Friday, August 29, 2008

The Unveiling

Top of the morning to ya! Did you know that Camels & Chocolate has a brand new look--and home? You didn't? Well, go on over there and check it out, now would you!

And if you've been so kind to bookmark me or add me to your link list or Google Reader (I'm honored! Really!), please update it to www.camelsandchocolate.com and I will be eternally grateful.

See you on the other side!

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Confronting My Fears (or How a Shark Tried to Play Finsie with Me)

So we've established I'm the tiniest bit afraid of SHARKS. That said, did you think you would ever in a million years see this?

No? You're not the only one! You see, after Holly (also afraid of all finned things) and I had completed our first day of check-out dives in the Bahamas, we were all, "bring on the sharks! We can take 'em!" A definite change of tune from us grasping each other for dear life on the boat, whimpering, "but what if we see a shuh-shuh-shuh-SHARK?!?" But something about getting comfortable in the water made us change our tune. Unfortunately, then I came down with the Bahamian Diet (AKA stomach flu) and was unable to join in on the fun. Holly went diving with the rest of the group--Brendal, another Holly, John, Linda, Sue and Angie--as planned, which was all good as there were many BODIES and her chances of being attacked were severely diminished. John and the nurse shark even made friends, as the shark really liked to be pet like a cat.

So after seeing the pictures Holly took and slightly getting over my bug (I was still quite paranoid about vomiting in my regulator, but alas, I was fine), Brendal took me diving the next morning so I could complete my certification. Took me diving with just the intrepid Angie, who came along for the ride, on a day when there were far less people for the sharks to feast on. The second we anchored the boat and I entered the water, I took a brief peek underwater and saw two or three Caribbean reefs circling below me. Zoiks!

As we descended 40 feet to the bottom--and I won't lie, I was shaking in my dive booties--Brendal made me do one last skills check, which entailed taking out the regulator, removing the BCD (the life jacket thingie you wear when diving), and even removing and clearing my mask--as the sharks circled above us.

Now, it's never fun to be blind underwater, and mask removal always gives me a slight panic attack, but it's far less fun to be blind underwater when you look up and see this prior to performing the task:

Those suckers weren't small (nurse sharks, aside), let me tell you. The reefs and bulls were a good five or six feet in length, at least.

But you know what? It oddly wasn't scary. They're such peaceful, graceful creatures, I've come to find, that I would actually get excited every time another one swam around the corner.

However, toward the end of our dive, as we were beginning our ascent, a friendly nurse sharks started circling me. Brendal motioned for me to pet it. I got closer. And closer. As did it (he? she?). It grazed my fin, and I bolted upward. I guess you can't completely triumph over trepidation in a mere hour. I'm still kicking myself that I didn't get to leave the Bahamas boasting that I pet a shark.

Several of you have written me that you're terrified of the ocean and sharks, as well, and that you could never learn to dive for those very reasons. I get you, I do; if anyone can relate it's me. But it's far less intimidating than snorkeling--at least you have a full range of vision, whereas with snorkeling you never know what's lurking behind you--and you're missing out on so much by not exploring life underwater (did you see The Little Mermaid and Finding Nemo? Case in point!). And if you need someone to hold your hand and accompany you to your therapist session beforehand, consider me your girl.




The pre-shark dive interview, courtesy of Miss Burns. Seriously, could I be any hotter in my dive garb?!

Monday, August 25, 2008

Well, Glad That's Behind Us...

...was what I was going to say in reference to Friday's court appearance. Unfortunately, it's hardly been resolved. I was terrified to go into court Friday. TERRIFIED. Stupid, I know, for a measly speeding ticket, but I had such a scarring experience with the Pigeon-Faced Cop that I really didn't want to have to see him again. My stomach had been in knots since June 18, when I got cited for doing something I didn't do. I can't help it. The law scares me. I've maintained such a clean record in my 25 years that I wasn't really sure what to expect in court. In fact, just to illustrate how little I got in trouble growing up, my mom still laughs about the time I came home from school at 13 pleased as punch that I got detention--finally. And for being tardy, at that. I guess that was me releasing the "rebel" within. While my sister Kari was always in trouble, I was the one in the corner with a permanent halo etched above my cranium.

