Tribute by Ann Marie Fallon, shared during my Mom’s Celebration of Life:
Thank you all for coming together today to celebrate the life of Cherylee Ann Berge Hamilton.
My mom. Our mom. Your friend. Your massage therapist. Your sister. Your grandma. Your great-grandma. Your mother-in-law. Your sister-in-law. Your aunt. Your cousin.
Our mother navigated life with all of its ups and downs to the best of her ability. She was strong-willed. She was not predictable. She was not someone to "figure out". She was unique. Our Mom seemed to be on an adventure of some sort.
My Mom would recall her annual travels to Florida: and talk about The Strawberry Festival, the Bok Tower, and the Detroit Tiger's spring training. Over the years, I really didn't understand why she continued to go to Florida to visit those places. But after she died, I learned that she use to go there with her parents, and when her mom died, she continued to take those trips with her dad. Even after he passed away, those adventures continued. Her time there brought back treasured memories, and created new ones.
Another one of those things that didn't make much sense to me was this Somewhere in Time event on Mackinac Island. A little history. My fifth-grade class went to Mackinac Island as the movie Somewhere in Time was being filmed, and my Mom was a chaperone. The movie starred Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour. It didn't do too well at the Box Office, but like the title of the movie suggests, a majority of the movie takes place in an earlier time-period, Somewhere in Time, set in the early 1900s.
The Somewhere in Time event on Mackinac Island became one of her favorite destinations. Year after year, she would not only tell stories about her trip, but she would make the yearly invitation to join her. Wearing these extravagant outfits, playing dress-up; it was all kind-of-weird to me.
Then, one year, even though this wasn't my thing, I went because of our mother's enthusiasm. She really was a good storyteller and salesperson. I was able to share in an experience that brought her a lot of joy.
The event highlighted her taste in the finer things, as well as her interesting and unique personality. If you're wondering what's with the hats?, "Somewhere in Time" has a lot to do with it.
A few months ago, in May, we took her to Mackinac Island. She specifically made a request to have tea there. Like just have a tea-time experience. She also wanted to have lunch at the Grand Hotel. Even though she had limited energy, we made it to lunch, but tea-time would have to wait.
I am pleased to tell you that tea-time has been rescheduled for today. When we conclude here, please make your way to the dining hall to enjoy tea-time together, with plenty of refreshments and conversation.
The Mackinac Bridge Walk was another repeated adventure. She loved participating in this event and she regularly communicated her open invitation. I am thrilled that my first Bridge Walk will be tomorrow and I hope to make space for it in the years to come, to walk "the mighty Mac" in loving memory of our mother. You are welcome to join us: tomorrow or perhaps sometime in the future.
Volunteering at Camp Daniel was another one of those experiences she frequently talked about. Camp Daniel offers people with disabilities access to a safe and fun camping experience, where the physical, social, and spiritual needs are lovingly met.
Before Camp Daniel, I knew it as Camp Chicagami, on Little Lake Newton. It was a summer-camp family-tradition for our mom, for our aunts and uncles, as well as for my sisters and me.
At Camp Daniel, our mother served campers with disabilities for many summers. She offered what she could; her passion and her time. She also invited others to join the cause. Through her insistence, key connections were formed. Camp Daniel was positively impacted by our Mom. And our mother was positively impacted by Camp Daniel.
I'd like to suggest Camp Daniel as a worthy cause to invest in. Our Camp Daniel family would be happy to give you a tour before you leave today.
Throughout our Mom's life, yes, she pursued various physical and social adventures. Yet foundationally, she was on a learning-journey. A learning journey of faith in the Most High God and a learning-journey of love.
Our mother desired love: to be loved. And she desired to love.
She navigated her life to the best of her ability. She experienced the amazing, and the awful, and through it all, she trusted her Creator and the Son that He sent.
I'll close with a poem by L.R. Knost that our Mom loved:
Life is amazing.
And then it's awful.
And then it's amazing again.
And in between the amazing and the awful,
it's ordinary and mundane and routine.
Breathe in the amazing,
hold on through the awful,
and relax and exhale during the ordinary.
That's just living
heart-breaking, soul-healing,
amazing, awful, ordinary life.
And it's breathtakingly beautiful.