Yesterday on Thursday December 5th, 2013 we laid my grandpa to rest. His service was held at Fairhaven Cemetery in Santa Ana in the Waverley Chapel.
Let me begin by telling you what kind of a man my
Papa was.
He was born in 1915 in Indiana and grew up poor as
most did in those times. His parents, he
and his sister eventually moved out here in SoCal. He met my grandma at a dance in Laguna Beach
and they married shortly after. My
grandma had troubles getting pregnant so they adopted my Aunt Diane. 2 years later the pregnancy became a reality
and my mom was born.
Papa worked a bunch of different jobs but landed
on the Santa Ana Fire Department and proudly worked there for 34 years. He was feared and respected by all. There was the Fireman’s Way and then there
was Woody’s Way. Not many argued with
him and those who did were always met with what a stubborn ornery man he
was. Stories from the Fire Department
range from him putting a man’s cigar out in his potato salad when he wouldn’t put
it out after Papa told him, to him folding a man up like a taco in his mattress
and throwing him down the pole 2 stories because he wouldn’t get out of bed. The fireman wore boots with smooth soles
until Papa fought to have them changed to serrated so his men wouldn’t
slip. He was so proud of his job and his
men and it showed in his work ethic and how the men looked up to him. I remember growing up, I would be
chatting with a fireman and mention that Woody Woodyard was my Papa. This would be followed by a smile and
reaction then usually a story of something he did.
My Papa was a builder. He would fix absolutely anything. He loved to work with his hands. He made birdhouses for my mom that she then
painted and sold in boutiques. He built
all sorts of random stands and chairs and contraptions for around the
house. He painted his house a few times,
once when he was 93! He is most known
for building the house that our family vacationed at for many years out in
Joshua Tree. No plans mind you. Just him and his buddy Ralph. The only oops was that they built the house around
the furniture and when it came time for us to sell it, let’s just say getting
that furniture out was a comedy routine.
He and my grandma were part of a camping group
called The Alpine Andy Group. They went
camping once a month for years.
Sometimes me and my friend Amy who was the granddaughter of another
couple and dear friends of my grandparents would go and camp with them. One time they, with a few other married friends
of theirs took 6 weeks off and drove across the United States in their RV’s. Papa loved to fish and was weirdly good at
it. He could catch anything. He taught my brother everything he knows
about fishing.
He loved my grandma more than I have ever seen one
person love another. They were married
for 75 years. He loved his family more
than anything and did everything for us.
His love was pure and honest and fierce.
He was one of the strongest people I have
known. Physically and mentally. The man never complained. Never had a headache. He raised my mom and Diane then Shane and I
with the “Rub some dirt on it and you’ll be fine” mentality.
I loved our camping trips the most. Papa and grandma would be in the RV and mom,
Shane and I would have our tent right outside.
Papa would always string up the plastic kitty lights around the awning
for me then smack his head continuously on them cursing every time. We played cards for hours. Uno, poker, gin, kings corner, go fish. We would go on long walks and usually fall
behind because he would walk so fast.
When I was a kid he told me a cow licked his hair
off and that’s why he was bald. I
believed him until I was twelve. When confronted
again about it now once I was old enough to know a BS story when I heard one,
that twinkle in his eye would sparkle and he would stick to his story. He was famous for his one liners. His delivery was perfection. Usually in the middle of a conversation we didn’t
think he was paying attention too he would slyly hit us with the perfect one
liner. Every damn time. Always followed by that famous twinkle.
There were only two times I remember my Papa getting seriously mad. One time was when my friend Susan and I had wandered off in the desert on a walk and lost track of time. When we turned around to go back there was my Papa, pulling up in his car. He got out and screamed at us for wandering off in the dark. Susan and I will never forget that. The 2nd time was soon after my divorce and the ex's name was brought up. Papa snapped that he hoped he never ran into him because he would be sorry. Then he muttered something about his gun collection. I'm not going to lie...there was a little part of me that wanted to see what he would actually do. But in life my Papa was not an angry man. Stubborn yes. Onrey yes. But his soul was gentle and he loved so many and so much. He loved to laugh. He loved to prank and joke. He loved to work. And man did he love us.
3 years ago my Papa’s health started to
falter. He started to shuffle his feet
and needed help getting up. He did not
take this well at all. When his driving privileges
were taken away because he had had one too many small strokes I didn't think he would ever forgive that Doctor.
