost a great mother, wife, daughter, sister, and friend.  There will be many tears shed for Wendi, for she is widely loved.  But Wendi will be just like the sun at the end of a beautiful day, for as darkness sets in the moon lights the way.  Just as the moon gets its light from the sun, Wendi’s light will shine from the people she loved.

A star may have disappeared this week, but her light will continue to shine.

 

Please help this bright star to continue to shine and donate to the Wendi Baron-Willette Memorial Fund. c/o Christopher Heights of Worcester, Mary Scano Drive, Worcester, MA 01605.

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