tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2476808902704210325.post6704459406634273648..comments2023-08-26T08:12:45.325-05:00Comments on Countryside Life: Debbie 1961-2012Aprilhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07281951290036529118noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2476808902704210325.post-17292623958069086062012-01-16T15:00:09.084-06:002012-01-16T15:00:09.084-06:00April- I want to thank you for this blog and posti...April- I want to thank you for this blog and posting about Debbie. I am a good friend of hers, but I moved 6 years ago, and as distance does, it was hard to stay in touch with Debbie. I will always regret not staying in close contact with her those years, but I also know that we are both to blame. We were both raising families and had busy lives. I know that the distance didn't matter, because once I heard her diagnosis, we were on the phone and as usual she was trying to console me! She and I worked together at the hospital, I worked there before she was hired, but once she was there it was like she was meant to be there. We quickly became friends, and would work together all day, and then I would take my daughter to her house in the evening. We would eat chinese, drink Dos Equis, and watch the best of SNL- Will Farrell. She even gave me a cowbell as a wedding gift! I was lonely and couldn't find a good man in the burg,so I resorted to eHarmony, and Debbie and I would go through the choices sent to me. I was very selective, and Debbie picked out a guy that she said would be perfect for me. I ignored someone because his name was Karl and he didn't capitalize his name. Debbie made me talk to Karl, and we have been married for 6 years. Debbie just has this special power to know people and to know what they need. She was always willing to take on the hardest cases at the hospital. People who had lost a child, difficult family members, and people with cancer. I remember when a man in his 40's was diagnosed with cancer, Debbie immediately said that she would go see him and his family- she saw that family through every visit to the hospital, all the way to end of the patients life. The way that Debbie lived her life,was almost a foreshadowing of how her life would be taken away. I know that she felt as much support from her family and friends as she gave to that family. Her kindness and generousity of heart should be an example to mankind of how to live. Her death should be an example to mankind on how to die with dignity and how to let the will of God lead you home. I know Debbie is an angel, she was an angel here on earth. I know that I have someone watching over me, and she will meet me when it is my time to go. I will love and miss her forever.<br />Dawn Richter WilkingAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com