After some time he accepted it but his health kept going downhill. He started to use a cane, then a walker, none
of these did he accept at first. He
would NEVER let us put him in a wheelchair.
We eventually had to bring in 24 hour care for both of them and last
year in November hospice was brought in.
We ended up with Noelle – the most amazing caregiver I have ever
seen. For the 1st few months
Noelle would put on a belt and hoist Papa into a wheelchair and wheel him
around outside. Eventually though my
Papa became bed bound and his mind started to go.
This was probably the hardest part of it all. Watching my Papa decline so slowly. He was stubborn in his life and stubborn
until then end. When I would visit I
would share stories and try to get him to remember the past and things he loved
but it got harder and harder. A few months ago I leaned in to give him a kiss
goodbye, a day of not much sense being made in our talks. He cupped my face in his hands and stared at
me. “What is it Papa?” I asked. “I love you so much my sweet girl,” he
said. My eyes filled up with tears as I
tried so hard to fight them back. I
never wanted Papa to see me cry. “You
are beautiful and perfect.” He said. I
smiled and kissed him again. When I
turned away the tears fell and I high tailed it out the door.
Most of our talks after that didn’t make much
sense. Once in a while I would get him
for a moment or two and we connected but then he would be gone again. Dementia is an evil evil disease. Almost every time I left there I would cry all the way home.
He loved to hold my hand when I visited. This was the last photo I took of my Papa:
The Thursday before he passed my Papa took a bad
turn. We thought we were going to lose
him. But when I came by he had
improved. That Saturday night I didn’t sleep
well. I had nightmares and for the 1st
time in a long time I woke up depressed.
I didn’t want to get out of bed.
But grandma had wanted a Pumpkin Spice Latte and I needed to get up and
get over there. I was just so sad. I decided to pull a random act of kindness at
Starbucks and pay for the people behind me to lift my spirits. The drive thru kid was in such awe he gave me
a free blueberry muffin, warmed, as a thank you for being so nice. I was excited to share this story with my
grandparents. I walked into my grandparents’
house with a latte in each hand and the muffin bag in my mouth on November 24th,
2013. I shouted a muffled hello. My grandma and her caregiver were coming in
from the back and I looked at Papa. He
was on his side with a washcloth on his head.
Eyes closed. He didn’t look
good. “Hello!” I shouted again as I
crossed into the kitchen. Joel (Papa’s
caregiver) was outside on the phone and did not look happy. I set one latte down and took the muffin bag
out of my mouth. Papa then rolled over
and the oddest exhale came out of his body. I stood there frozen staring at him because it
was the oddest sound. He looked
dead. My heart dropped, but he has
looked this bad before. Grandma was set
down and just as I was about to walk over Joel burst in furious and telling me
they had too many blankets on him. He
had a fever he was trying to get down.
He put a cool washcloth on him and had bathed him and put a light
blanket on. He turned and walked over to
Papa. He touched him, leaned into him,
but his hand on his chest then turned to me and said “He’s gone.”
I will never forget that as long as I live. My heart dropped. “What!” I shouted. I slammed the latte down I was still in shock
holding and grabbed my phone out of my purse.
“Do I call 911?! What do I do?!” Joel shook his head and started to take his
blood pressure. I started pacing back
and forth in the kitchen. Pauline
(Gramma’s caregiver) came in with another machine asking Joel if it would work
better. I called my mom. All I said when she answered was “You need to
get here now.” I hung up. Joel was
shaking his head to Pauline. “It’s error
ing out. He’s gone.” I stood next to grandma now who had not
realized yet what was going on. “I’m so
sorry Jami” Joel said. That did it. I leaned down to my grandma. “He’s gone grandma. He’s gone.”
She clasped my hand shaking and crying.
I just stood there holding her hand.
I had gone numb. With my free
hand I called my brother. “Papa is gone.” He said he’d be right there. Joel explained to me that he had called hospice
and they were on their way. I stayed
with grandma until Shane got there. I
then went outside to stop my mom and tell her before she came in.
The day continued on as if it were a dream. I watched my mom come in and say
goodbye. Joel went and picked up Noelle
who wanted to be there. Danelle arrived
as well. The hospice social worker
arrived and we all stared at her not knowing what to do. She did paperwork and tried to comfort
us. Shane called Fairhaven. They arrived around 3pm. I took
grandma and mom into another room and the social worker and I distracted grandma
while Danelle blocked any sort of view she may have when they took him
away. I looked out the window and saw
the gurney covered in a maroon sheet.
