July 16, 2005
How I Want My Obituary To Read
Let's ease up today and enjoy a bit of humor. For the funnybone deficient, please skip I Cogitate today.
Unfortunately, I cannot recall where I found this (the Raleigh newspaper?) Highlights in black are my doing::
Dorothy Gibson Cully obituary
On June 3, 2005 at 10:45
p.m. in Memphis, Tennessee, Dorothy Gibson Cully, 86, died peacefully,
while in the loving care of her two favorite children, Barbara and
David. All of her breath leaked out.
The mother of four children, grandmother to 11, great-grandmother to
nine, devoted wife for 56 years to the late Ralph Chester Cully and a
true friend to many, Dot had been active as a volunteer in the Catholic
Church and other community charities for much of the past 25 years.
She was born the second
child of six in 1919 as Frances Dorothy Gibson, daughter to Kathleen
Heard Gibson and Calvin Hooper Gibson, an inventor best known as the
first person since the Middle Ages to calculate the arcane lead-to-gold
formula. Unable to actually prove this complex theory scientifically,
and frustrated by the cruel conspiracy of the so-called "scientific
community" working against his efforts, he
ultimately stuck his head in a heated gas oven with a golden delicious
apple propped in his mouth. Miraculously, the apple was saved for the
evening dessert. Calvin was not.
Native Marylanders and
long time Baltimore, Kent Island and Ocean City residents, Ralph and
Dot later resided in Lakeland, Florida and Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Several years after Ralph's death, Dot moved to Raleigh in 2001, where
she lived with her son, David.
At the time of her death, Dot was visiting her daughter, Carol in Memphis. Carol
and her husband, Ron, away from home attending a "very important
conference" at a posh Florida resort, rushed home 10 days later after
learning of the death. Dot's other children, dutifully at their
mother's side helping with the normal last minute arrangements -
hospice notification, funeral parlor notice, revising the last will,
etc. - happily picked up the considerable slack of the absent former
heiress.
Dot is warmly remembered
as a generous, spiritually strong, resourceful, tolerant and smart
woman, who was always ready to help and never judged others or their
shortcomings. Dot always found time to knit sweaters, sew quilts and
send written notes to the family children, all while working a full
time job, volunteering as Girl Scout leader and donating considerable
time to local charities and the neighborhood Catholic Church.
Dot graduated from Eastern
High School at 15, worked in Baltimore full time from 1934 to 1979,
beginning as a factory worker at Cross & Blackwell and retiring
after 30 years as property manager and controller for a Baltimore
conglomerate, Housing Engineering Company, all while raising four
children, two of who are fairly normal.
An Irishwoman proud of and
curious about her heritage, she was a voracious reader of historical
novels, particularly those about the glories and trials of Ireland. Dot
also loved to travel, her favorite destination being Eire's auld sod,
where she dreamed of the magic, mystery and legend of the Emerald Isle.
Dot Cully is survived by
her sisters, Ginny Torrico in Virginia, Marian Lee in Florida and
Eileen Adams in Baltimore; her brother, Russell Gibson of Fallston,
Maryland; her children, Barbara Frost of Ocean City, Maryland, Carol
Meroney of Memphis, Tennessee, David Cully of Raleigh, North Carolina
and Stephen Cully of Baltimore, Maryland. Contributions to the Wake
County (NC) Hospice Services are welcomed. Opinions about the details of this obit are not, since Mom would have liked it this way.
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