I have been to court one other time when four friends and I were "arrested" (I use the term loosely as it never appeared on my record) for underage drinking. Funny, though, all of us passed the sobriety test with flying colors, and even at 18, I was smart enough to find a sober driver to drive my Mom-Mobile (that was back in the Taurus days) after consuming HALF A DAQUIRI. In a six-hour period. Unfortunately for four of us in the car, the fifth (a total idiot who did have a previous record) jumped in the backseat on our way back into town and left an open, unclaimed beer can that got us all in trouble. Luckily, though, the judge took one look at us clean-cut, well-coiffed ladies and dropped all charges, expunging everything from our records. (It doesn't hurt that I hail from a small town, and the DA knew us all from the time we were in diapers.) Justin (the idiot with the record) didn't get off so easily. Still, that was more than enough court time to last me the rest of my life. But at least I was accompanied by three friends and our parents. This time I had to go at it alone.

I had been needing to get back to Monterey/Carmel anyway, as my book deadline is looming a month and a half away (I've turned in ONE of 10 chapters...ack), and I hadn't been down that way since Helle's trip in April. So I went down a day and a half early so I wouldn't be getting up at the crack of dawn for my meeting with the judge. And desperate time call for desperate wardrobes, I say. For the occasion, I broke out Corporate Kristin, a look that hasn't seen the light of day...um, ever. Or maybe since mock trial when I was 17, if then. To give you some idea of how rarely I wear anything office-y, this ensemble hails from Express circa 2003. You know the days when I deemed Express actually worthy of wearing (present time it's all sparkles and Jonas Brothers fans). It helps that I'm preparing for LASIK surgery and am condemned to wearing my geek glasses for three months. Instant sophistication points right there, I say. A tightly knotted bun completed the look, and I could have passed for a college librarian. I've also never tucked in my shirt, EVER, so it was just a day full of firsts.

Getting up early is probably one of my least favorite pastimes, right up there with cleaning the toilet and going to the dentist. If Jemima isn't enticing me out of my warm bed at 5:30am for a run with lures of a bikini-ready body, chances are I lounge around until nearly 8. I do work from home for a reason. I really didn't want to get out of the luscious goose feather bed at Bernardus Lodge in Carmel Valley, but I've heard tardiness does not go over well in court. So rise at 6 I did, and I arrived at the courthouse to a line 30 people deep. I couldn't have felt more out of place. Everyone else was in sweats, ragged jeans, sometimes even pajama pants. Um, did they not get the memo about first impression being somewhat important? I had spent over an hour on the phone earlier that week trying to get a hold of someone at the court to discuss the procedure, considering every state's traffic court is different, and the lady I finally pinned down was very brisk with me and said I needed to show up at 8 and request an arraigment. Which is exactly what I tried to do, only they wouldn't let me speak to the judge. To do so, I would have to request a trial by court and return six weeks later. Ummm, NO. That would cost me more money in gas and time lost than if I just paid the $283 ticket. So I opted for trial by declaration (AKA writing a letter), with the option of traffic school should I be found guilty. All that time worrying and perfecting Corporate Kristin for nothing. And I'm a bit bummed, as I had my routine down pat, and I think I would have had a much better chance pleading my case in front of the judge than on paper. (P.S. Does anyone have experience with such a matter? I need to write a kick-ass letter to which the judge simply can't find me guilty.)

The silver lining to my cloudy day (both literally and metaphorically) was that SVV came down to join me for the weekend. We had a good time seal watching from our balcony on Cannery Row and visiting the famed Monterey Bay Aquarium (and me eating my weight in salt water taffy, something that seems to happen every time I'm down that way). I really like Monterey, even as touristy as the Cannery is and despite how the area seems to attract the World's Most Obnoxious Children, accompanied by the World's Most Obnoxious Parents Who Let Their Children Tear Around Restaurants, Ripping Down Curtains, Repeatedly Dropping a Rock on the Table Until Every Patron Gets Up and Leaves Out of Annoyance and Never Uttering a Single Scolding Word (none of you, clearly). Even despite all that.

So I'll leave you with some pictures (all taken by SVV, natch):














And videos of the weekend that I tried to upload yesterday (Flickr's video function ROCKS! I've so been converted):


(Best viewed with sound off. Trust me.)


(Why I'd rather have an otter than a cat.)

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Signs I Might Have Something to Worry About

SVV: I don't like how shiny L'Occitane makes my skin. Other "products" just don't seem to do that.

Me: Um...


I feel like this conversation was taken directly from Esquire's "Gay or...?" page. What's more disturbing: The mere fact that SVV notices a distinguishable difference in luxury bath goods or how he refers to it as "product"? (I think I've spoiled him with all these five-star hotel stays and the closet we now have bursting of Kiehl's, Bliss, Molton Brown, Gilchrist & Soames--all swiped, of course. I'm far too cheap to actually spend more than $5 on shampoo!)

