Message that I sent to the Relatively Healys list:
After several days of declining health, Aunt Eileen, 94, died last night about midnight. (Aug. 21). The nursing home contacted [my sister] Debbie and she drove over and picked up Aunt Helen, who just turned 93.
As Helen said a few minutes ago when I called, there are at least six times when she thought when she said good-bye to her sister, that Eileen would be gone by the next morning, but she’d still be there. “I’m a tough old bird,” Eileen told Helen. She’s told me that, too, and probably Tim, with whom she felt she had a special relationship. I have loved Aunt Eileen for many years and always been deeply appreciative that she has always been on my side.
Eileen insisted that she did not want a funeral or a memorial service. As you know, we were raised Unitarian and so her tradition is more secular. She also was painfully shy. We may get together when the urn is buried at the gravesite near the Healy plot at the Worland cemetery. The story has been waiting for several years, since Uncle Jim died. The funeral home has kept his ashes and hers will be added to the urn for burial.
Dick Bonine (Helen’s son) is driving down tomorrow from Montana to help pack up Eileen’s room. DJ (Mike’s oldest son) is in Worland right now having a vacation before he leaves for his 2nd year of an MBA at Claremont University. He and Mike and Greg can help, too. Kay (Helen’s oldest) has offered to come, but Helen would prefer for her to wait for awhile, since Kay has just arrived back in Oklahoma after wintering in Arizona
I am flying to Worland on Aug. 31 for my 50th high school reunion, and Tim told Helen that he plans to be in Worland around Sept. 6, so perhaps we can find a way for some of Eileen’s nieces and nephews to say good-bye. She and Jim had no children.
Eileen moved into the Worland Nursing Home to keep Jim company a long time ago – 12 years? 14 years? She was a mainstay for my mother and for Mike’s wife, Jean, when they moved to the nursing home. She lived next door to Mother and two rooms from Jean.
I have felt very sad that Eileen was so confined for these last years, but I also feel enormous gratitude over how loved she felt in these last years. The nurses and aides have petted her and she blossomed. Who knew that after the terrible memories of having to go to an orphanage and being “too old to be adopted” — that she would end up dying in an institution surrounded by people who cared. Including her sister, who has always been with her, and one of her nieces. In fact, Aunt Eileen Healy Horn had two families — she and Aunt Helen Healy Bonine are close with their blood brother and sister — and she was loved by the family that adopted her.
By the way, I was talking with PIV a couple of days ago. He didn’t know that Aunt Helen was named after Helen Healy Lynch, the sister of our grandfathers (PII and Alex 1)
Gulker.com: Ah, they noticed…
From the morning edition of Gulker.comLinda came back from the mailbox this afternoon and flashed this month’s Scientific American cover. “Look, hon, they’ve dedicated a whole issue to you!”True, I’ve been a subscriber for more than 30 years, but no, this isn’t a celebration of all things Gulker.~~~~~~My comment:Ah, Chris,You and Linda have spent too much time in newsrooms. You know how to hold an audience — always surprise ‘em. You must have a lot of us checking every day to see what is happening next. I can’t be the only one who sucked air this morning and then laughed out loud. Not the stupid little snicker, lol, but LOLOLOLOLOL!!I see you’ve posted 2x today, which means now you’ll have us checking in at gulker.com as often as we hit news.google or CNN.Here’s my take on smite. Smitted reminds me of texted. Both sound like duh, like you’re being a bit duh-dumb when you say them.Here’s what I’m learning from you about dying. I cared deeply about Mario and his death and I care deeply about yours. But this time, my feelings are open, not blocked like with him. This time, I weep. This time I want you to hang on for a few more days, for more exchange of ideas — I was counting on you to get a 12-core and tell me if it really is faster — and I want more laugher, and more thoughts about God. You’re like a month of Sundays that I want to last forever.The point is, if it weren’t for you and Linda and the way you are holding us close, I would have shut down my feelings as soon as you posted your bad news. Instead, your strength and openness makes it okay for me to feel the whole range of feelings, too. Thank you.
Fav Daily News: British blueprint for debt reduction with growth
Posted 5:30 p.m.
News Alert: White House predicts record $1.47 trillion deficit
03:07 PM EDT Friday, July 23, 2010
——————–
The federal budget deficit, which hit a record $1.4 trillion last year, will exceed that figure in 2010 and 2011, according to a White House forecast released Friday.
The $1.47 trillion budget gap predicted for 2010 represents a slight improvement over the administration’s February forecast, but the outlook for 2011 has darkened considerably, primarily due to a drop in expected tax receipts.
For more information, visit washingtonpost.com:
http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/C7I8XW/WL1C4B/2OAMF3/EP3ZNG/9QBG0/ID/t
Posted at 10:30 a.m.
Michael Gerson opined today in the Washington Post that if British Prime Minister David Cameron’s approach succeeds to budget reduction that also enables economic growth, “he will provide a model for Republican victory in the 2012 U.S. presidential election.”
Most Democrats and Republicans fear our unprecedented debt. What’s the solution of Britain’s newly elected conservative leader?
Gerson says:
Cameron’s June 22 emergency budget proposed the deepest, most sustained reductions in British spending since World War II. Health programs and foreign assistance are fenced off from cuts. But other government departments will see an average of 25% reductions over the next five years….
Cameron’s austerity has the virtue of economic responsibility. It is easy to close the budget deficit with massive new taxes–but it is also massively destructive to economic growth. So Cameron has proposed about 4 pounds in spending reductions for every pound in tax increases. A recent study of 44 major fiscal adjustments in developed nations since 1975 found that a one–percentage point increase in taxes as a portion of gross domestic product cuts annual economic growth by an average of zero. Nine percentage points. Reducing government expenditures by one percentage point, in contrast, increases average annual growth by 0.6 percentage points.
If Cameron’s approach works–dramatically cutting deficits without stalling economic growth–it will be an obvious, powerful example for America and other nations.
Cameron’s progress offers two other lessons that some Republicans may be less willing to acknowledge.
First, Cameron’s austerity measures have succeeded (so far) in the context of a coalition government with Liberal Democrats–Britain’s centrist third party. This alliance of the middle has made Cameron’s government less dependent for support on the extremes of either party, resulting in a truce on divisive issues….
Second, Cameron makes clear that austerity alone is not a sufficient message for a political party. He calls deficit reduction in his “duty.” He refers to his social agenda– “the Big Society”–as his “passion.” Cameron has paired his emergency budget with a series of measures designed to encourage localism empower local communities, create charter schools, reform welfare and fund the work of private charities….
I’m not sure I agree, or disagree. I want to see what happens and how the ensuing unemployment will be resolved that will come the British government’s 25% reductions in spending.
A few minutes ago, I forwarded Gerson’s full column to some of the moderate, very discouraged Republicans I know as an encouragement that there may be a blueprint for them to shake off the Tea Party and religionists and offer an alternative worth considering.
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