Mom, you were the heartbeat of our family. Every Sunday dinner, every phone call, every piece of advice — I hear your voice constantly. Rest well.
Quote Wall
Heartfelt words of love, remembrance, and comfort.
Grandma's hands could do anything — sew a wedding dress, make brown bread, hold a crying grandchild. I want hands like hers someday.
Mum always said the rosary was her armor. She wore it well every day of her life.
Margaret was a faithful parishioner and a tireless servant of this community for over 50 years.
She came to this country with almost nothing and built a life full of everything that matters. She is the definition of courage.
Aunt Grace taught me how to paint when I was twelve. Not technique — feeling. She said, paint what you're afraid of and it becomes beautiful. I've been trying to do that ever since.
We shared hundreds of night shifts together. She always brought homemade food and always left the ward a little warmer than she found it.
Grace was always at the sidelines cheering — not just for her daughters, for every child on that field. She cheered for everyone.
She helped me through the worst year of my life without ever making me feel like a burden. That's a rare gift.
My daughter was in Grace's care for three weeks after her accident. The compassion she showed our family — the way she explained everything, always with calm and hope — I will never forget it.
Grace was my oldest friend. We met at nursing school in 1977. I cannot imagine this world without her in it — and yet here I am, trying.
I don't think I have ever met anyone who genuinely loved people the way Grace Thompson did. She made kindness look effortless.
We grew up three houses apart. Grace was always the one who looked out for the younger kids, who included everyone. Some people are just born good.
Grace mentored me through my first year in pediatrics. She had infinite patience and zero tolerance for indifference.
She painted a watercolor of my backyard garden as a birthday gift. It is the most beautiful thing in my home. I will treasure it always.
My book club lost its brightest light. Grace could talk about a novel for two hours and make you feel like you'd never really understood it before.
In 28 years I never saw Grace have a bad day with a patient. She had a gift — not just clinical, but human. Medicine is poorer without her.
She showed up for every recital, every game, every hard conversation. She was the most present person I've ever known. We are who we are because of her.