Tuesday, March 26, 2013

A Force to Be Reckoned With - Wanda Weese Perez


Mom’s health really declined in the last year, so I’ve been thinking for a number of months about what I’d say about her when this day came.  So many things about her come to mind...  Wanda Perez was a real personality.  After some thought and prayer I believe that Mom - and the Lord would like you to hear what the Perez kids have heard from Mother’s lips very often over our life time: Live each day like it’s your last.  That’s certainly the way Mom lived her life.  I could probably talk all day long about the many ways that Mom fleshed out the idea of living each day like it’s your last, but I want to focus on three in particular:

Life is an adventure-  Mom was an adventurer.  She loved to see new places and learn new things.  She wasn’t afraid to step out and try something new.  She always told us that we could do anything we wanted to do.   After nursing school she decided to buy a sewing machine and taught herself how to sew.  Those of us who’ve known mom for a long time have probably worn something she made.  When she was a young nurse she hung out in the phlebotomy lab and learned how to be an expert stick – and in typical Wandanator fashion, was telling the nurses and phlebotomists at DRMC where to stick her right up till the end.  She could also do basic plumbing, electrical, and some home repairs.  She had lots of tools (including a chain saw) and she knew how to use them. 

Mom loved to travel.  In 1974 she took the five of us and our cousin Nick on a cross country adventure of epic proportions.  That trip was formative for all six of us kids.  She instilled in us a love of beauty and whimsy, as we stopped to see so many of this country’s beautiful places – and it’s oddities as well.  I’m known to my nieces and nephews as the Queen of Fun.  Well guys… Abuela was the original Queen of Fun.

 Sometimes adventure comes our way through challenges or adversity. Mom was game for that too, and taught us to face challenges with a can-do attitude. When we were very little she’d quote the Little Engine That Could to us – “I think I can, I think I can, I think I can – I can!”  As we grew older, she’d simply say, “Can’t never did anything.”  The challenges that Mom faced were sometimes daunting, but her resolve and her love of adventure meant that she faced them bravely, and never as a victim.  She was – as one of her friends aptly put it, intrepid.  Even at the end of her life when faced with declining health and very real limits on so much that she loved, Mom never had a pity party.

 Life is an adventure. Whether you’re out there seeking a new adventure or if life has dealt you a very difficult hand to play, go for it!   – Mom would say, “Can’t never did anything.” Face life – even the difficult things - as an adventure. Be boldly courageous, and you’ll have a lot more fun whatever comes your way.

People are important – Mom loved people.  She was genuinely interested in whomever she met.  Mom asked lots of questions – not because she was nosy, but because she truly wanted to know who people were.  She had lots of friends, and people were naturally drawn to her – especially young people.  I think that the reason young people liked mom was because she immediately treated them with respect.  She asked their opinions and took them seriously as persons.  Mom saw the humor in situations – irony and absurdity – and appreciated it with laughter.  In most of my fondest memories of Mom she’s laughing.

As a nurse mom demonstrated strikingly how important she felt people are.  Even her presence was healing, and she cared for her patients tenderly and competently.  For years she served in Employee health at DRMC.  She took that job very seriously and found herself not only nurse, but sometimes confidante and therapist.  She was always faithful with whatever was entrusted to her – whether someone’s health or their secrets. 

Over the years Mother opened her home to many people.  She cared for people in very practical ways – offering the hospitality of her cooking and friendly conversation.  There was always room for one or two more at the table.  We were often dismayed at the amount of food she’d buy and put in the freezer, but those supplies made it possible for her to offer hospitality to unexpected guests without feeling stressed out.  For mom, it was always the more the merrier.

People are important.  Mom’s life demonstrates in very real ways what it looks like to love our neighbor.  Take a real interest in other people.  Be a faithful friend.  Treat others with respect- especially young people.  Offer hospitality.

Actions Speak Louder Than Words – The Wandanator was a woman of action.  As much as she liked to chat with people, when it came down to the nitty gritty of living, she’d rather do what she believed than talk about it.  Mom didn’t spend a lot of time talking in the theoretical.  In fact, I can’t remember a single time I heard her say anything remotely theoretical.  She was a practical person.  In her mind it was fine to tell someone you love them, but it’s even better to show them.  It’s fine to have principles, but better to live them out. 

We all know that Mother loved to have her say.  She didn’t mind telling us what to do or how to do it.  Now that she’s in heaven, maybe she’d be more apt to quote from Scripture than she was before, so I thought it would be appropriate to leave my siblings and myself – and all of you- with a final instruction about being a person of action – this one from Philippians 2: 11-13 : 12 Therefore, my beloved, just as you have always obeyed me, not only in my presence, but much more now in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; 13 for it is God who is at work in you, enabling you both to will and to work for his good pleasure.

For the last couple of years Mom was working on writing down her life story.  She only made it to the mid 1970’s, but the last word she wrote was Hallelujah.  I think that’s fitting.  We praise God for the incredible gift that Wanda May Weese Perez was to us.  We praise God for His work in and through her.  And we praise God that she has finished the race and kept the faith.  Hallelujah.

 

 

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