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I met Guy at graduate school at Purdue. He was friendly and well dressed. Guy complained about West Lafayette saying there was nothing to do there. He missed the east coast and the shore. When I visited him after we graduated he taught me how to body surf. We were friends for 55 years and and I miss him dearly.
In response to "How did you first meet Guy?"
First met Guy at Purdue graduate school. He was always friendly, well-dressed and prepared for class. He had trouble acclimating to West Lafayette, Indiana, which was so different from his East coast upbringing. It constantly asked me what is there to do in this little town. After school, when I visited him, I realized how beautiful his beloved East Coast was even taught me how to body surf 
The photo video was fantastic. Such a caring, giving, loving person. I still remember fondly our days together at Purdue. He was my best friend there.
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The photo video was amazing. What a wonderful, fulfilling, and loving life he led. I still remember all the wonderful times we had at Purdue University. He was my best friend there. God rest his soul.
Thinking about you and your family with love. Your Husband, Dad, Grandfather was a very special person to us. Wonderful memories of all the special times we shared with him. Love to each of you.....
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Dear Friends,

Our Guy was an amazing guy! Brilliant, well read, ready to offer help, sensitive, caring, and fun! We miss him so much!

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Here is a copy of the amazing photo video put together for us by Beth Shea.
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Leslie Fincke
2022, North Shore Arts Association, Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA, USA

Here is the eulogy I gave at the Celebration of Life on October 17th:

I’d like to share with you how I observed my Dad over these past 50 years. Don’t worry, I won’t go year, by year. But, HE was always observing, and I like to think that I learned from the best.

There are SO many things I will miss. His whistling around the house. Him asking “How’s Squeaky?” (his nickname for our dog). Seeing him working at his desk with his baseball hat perched ON TOP of his head, not actually ON it, tipped down low because the sun was beaming into his eyes. Watching him tap his foot to 50’s music. Him saying “It’s 10 degrees cooler in Gloucester! The ocean is natural air conditioning!” or asking me if I wanted to bring the PVC pipe with me to walk the dog, like he did, to fend off any coyotes; watching TV and flossing together - (yes we are a weird family like that)

Dad was the most thoughtful person I know. What I really love is that he was great about SHOWING he was thinking about you. Like, when Adrienne and I were very young, he worked at Hershey Foods and would often come home with Hershey Kisses for us.

I’ll never forget when he started coming home from work with record albums he bought JUST for me and Adrienne; I think we were ‘tweens. You see, Dad’s turntable and record collection were sacred to him. Adrienne and I got many lessons on how to hold the records just right so as to not get any fingerprints on them, and how to place the needle on the vinyl, ever so gently. It was a rite of passage to give us our own records to start our own collection. Without us asking, he researched what was “cool” and showed up with albums from Men At Work or Bruce Springsteen - not albums he wanted, but ones he thought we would like.

Christmas Eve always meant Dad handing out the personalized gifts he’d selected for me, my sister, my mom and my Grandma from Handworks, his favorite artisan gallery. Later, he would travel into the Harvard Bookstore in Cambridge to hand-select books for each of us that were always spot-on.

I swear, just about every time I arrived at my parents’ house, he was wearing a shirt I had given him. The one from the Montana diner with 50 different pies, or from the surf shop in Australia, or the “I (heart) Pad Thai” sweatshirt I had made for him. I asked him about this just a month ago and said, “Dad, do you always wear a shirt I gave you when you know I’m coming over?” He said “No,” but I honestly think his thoughtfulness had become part of his subconscious, his way of being in the world.

For his 83rd birthday, I gave him a small fill-in-the-blank book called “Dad, In His Own Words” and we just discovered that he had started to write in it. One of the questions was: What do you miss most about being a kid? And he wrote “Being Free to play. I liked being playful.” I can tell you that Adrienne and I, and Kai, Kole and Charlie, don’t think he ever lost that playfulness. As kids in Harvard, I remember BEGGING him to wrestle with us after dinner, and giggling with anticipation when I knew he was trying to tickle me under the chin, which was his signature move. Later, at family gatherings in Gloucester, he and the grandkids would disappear for their wrestling match, and usually the kids would emerge first, red-faced and sweaty, all disheveled, with victorious ear-to-ear grins. Eventually Dad would appear, hair mussed up just a tiny bit.

He also kept on playing the many different sports he loved. Skiing, basketball, tennis, racquetball, kung fu, tai chi, windsurfing, sailing, kayaking, golf… to name just a few. [HAHA] Our backyard in Harvard had: one (regulation height) volleyball net, one (regulation height) badminton net, one (regulation distance) horseshoe pit, one (regulation height) basketball hoop (that was WAY too high for his daughters) and one on-demand croquet course that was always laid out at, you guessed it, regulation distance. He also coached our youth sports teams, organized town tennis tournaments and an annual softball game/cookout, and, as often as possible, was the #1 fan on the sidelines of his grandkids’ various games.

Dad just loved learning. And, when he decided to learn about something, he learned ALL ABOUT IT. In that way, he was like the bulldogs he loved so much (Jinx, Oliver, and Winnie) - relentless in his pursuit, not of bones or shoes, but of knowledge. He read something every single day – there were many novels, but far more nonfiction than fiction. He is someone who actually read ALL the newspapers and magazines he subscribed to like: The Boston Globe, Foreign Affairs, The Week, and his beloved Consumer Reports. I bet many of us in this room received articles he’d cut out, maybe highlighted with the things he thought we would find interesting. I don’t know about you, but those clippings were ALWAYS something I found interesting. He nailed it.