And I've been trying for THREE hours to upload videos from the Monterey Bay Aquarium to Vimeo so you wouldn't be starting your Mondays off with a measly post like this, but alas, the site hates me and it will have to wait until tomorrow when I have more patience (does anyone have a better alternative to Vimeo that isn't youtube? because Vimeo has some serious kinks to work out). Good-night, y'all!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Relocated

Hi! I'm chillin' over at Secret Agent Josephine's pad, home to the beyond adorable Baby Bug, for the day, while she takes a much-deserved blogcation. Come say hi when you have a minute! Oh, and there's a very good chance I might be in court in Monterey while you're reading this (Friday morning) silently cursing that lying Pigeon-Faced Cop who's solely responsible for my high anxiety these past couple months politely pleading my case with the judge. Wish me luck!

Spoiler Alert: SAJ designed me the cutest banner(s!) ever for my site, which will soon occupy its own URL. Huzzah! Big reveal to come soon when it's all gussied up and ready for visitors!

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Bahama Mamas

I never had much desire to visit the Bahamas. I mean, I was here back in 1991 on a Disney Big Red Boat cruise, but that hardly counts, right? I just sort of envisioned the whole country being one giant, tacky Spring Break destination like Panama City (apologies to my PCB native friend Alison), or else littered with tourist eyesores like every port-of-call you visit in the Caribbean. And that's just silly, isn't it, expecting a country that consists of 700 islands to fall under one large umbrella of generalizations? Because I'm here to tell you, you'll nary find more crisp, clean, stunning water than we saw in the Abacos, the island chain in which we were staying. (In fact, it supposedly has the best visibility in the world, making it all the easier to see if a SHARK is approaching well in advance!). Much like Canada before it and the Maldives before that, the Bahamas has stolen my heart.

While there, too, I thought it would be fun to come back a few pounds lighter, as opposed to heavier like one usually does on this type of self-indulgent vacation (even though this was technically a "work trip," when it comes down to it, let's be honest, IT'S THE FREAKIN' BAHAMAS, and really served as little more than an awesome, sunny, five-day break from chilly San Fran). So I opted for a new diet, one that consists of contracting a deadly stomach bug likely from my germy 8-year-old airplane seatmate, and one that surfaces as you're sailing upon placid water, so upon the first hour of severe vomiting on board, you mistake it for an odd case of motion sickness. Then, when 18 hours later, your stomach is still thrashing around like a fish trying to rid itself of a pesky hook, you realize, hmm, that's really odd for seasickness and write it off as a virus that will dissipate after its scheduled 24 hours...or so you hope. And then you proceed to rid yourself of anything that enters your system for going on four days and come to the realization that 24-hour viruses don't necessarily last only 24 hours and sometime stick around just to be a nuisance for a full 96. But hey, you do return home FIVE pounds less, possibly the only time that will ever happen after a Caribbean escape.

I felt really bad ditching Holly on our second day of diving, as not only was the first day a real blast, but we were the only two divers getting certified and we were, after all, Dive Buddies. I mean, what if she drowned without her buddy there for support? I wouldn't want to go through life with that burden hanging on my shoulders (besides, I kind of adore the girl, so that would just generally suck all around). But she passed with flying colors and even swam with SHARKS(!), and upon getting back to the resort, accompanied me to the beach because I was feeling slightly better.

And because she's a true pal like that and in her obvious Olympic spirit, she went as far as to join me in my intense pain, by possibly breaking a toe or two (no exaggeration) through performing a death-defying Nastia Liukin-like leap on a deserted beach. Because friends don't let friends be condemned to the infirmary alone.

The thing about Holly is that when I was but a mere fan of hers on the East Coast, I thought, this is The Nicest, Most Down-to-Earth Girl Ever. But now that we've become friends, I've learned that that's simply not true. She's even nicer and cooler than The Nicest, Most Down-to-Earth Girl Ever. Definitely someone you want as your travel, dive and infirmary cohort.

By day three, however, I was feeling well enough to hobble around in a hunched-over positions, so I completed my dives, and Holly and I got all grad-u-mated at Brendal's Dive Center. Sadly, the caps and gowns were still at the cleaners.

And can I just brag for a minute on my underwater digital camera case and suggest that if you're planning similar snorkel or dive trips, you follow my lead and invest in one, as well? Because, well, just look at the evidence below and see for yourself.







Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Manga Me

What do you think?


Uncanny resemblance?


Not one bit?

(Excuse my pronounced wrinkles and lines in the above shot. I have no idea when I got so old.) Before you click on THIS LINK, don't say I didn't warn you. (And don't send your boss my way when you get fired for lack of productivity.) Nearly as much fun as elfing yourself!

(Picture from last year's holiday soiree evite.)

Monday, August 18, 2008

Fish Out of Water

I fear you're going to have to live with me blogging about my new obsession, my new favorite easy travel destination, my secret Bahamian diet, and the like for weeks to come (sorry in advance), but Holly and I just arrived back in San Francisco after 13+ hours of flying and a pretty exhausting, albeit interesting past few days, so for now, a teaser on what's to come (worth the click, I promise--and I love you guys so much I just spent over two hours waiting for stupid Vimeo to upload it!):


Silver Cloud from krysleigh on Vimeo.

See y'all soon!

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Under the Sea

Have I mentioned before how DEATHLY AFRAID OF THE OCEAN I AM? And um, really all forms of water? It's so severe, actually, that I avoid swimming pool drains at all cost (blame that on the 90's screamfest Pirahnas), won't go in a pool alone, and then often keep my head above water, as if something is lurking just below the surface and will bite off my head if I submerge. I even refuse to shut my eyes in the shower if that relays the severity of my fear of water. Why am I so neurotic, you ask? Well, I really have no idea--I mean, I had a pretty normal childhood, no traumatizing events to speak of--but clearly, clearly, the SHARKS will come out of the faucet and rip out my eyeballs with their menacing teeth if my eyes are shut. Clearly.

I'm sure I've bored you at least 734 times with my crippling fear of the sharks, and I hate to sound like a broken record, but I HAVE A CRIPPLING FEAR OF SHARKS. AND ALL THINGS WITH FINS. Flipper included. (Flipper does technically have fins, right? I'm no marine biologist and I would Wiki it, but I'm not going to risk a picture of a shark turning up on the results page.) I don't really think many people take my supreme paranoia seriously because everyone is so-called "scared of sharks." But we're talking extremes here, people. Just ask my mom. As a child, I made her remove the "S" volume in my set of children's encyclopedia from my bedroom, as well as any book that contained a picture of underwater life. I wouldn't sleep in the same room with it. In college in Knoxville, there was a billboard on the Interstate boasting a threatening picture of a great white. I drove off the side of the road with Megan in the passenger seat the first time I saw it. All subsequent passes, I covered my eyes--probably not good for the driving, but better than the alternative (a mid-driving, panic attack-induced car wreck). I still suffer medium to high anxiety and launch my MacBook across the room if I happen to stumble upon a Web page with a picture of a shark on it. And I made SVV scour my diving books prior to the course and tear out any such photos that might cause my nightmares to resurface. Even seeing the word SHARK so many times on this hear post is causing my heart to palpitate wildly. Is this normal? Seriously, are any of you this afraid of something that, statistically, is responsible for a mere FOUR deaths, worldwide, a year? (Just so you know, the four deaths have already happened in the first half of this year, so we're in the clear...until 2009, at least.)

So why then did I think learning to SCUBA dive (that's Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus for those of you who have yet to take the 16-hour SCUBA School, ha!) was a good idea? Blame it on the Maldives. I never had any desire to be more than toe-deep in any body of open water until the Maldives cast its spell over me, told me I was pretty, and courted me harder than even Colin Firth ever succeeded in doing in a single 90 minutes of a romantic comedy. Weeks later, I went to the Dominican Republic on assignment and again went diving--with a much more disappointing result: overfished water, no marine life. And still, I was hooked.


When I got the opportunity to go on a worktrip to the Bahamas to finally get my full certification and not have to take that uber-boring pool skills class one more time before doing a Discover SCUBA day, my immediate reaction was a "HELLS YES!" (shouted in all caps, of course). And I even roped in a good pal (trust me, talking her into jetsetting to a beautiful, serene, remote spot in the Bahamas on the work clock was like asking her to cut out and lend me her spare kidney, let me tell you), so I had a reliable underwater buddy who could handle being responsible for my life at 100 feet below the ocean surface. And thus, SCUBA School commenced.

