Death Is Not The End by Robin Lee Sardini
Her name was Bonnie. She was 57 years old the day she died. It was her birthday. She was a hard worker who loved gardening in her sprawling country yard. She was a beloved elementary school teacher and volunteer in her community. She loved her family and her baby grandson. She was a woman of faith and honor. She was the kind of person you could always count on to be there if you needed anything. I know...she was my neighbor. As a testament to the impact she had on the lives of those she met, the line at the funeral home wound back and forth in serpentine fashion through the room in which she lay, into the reception area, out the door and down the long parking lot. She was loved by countless many. The verse on her memorial card was a profound expression of the inextricable mix of her love of the beauty in nature and her faith in the afterlife. May we all find hope and comfort in these exquisite words by Juanita DeLong: My Hereafter Do not come when I am dead To sit beside a low green mound, Or bring the first gay daffodils Because I love them so, For I shall not be there. You cannot find me there. I will look at you from the eyes of little children; I will bend to meet you in the swaying boughs of bud-thrilled trees, And caress you with the passionate sweep of storm-filled winds; I will give you strength in your upward tread of everlasting hills; I will cool your body in the flow of the limpid river; I will warm your work-glorified hands through the glow of the winter fire; I will soothe you into forgetfulness to the drop, drop of the rain on the roof; I will speak to you out of the rhymes of the Masters; I will dance with you in the lilt of the violin, And make your heart leap with the bursting cadence of the organ; I will flood your soul with the flaming radiance of the sunrise; And bring you peace in the tender rose and gold of the after-sunset. All these have made me happy, They are a part of me; I shall become a part of them. by Juanita DeLong
----------------------------------------------------------- She will live on.
Copyright © 2007 Robin L. Sardini Reprinted with permission from the author About the Author Robin L. Sardini lives in northwestern Pennsylvania with her husband, Bill, who was also her high school sweetheart. They are the proud parents of two girls and the proud grandparents of one baby boy. Robin is a published poet and blog author. She began writing at the age of 8. She has served in the professions of Law Enforcement, End of Life Transition, and is currently an Internet Entrepreneur. In addition to writing, Robin enjoys reading, singing, composing songs with her husband, connecting with people, and sharing a message of hope, healing and reconciliation. Please visit Robin at http://thespiritknowsbest.blogspot.com and http://www.myspace.com/indigodeep to learn more.
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