When everything had settled slightly I went to the garage where all my
Papa’s tools are and sat down on the floor and lost it. The sadness wrapped around my heart like a
vice and squeezed the breath out of me. I was hysterical. I was out there a while then I heard someone
come in behind me. A hand squeezed my
shoulder. I pulled it together, stood up
and turned around. It was Noelle. We hugged and I returned inside. I was later told that Joel said my Papa had waited for me before he passed away. He heard my voice then left this earth. He waited for me.
The next day mom, grandma and myself went to
Fairhaven and dealt with everything. It
was still so surreal to me as we made all of the arrangements.
The phone calls and the flowers and the cards and
the texts and the Facebook posts started to flood in and made me feel so loved
and supported.
The service was lovely. We arrived early for a viewing but I couldn’t
bring myself to come up to the casket.
From what I could see it didn’t look like my Papa. Grandma sat with him for a while then we
closed it before the main service started.
Pastor Tae Shin was the back up from Covenant
Presprytarian and was so nice. Terri
sang “How Great Thou Art” a song my Papa loved.
My dad got up and read the obituary that I wrote and then edited into a
biography. He shared a few stories from
the fire department and almost broke down at the end. Pastor did a sermon of sorts then opened it
up to anyone. A fireman came up and
shared a hilarious story. Then my
brother got up to speak. He didn’t make
it through his speech when he mentioned that he’ll think of Papa next time he’s
fishing. When he broke, my heart
broke. I have never seen my brother
break like that. I heard many others
lose it at that point as well including my father. Watching the men in my life cry made me love
them more and my heart break right alongside.
I jokingly smacked him as I walked up now trying to pull myself together
for my speech which I shared below. I
almost made it to the end and barely cracked out the last line. I screwed up Terri but she pulled it together
and sang “Amazing Grace” beautifully after me.
Pastor Tae closed and that was it. My brother and I were pall bearers as well as Danelle, Noelle and four of Shane's dear friends.
When we walked out of the church the clouds in the
sky had made two hearts. Terri pointed
this out to me and smiled. She caught a
photo as well.
The gravesite service was to follow and the main
Pastor Stan performed that. I didn’t care
all that much for him or his words. Papa
was in the United States Coast Guard so he had military honors. This included a man playing Taps on a trumpet
that of course set me over the edge as well as my dad and brother. They unfolded then refolded the flag and
presented it to my grandma. It was
beautiful. We stayed until they lowered
him into the ground, then we all took roses off the spray and tossed them into
the ground where he now lay.
To my dearest friends who came to Papa's service. Thank you. It truly meant the world to me and my family that you were there.
To my dearest friends who came to Papa's service. Thank you. It truly meant the world to me and my family that you were there.
A reception followed at my grandma’s with amazing
food and wine. Everyone looked through
albums and shared stories and laughed and cried.
I will miss my Papa more than words can ever
describe. There is a hole in my heart
that will never heal. I have issues with
religion but I do believe in a god and I do believe that when our time is done
here on earth that’s not the end. There
is something else out there but I don’t think we are meant to know what that is
but it’s good and I believe my Papa is now at peace and happy and will always
be watching over me. I love you so much
Papa and will miss you tremendously. I
promise to continue to live my life to the fullest and not let anyone bring me
down. You taught me to be strong and I
will. I love you Papa.
Here is what I and read:
Here is what I and read:
Love Letter to My Papa:
I love the way you look at gramma.
I love the way you tease her.
I love how much you love her and how
much you love your family.
I love how you are fiercely loyal.
I love that I can count on you for
anything.
I love that you have the biggest heart
I have ever seen in a person.
I love that you were a fireman.
I love that your men respected and
loved you.
I love that you are a legend.
I love that you are exceptional.
I love that no one compares to you.
I love that you love me so much.
I love that you hate it so much when I
hurt.
I love that I can trust you with
anything. With my life.
I love your quick wit.
I love that twinkle in your eye.
I love that you’re so strong.
I have loved you since I was a little
girl. They always said they would hear
me chasing after you calling “Papa! Papa!”
If anyone was ever looking for me your lap was the first place they
would look.
I have inherited your strength. Your stubbornness. Your wit.
And I am thankful.
You have taught me how to love, how to
laugh, how to be fair and honest and that there are people in this world whose
hearts grow bigger and better every day.
You are my superman. My hero.
You are and will always be my Papa.
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