Blog archive
March 2024
Addressing The Needs of Older Adults Through Pasadena Village
03/25/2024
Coming Soon: More Resources for Older Americans, Online and in Person
03/25/2024
Community Building Locally and Nationally
03/25/2024
Preparing for the Future with Ready or Not
03/25/2024
Volunteering is at The Heart of the Village
03/25/2024
Women's Liberation: Then and Now
03/25/2024
Writing Memoirs Together
03/25/2024
Current Views on Current Events
03/20/2024
Unchained
03/18/2024
Rumr of Humor issue # 2409
03/10/2024
Blacks Portrayed by European Artists
03/03/2024
Rumor of Humor #2408
03/03/2024
February 2024
Caring for Ourselves and Each Other
02/27/2024
Doug Colliflower Honored
02/27/2024
Great Decisions Connects Us to the Worldwide Community
02/27/2024
Letter from the President
02/27/2024
Pasadena Village's Impact
02/27/2024
The Power of Touch
02/27/2024
Villages as a New Approach to Aging
02/27/2024
Addressing Gang Violence in Pasadena-Altadena
02/21/2024
Rumor of Humor Issue 2407
02/19/2024
Thank You For Caring.
02/12/2024
Rumor of Humor 2405
02/11/2024
Curve Balls
02/10/2024
Sylvan Lane
02/10/2024
Rumor of Humor 2404
02/09/2024
Larry Duplechan, Blacks in Film
02/03/2024
January 2024
Pasadena Village Joins Community Partners in Vaccination Campaign
01/29/2024
Rumor of Humor #2403
01/28/2024
Pasadena Village Joins Two Healthy Aging Resource Projects
01/25/2024
Decluttering: Do It Now
01/24/2024
Village Volunteers Contribute to the Huntington Magic
01/24/2024
Villagers Creating Community
01/24/2024
Villagers Reflect on Black History Month
01/24/2024
Walk With Ease, 2024
01/24/2024
Wide Ranging Discussion on Current Issues
01/22/2024
Wide Ranging Discussion on Current Issues
01/22/2024
Rumor of Humor # 2402
01/21/2024
Rumor of Humor # 2401
01/15/2024
Re- Entry Programs, a Personal Experience
01/08/2024
EULOGY FOR PATRICK
By Lisa DavisPosted: 09/19/2020
- Contributed by Lisa Davis -
I don’t know how many of you knew Patrick. He was friendly and outgoing, but not one to draw attention to himself. Patrick died of a brain tumor early April, but he was also an indirect victim of COVID-19. He chose not to have radiation or chemotherapy and died at home with hospice care. The sad thing was, he didn’t have many visitors in his last days because of COVID-19.
When the pandemic struck, I became paranoid. I didn’t leave my house. I had food delivered. I didn’t visit Patrick anymore because I didn’t want to infect him with COVID-19. Infect him? How absurd. He was dying! Not seeing him in his last days still weighs heavily on me.
Because of the pandemic, we never had any kind of goodbye ceremony for my dear friend. When this horrible time is over, it will be too late. Some of the Village’s newer members never knew him.
I first met Patrick when he joined the EZ Walkers. He coined that phrase, which I thought was clever. He took over the leadership of the group. On each walk, he insisted on a group picture. We roped in the next person who walked by or asked the Tai Chi guys to take a photo. Patrick then emailed it to Belinda, usually with a pithy or humorous note.
Patrick was my kind and gentle friend. He helped me when I locked myself out of my car. He correctly identified my TV’s problem and offered to go to Costco with me to buy a new one, and to install it for me. He belonged to the Village volunteers. He helped his neighbors on Euclid with various problems.
Bill Vincent has asked me several times if I have come to terms with Patrick’s death. I haven’t yet, but maybe this writing will help. Bill and Patrick lived only a stone’s throw away from each other, and they did many things together.
Patrick had many enthusiasms, but his passion was astronomy. After he retired, he moved to Pasadena because of Caltech and JPL, and quickly made friends with some of their members. He and his friend Alan went far and wide to view some special astronomical events. He attended every Cal Tech astronomy lecture he could, and loved to talk about it.
Patrick tried his best to interest me in astronomy, and when I said that I needed to read something like Astronomy for Dummies, he gifted me that book. I read it almost to the end, but I could see that I would never really be comfortable with lightyears, asteroids, and black holes.
Patrick loved science, and he and Bob Snodgrass started a science affinity group, which Bob still leads. When I said to Patrick that I wanted to belong, he said to me that the social sciences weren’t “real science”. Ouch! I spent my whole career in psychology.
Another passion of Patrick was operettas. When he first mentioned this, and I burst into the first few bars of Lehar’s Der Zigeunerbaron, he was thrilled that I knew operettas. I grew up in Vienna, and knew operettas like a later generation remembered Beatle songs. Patrick knew that Fritzie Culick, another member of our walking group, was quite a musician, and one of his hopes was that the three of us would get together and listen to operettas. I don’t know if he ever talked to Fritzie about that.
When my daughter, Sarah, once joined a Travel Buddies outing led by Bill Jennings, she and Patrick became instant friends. Whenever Sarah came to town, a visit with Patrick was a given. On Sarah’s last visit before Patrick died, we had an art orgy. A Pacific Asia Museum exhibit consisted of a huge balloon, which we entered with shoes taken off. Inside the artist had drawn zillions of images with a black sharpie: flowers and fantastic shapes, with many embedded figures. I have a photo of Patrick lying on a padded low table in the middle of the room and gazing at the fantastic images. It was an otherworldly experience. We followed that with a visit to the Pasadena Museum of History, which showed photos of old-time Pasadena, and ended the afternoon at the Norton Simon.
Sarah cries every time I mention Patrick. I am still sad for the loss of my friend, and I also regret that Patrick died at a time when we were all distracted by COVID-19, and couldn’t manage a ceremony to celebrate the life of our friend. Our Lacy Park EZ Walks haven’t been the same without Patrick.