Showing posts with label Dying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dying. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Rest in Peace


Dear Friend from Care Source Hospice
Sweet Radiant Spirit

Victor John Beck "Vic" Victor John Beck, age 96, passed away April 23, 2008 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was born to John Beck and Dorothy Rindfleisch Beck on March 1, 1912 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He graduated from Granite High School and the University of Utah. Vic proudly served his country in the U.S. Air Force during World War II. On June 3, 1946 he married Dorothy Ence in the Salt Lake Temple. She was killed in an airplane crash October 6, 1955. Later he married Maxine Shepherd Pope in the Salt Lake Temple on August 1968. After 31 years of government service, he retired from the Veteran's Administration. He was an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, having served in many ward and stake callings in the Winder and the Winder West Stakes. Preceding him in death are his parents and one sister, A. Faye Hardman. He is survived by his wife, Maxine; step-son, Alan Pope; granddaughter, Ashley Pope; sister, June B. Wilson; nieces and a nephew. There will be a viewing at Jenkins-Soffe Mortuary, 4760 So. State, Friday evening from 6-8 p.m. Funeral services will be held Saturday, April 26, 2008, at 11 a.m. at the Winder 4th Ward, 951 E. 3815 So. in Salt Lake City, Utah. Prior to the funeral, there will be a viewing at the church from 10:00-10:45 a.m. Interment will be at Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park. The family expresses deep appreciation for the help from Harmony Home Hospice assistants and the kind, loving and skilled attention from the many dear friends at Care Source. Online condolences may be shared with the family at www.jenkins-soffe.com Published in the Deseret News from 4/24/2008 - 4/25/2008.


Tuesday, April 22, 2008

It is All About Love

Each Sunday my husband and I are privileged to help conduct a LDS Sacrament Meeting at the CareSource Hospice in Holladay. The sweet, elderly people living there are terminal, most with less than three months to live. We call the hospice "God's Waiting Room" and we are the send-off crew.
CareSource Hospice in Holladay

A wonderful part of the calling is to ask a friend or ward member to speak at our half-hour meetings. We have heard some touchingly sweet messages from our neighbors. In turn each of these speakers is moved by the amazing spirit in this facility.

Our neighbor Stacey is a remarkable woman with an incredible story. She shared her account with the residents at the hospice last Sunday. It goes something like this:

Fresh out of college, Stacey was asked to teach at the homeless shelter's one room school near the freeway viaduct in downtown Salt Lake--a daunting challenge for an experienced teacher, let alone a young woman of twenty-two.

As she arrived the first day, with fear and trepidation, a wild-eyed, wild-haired man led her to a group of adults huddled around a fire they had built under a viaduct. Some of them were parents of children she would be teaching. He introduced Stacey as the new teacher and the others began firing questions at her. They laughed when she admitted that this was her first real job. A woman sitting on the curb said, "Well, honey, you ain't got nowhere to go but up."

At The School with No Name, as it came to be called, Stacey taught up to 25 students a day, ranging across all 13 grades, crammed into a 12' by 12' room in a shed. Each time someone needed to reach one of the battered books on the cinder block shelves, the whole back row had to stand up and move their desks. Stacey would walk around in the morning knocking on parked cars to round up her students for class. She didn't know then that she would come to regard this bottom-of-the-barrel job as the one place in the world she was meant to be. "At first I cried every night. Now I would be sick if I had to leave," Stacey says. "The children give much more to me than I give to them."

Such was the case of nine-year-old Dana. When she first came to the school she wouldn't talk or even look up at Stacey. Dana flinched if someone tried to touch her. Slowly she gained enough confidence to talk a little. Then Stacey had to go into the hospital for radiation treatments as a follow-up for thyroid cancer. Dana lingered after school with her hands hidden behind her back. She asked Stacey if she were scared and Stacey admitted she was a little. Then Dana said, "I have something that will help you." She placed a black-and-white stuffed bear on the teacher's desk and stepped back. "He'll go with you to the hospital. It helps to hold him tight when you're afraid," Dana explained, promising, "It really works."


Stacey's eyes filled with tears and all she could manage to say was "Thank you, Dana." All went well at the hospital and Stacey returned to her classroom--only to find Dana gone!

Later she asked the shelter staff about Dana's history. The little girl lived with her father but custody had been awarded originally to the mother. A neighbor had called the police because she had not seen Dana or her little brother for several days. The mother and her boyfriend claimed the children were away visiting an aunt. But the police persisted and found the two children locked in the cellar. They were crouched on a damp, dirt floor in an unlit, windowless room. They had no food or water and were very weak. With one hand Dana was holding her younger brother, and in the other hand she clutched a dirty, black-and-white bear.
Stacey was heart-broken to learn that she possessed the one and only thing in Dana's life which gave her comfort and stability. She decided to tell Dana's story in order to help others learn this poignant example of love. Dana gave Stacey the only thing she had to give.

Such heart-rending stories were not uncommon in Stacey's job. One day she was talking to her class about the importance of friendship and about showing people we love them by the things we say. A boy replied matter-of-factly, "You know, teacher, nobody don't love nobody."

That searing phrase haunted Stacey and she choose it for the title of her book about the lives of the shelter children and her experiences teaching them. She felt she had gained so much from the children, she wanted more people to have a chance to learn what she had learned: that each of us is merely the product of what was given to us as children—not the things, but the time, experience, and love.

Nobody Don't Love Nobody is sad and inspiring. "It has really spurred incredible interest," says Stacey who has become a national figure, traveling all over the country advocating the educational rights of impoverished children.

Our elderly friends at the Hospice are like the young children in Stacey's story. Many cling to stuffed animals, baby dolls, or pictures of grandchildren. It is all they have left in this life, other than their personal knowledge of our Savior and his love for them.

It really is all about LOVE, whether we are nine or ninety. Each individual is valuable and loved in God's eyes---so it should be with us.