As she'll tell you, there were highs (underwater tea parties; passing our written exams with nearly flying colors; doing the sprinkler and lawnmower at 10 feet below sea level, which we will hopefully re-enact in the Atlantic Ocean for you all if my underwater digital case does its job), lows ("summer" San Fran conditions, meaning a chilly pool; the repetitive surrendering of our weight; having to remove our wetsuits, BCs, tanks, booties, flips, et al every half an hour when we inevitably had to pee), and all in between (having a cool police officer dive instructor who seemed to love us one minute, loathe us the next). Then of course there were the tens of emails we sent back and forth beforehand pondering issues of extreme importance: was it really pertinent we do all the homework (um, YES), would they all think we were freaks if we turned up in bikinis (not to our knowledge), was this even a good idea in the first place (yet to be decided)?

But we passed the "easy part" (freezing our asses off in a suffocatingly-small swimming pool) and now just have to complete our check-out dives somewhere in Green Turtle Cay in the Abacos, where we're likely sitting at this very moment drinking pink drinks with matching umbrella stirrers--ha, fooled ya! (I just love that I can set up my drafts to post in advance!) And here you thought I was sitting behind a computer somewhere in the greater Bay Area. Hopefully, we'll both return with killer tans, a universal referral form allowing us to partake in recreational dives anywhere in the world (at the maximum of 100 feet, of course, because we follow the rules like that), and sans decompression sickness...but only time will tell (call this here post a cliffhanger if you please).

***P.S. I really want to thank you all for your incredibly kind comments about my grandmother, as well as your encouraging words after my marathon. You all rock! I'm constantly in awe of how caring the Internet is, and if I didn't have a chance to respond to you individually (I don't have e-mail addys for a lot of you, unfortunately), please know that I was touched by each and every word!

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

A Grandmother is an Angel in Training

It's never easy to lose someone you love. If they go from an ongoing illness, you always think it's going to be less painful, because you knew this day was coming for years. But nothing can prepare you for that day when you finally have to say good-bye to that someone for good...or, depending on your religious beliefs, at least for now.

My grandmother, Doris Jeans Watts Housholder (now that's a mouthful, isn't it?) was born on Dec. 15, 1921 in Knoxville, Tennessee. She was the middle child of three, with an older brother, Tom, who had a tendency to "accidentally" dip her pigtails in inkwells, and a younger brother, Jimmy, who she always felt the need to look after.

When she was but a child, a mere teenager, she met my granddad. He was one of seven children, living with only their mother, as their father passed away years before. My grandfather was--and still is--an extremely brilliant man. He graduated high school at just 15 years old, and while he won't admit it, he could have gone to any Ive League college he wanted (his brother Charlie, who's 91 and lives in Memphis, went to Harvard Med). But he stayed in Knoxville, because he'd met the love of his live, my grandmother. She went out on a date with him, as a favor to his older brother Quinton, and the rest is history.

They got married, and my grandfather left for war for four years. He was in the Battle of the Bulge, one of the bloodiest battles in WWII. It was weeks before my grandmother found out he had lived to tell about it.

It's been something like 70 years since my grandparents met--can you imagine being with the same person every day for nearly three quarters of a century? It's simply unheard of in today's society--and I don't recall ever being around the pair of them without seeing some form of PDA, whether it was a peck on the cheek or a full-blown hand-hold (ew!). It was sickeningly adorable. Even at 86, when her brain was gone and she barely knew her own name, one thing remained unchanging: her blissful love for my granddad. I've never seen two people so in love, and after seven-plus decades at that.

They had two kids, my mom and her older brother Bernie, and moved to the house in Tullahoma in 1955, in which they still resided until early 2006 when they moved in with my parents.

I was born the fourth of five grandkids, but I was the luckiest of the bunch: I grew up just five minutes down the road from my grandparents and spent much of my early years drinking "pudge juice" (the Kool-Aid my granddad named after me, despite that I was anything but chubby) and playing in my grandmother's garden. From the time I could utter coherent sounds, I called her Dede--no one knows why, other than to suspect I was trying to pronounce Doris. Even as I got older, I continued to spend every Saturday night with Dede and Granddaddy, and I speak the truth when I say you couldn't ask for two cooler grandparents.

Even though sometimes I was convinced her many granddogs were even more spoiled than the rest of us! (She always had five or six at any given time.)

I think I get a lot of my wanderlust from the two of them. True, they weren't the most intrepid of jetsetters--they were more cruisers and organized group travelers--but once my granddad retired and my dad took over the CPA firm, they were always hopping a plane to Egypt, Israel, Russia, Greece, and I quickly garnered quite the armoire of (dusty) international souvenirs.

