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![]() ![]() Be the first to post your most treasured memory of Stephanie. Decemby Stephanie Rayner in Uncategorized. In Loving Memory of the Latelle family pets. Foss uses boxes as a metaphor for forgetting. Ill wrap these treasured memories in a blanket of my love, and keep them for. ![]() In the lines, “memories in boxes, forgotten parts of, me, who I was, who I am,” The taped boxes stored in the attic are forgotten memories somewhere still in his head and furthers the reader’s understanding of the fact that the important memories that made him who he is were taped up long ago.Ī: The attitude of this poem is regretful. In the lines, “memories in boxes, forgotten parts of me, who I was, who I am,” it seems as though the author regrets to forget these memories that were not only part of his past, but that shaped who he is. S: There is a shift in the line, “treasured memories,” because the reader doesn’t understand that the boxes represent memories until the shift from general boxes to personal memories occurs. In memory of Stephanie (Simonis) Kielbasa, please visit our floral store.T: The title Boxed Memories means forgotten memories, put away and inaccessible. If desired, memorial donations may be made to The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, 125 West Bay Road, Amherst, MA 01002 (The Carle was one of Stephanie’s favorite places to spend many joyful hours with her family. In her words, she was indeed “so glad to be here” until God finally fulfilled her wish to “go Home.”Ī private celebration of Stephanie’s life was held on July 30, 2018, directed by the Jackman Funeral Home. Even as her precious memories slipped away from her one by one, Stephanie remained humble, benevolent, gracious, patient, humorous, and unyielding in her abiding love of family and her appreciation for this Earthly life she so enjoyed. The ravages of progressive dementia over the last decade of Stephanie’s life did not rob her of her spiritual essence. She delighted in attending the theater in Boston, New York, and Providence. She was an avid reader, gardener, bird watcher, and an excellent Wonderword searcher. She was proud to be an original and ongoing member of the Harvard Medical School’s Nurses’ Health Study. Stephanie was a lifelong learner, who eagerly pursued higher education to enhance her knowledge and skills, and she willingly shared what she learned with others. She was a dedicated and committed professional who cared deeply for her patients. She will be remembered for her sensibility and wisdom, as well as for her loving, kind, and generous spirit. Stephanie dedicated her long life to her beloved family, and she was thankful for many wonderful neighbors in her lifetime, including childhood friends and their families, who settled in the Plummers section of town. She retired from her cherished profession in 1994. Stephanie stepped down from her career to provide full-time, in-home care for her mother but returned to community nursing in 1987. Vincent Hospital in Worcester, where she later specialized in ostomy care. Stephanie was employed ascharge nurse at the Whitinsville Hospital, and head nurse at St. She was a public health district nurse in both Worcester and Uxbridge, school nurse for the Northbridge Public Schools, and a private duty nurse throughout the Blackstone Valley. Her career as Registered Nurse spanned many years, in both the public and private sectors. She was a proud member of the Cadet Nurse Corps. After graduating from Northbridge High School in 1941, Stephanie worked for the former Whitin Machine Works until she enrolled in the Worcester City Hospital School of Nursing, Class of 1947. Stephanie was the daughter of John and Mary Simonis, and grew up in Whitinsville. Stephanie was predeceased by her parents sister, Loretta Simonis and son-in-law, Robert Sullivan. She also leaves many nieces, nephews, and their families. She leaves her sisters: Adeline Ziegler and Lillian Provencal her brothers: Henry Simonis and Francis Simonis and sisters-in-law: Wanda Jarosz and Alfreda Simonis. She is survived by her daughters: Mary Kielbasa, with whom she lived, and her fiancé David Milburn Debora Sullivan Janice Hanny, and her husband Scribner Anne Marie Kielbasa, and her husband Jon Pollard and her granddaughters: Mary Sullivan and SaraBeth Hanny. She was predeceased by her loving husband, John Kielbasa, in 1988. Whitinsville- Stephanie Kielbasa, 94, died peacefully at home on July 27, 2018. ![]()
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