The mark of a good life is that there's as much laughter at the memorial services as there are tears. Today, at the funeral of my dear family friend, there was a lot of both. Mrs. Stoffel had left her mark on everybody around her, and the reminiscences came fast and thick. At the wake, I had summed up her personality in six words: unstinting hospitality, boundless generosity, and devastating candor. Add a wicked wit, and a stoicism in the face of adversity to those characteristics, and you have a good idea of her character. She was a woman who was impossible to embarass (much to the chagrin of her children)... she had no problem asking strangers for directions or advice. She'd approach anybody and strike up a conversation, truly embodying the "strangers are just friends you haven't met" outlook.
She never pulled her punches, although she was never mean-spirited. She told her kids to "always call a spade a bloody shovel!" One could never harbor any illusions while in her company. If you were dressed like a slob, she'd tell you, "You look like a hobo." If you were acting like an idiot, she'd let you know. My friend George told us that she once chided him, "I love you, but you're a bastard!"
Her eldest child, John, came down to help her out every weekend since Christmas... he related how she took bad news from her doctors in the same way that she would a weather report, with a joke and that famous stiff upper lip. She had the gracious resignation of a person who had nothing to lose- she'd traveled the world (she worked for years as a travel agent), and she had seen her children start families of their own. She lived well, and she went bravely.
Mrs. Stoffel and I always joked about belonging to a mutual admiration society. We got along famously. I'll miss her terribly.
Sad for you, man. Remember the good times.
ReplyDeleteMy condolences.
ReplyDeleteIt's corny & trite, but thanks to your words here, she "lives" for me & others....
Thank you....
It sounds like she lived her life on her own terms and didn't try to be someone whom she wasn't.
ReplyDeleteI think, that those are the BEST kind of people.
Not everyone is going to "get" you but those that do, are keepers. :)
Again, I'm so sorry for your loss. It sounds like you lost a friend. Not just the Mother of a friend.
((BigHugs))
Laura
"You look like a hobo."
ReplyDeleteThat made me laugh.
It's tough losing a real character, isn't it?
Fine epitaph, B^4.
ReplyDelete~
A wonderful tribute to what sounds like a wonderful lady.
ReplyDeleteYou are in my thoughts.
She was a woman who was impossible to embarass (much to the chagrin of her children)... she had no problem asking strangers for directions or advice.
ReplyDeleteI knew someone like that. When I need to ask a stranger or jump a queue or anything else that's completely foreign to my nature, I channel my Inner Claire and let *her* do it.