Dede always had a propensity to pinch her grandkids’ “tushes” when we walked past. Cousin Rebecca and I learned this at a young age and were pros at flexing our bum muscles just as she would make a reach for them. This always resulted in a “rock hard!” response from her. She never caught on--or if she did, she never let us know. This trait must run in the family, because my Uncle Tom, her brother, still does it, too.

Much like my friend May's grandmother, who passed away just a couple months before mine, Dede called everyone "shug," short for "sugar." I'll never be able to hear anyone say that without thinking of her. She was incredibly talented with a needle and thread and smocked many of the dresses my sister and I grew up in (and we wonder why I still refuse to wear jeans). There wasn't anything she couldn't fix or alter, there was nothing she wouldn't at least attempt to remedy.

Dede was always so eager to marry me off—as many grandparents are—perhaps because growing up, I was more concerned with school and sports than dating. One time, in recent years, while I was home visiting, she handed me a Tullahoma News clipping.

"What's this?" I inquired curiously.

"It's a singles night at one of the local churches; I thought you could attend!" she exclaimed.

"But Dede, I have a boyfriend," I told her. We had just gone over this.

"You do?” she paused, mystified, despite the fact that we had just gone over this. “Well, it doesn't hurt to keep your options open!" she winked at me. She was constantly surprising us and a comedian in her own way. So far, two grandkids have been checked off the list, three more—myself included!—to go.

I’ve always been an enthusiastic shopper (this you know)—despite that my hobby doesn’t exactly mesh with my writer’s salary—and my mom always swore I got my love for clothes from my grandmother. Even after she moved in with my parents a couple years back, she would never emerge from her bedroom in the morning until she was fully outfitted in a cute ensemble, had her accessories on to match, and made sure her face—her makeup—was on. Another thing along these lines I took from her was an obsession with pink. I don’t think my grandmother owned an outfit that didn’t at least have a hint of her favorite color.

Sometime around 2001, after I had gone off to college, Dede started acting funny. They sent her to various neurologists and couldn't figure out what was up, but she wasn't acting herself. After awhile it was finally discovered that she had advanced dementia. Still, she was smart--even if she had no clue who any of us were, as happened toward the end, she would give you a huge heart-melting smile and a wink and act like she did, that you were the most important person in the world.

One of my favorite recent stories was from Andrew and Kelly's wedding last December, which happened to take place on Dede's birthday. At the reception, they brought her a big birthday cake, and she exclaimed, dumbfounded, "Well, it was just so nice of all these people to come out for my 90th birthday (it was her 86th)! I don't even know most of them!"

She honestly thought the party was completely organized in honor of her.

While we were in Alaska, she suffered the last of many strokes that tore up her poor little body in recent years and left her unable to eat or walk. My poor granddad, her biggest fan, had to make the devastating decision to let the sickness run its course, as there was absolutely nothing that could be done to help her condition. She died on July 17, 2008, peacefully, at my parents' home. I think it was God's way of ending her misery once and for all; she'd been through enough already. That mentality still didn't make it any easier to let her go.

More than 300 people filled the church, despite that her funeral was held on a Tuesday morning during the summer, while many of our family friends were away on vacation. Many of the attendees sported blue- and white-haired do's and were accompanied by a cane or walker; it was rather endearing. Some even outaged my grandparents by a decade. All had tears streaming down their cheeks, for they were her friends far before I was on this planet. But my sister at the sage age of 19 hit the nail on the head: "At least she's somewhere where her mind is completely back now. And it's only selfish of us to want her to stick around in pain just so we feel better." She's right, and we all know this and have reached the point where we can tell her story with joy, not out of sadness.

My favorite part of her obituary was this: "She was a friend to everyone, and a mentor to many--the first to arrive with food for the sick, and the last to leave when someone was in need of a comforting hand." As my mom said in her letter to her mother at the funeral, Dede went as far to take coloring books to the neighborhood children when their beloved dog passed away.

Until I was 7 years old, I honestly thought she was my best friend (that's what I would tell anyone who asked). I never thought it odd that I would much prefer having a 60-something best buddy to a child my own age.

She was the Dede who would climb Rutledge Falls with us well into her 70s; the Dede who would let us, her grandchildren, consume an entire bag of chocolate chip cookies and gallon of ice cream—much to our mothers’ chagrin–if we so much as asked; the Dede who so generously took us on family vacations to Florida or the Bahamas. The Dede who would rather undergo a double root canal than miss a Sunday of church. And while toward the end, she barely knew us, that’s still the Dede we’ll all remember.