He also learned from all of us. From his TEC clients, his daughters’ friends, his grandkids, his neighbors, and his many, many friends, he listened and learned. He asked questions that drew things out. He somehow heard me say things I couldn’t say, or didn’t even know I was saying. He took his time, and was deliberate with his words.

I’ve been thinking a lot about how my Dad helped so many people fix situations and figure things out over the years. Which is really VERY ironic because he was not good at fixing actual things; he was NOT handy AT ALL. Although he did build a house once! A dollhouse, for me and Adrienne, but I tend to suspect his friend may have been the general contractor on that job. Pretty much the handiest thing he ever did was pull his miniature swiss army knife from his pocket every Christmas, extract the tiny scissors, and (eventually) cut whatever plastic strip was preventing a grandkid from getting into a present.

My Dad taught us all how to fix things ourselves. He empowered and guided his children, friends and clients with knowledge and wisdom. He provided us the tools we needed to be better humans in the world rather than telling us HOW to fix something or WHAT to do. Well…. except maybe when it came to sports… I received a few unsolicited tennis and golf swing lessons.

Aside from that, he really never told me what I should do. Even as a teenager when I would sneakily approach him to get permission to do something Mom had already said “no” to, his answer was always “What did your mother say?” - I would grunt and stomp away, and I figured out for myself what I should do.

I keep wanting to be able to FIX the last year of his life, especially the last ten days - make him more comfortable, make him less thirsty. But, ultimately he fixed what he needed to fix for himself. He figured it out on his own. I believe that.

From now on, I may just spell the word “guide” by replacing the “i” with a “y” because this IS my Dad: A loving and wise Guyde who will continue to coach us and support us for as long as we want.

Lastly, I want to say that I am incredibly grateful for my Mom. My parents loved each other so very deeply, and for 54 years! which is just truly amazing. She says my Dad made her a better person, and he said the exact same about her. They set a crazy high bar for what a marriage can be (sorry, Tim!) and it’s important to know that what they created together is still here. It’s not gone.

Thank you for being here to celebrate the best Dad ever, and for letting me share all of this with you today. And for quietly listening, like Dad would have, and probably is. 

Leslie Fincke
2022, North Shore Arts Association, Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA, USA

This is the poem that Rona Tyndall, Minister at West Gloucester Trinitarian Congregational Church in, opened Guy's Celebration of Life with on October 17th. 

I am standing upon the seashore.

A ship at my side spreads her whites ails to the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean.

She is an object of beauty and strength.

I stand and watch her until at length

She hangs like a speck of white cloud just where the sea and sky come to mingle with each other.

Then, someone at my side says;

"There, she is gone!"

"Gone where?"

Gone from my sight. That is all.

She is just as large in mast and hull and spar as she was when she left my side and she is just as able to bear herl oad of living freight to her destined port.

Her diminished size is in me, not in her.

And just at the moment when someone at my side says, "There, she is gone!"

There are other eyes watching her coming, and other voices ready to take up the glad shout;

"Here she comes!"

And that is dying.

Leslie Fincke
2022, North Shore Arts Association, Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA, USA

This is the Epitaph read by Rona Tyndall, Minister at West Gloucester Trinitarian Congregational Church, at Guy's Celebration of Life on Oct. 17th

Epitaph by Merrit Malloy

When I die

Give what’s left of me away

To children

And old men that wait to die.

And if you need to cry,

Cry for your brother

Walking the street beside you.

And when you need me,

Put your arms

Around anyone

And give them

What you need to give to me.

I want to leave you something,

Something better

Than words

Or sounds.

Look for me

In the people I’ve known

Or loved,

And if you cannot give me away,

At least let me live on in your eyes

And not your mind.

You can love me most

By letting

Hands touch hands,

By letting bodies touch bodies,

And by letting go

Of children

That need to be free.

Love doesn’t die,

People do.

So, when all that’s left of me

Is love,

Give me away.

Leslie Fincke
2022, North Shore Arts Association, Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA, USA

This is the poem by David Whyte that was read by Guy's dear friend Pam Frederick at the Celebration of Life on Oct. 17th. 

SETTING OUT AT DUSK

The kayak sits on the black water

covered by trees.

Late October leaves drift by its bow.

Paddling out for weekend days away from noise

this silence leaves me unsure,

an old friend I haven’t met for years.

I sit, rudder pulled up, getting to know him,

double bladed paddle

dipping slowly in cold water

and looking up, see a single otter, skittering

on the grassy bank, stop,

—look round, see me, low shape on still water,—

roll back into the trees, leave me with silence.

I watch clouds gather between islands,

the wind pick up, shearwaters lift on the grey sea.

Through the sip-slap of waves on the lifting hull

I prick my ears for the small sounds

at the very edge of silence and then,

I pull the bow out into the wide sea,

paddle dipping

toward darkness and enter again. The quiet.

‘Setting Out At Dusk”

From River Flow

New and Selected Poems

©David Whyte and Many Rivers Press

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Guy's Grandson, Kai Roberto, …
2022, North Shore Arts Association, Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA, USA
Guy's Grandson, Kai Roberto, read this poem "Ocean" by Mary Oliver at the Celebration of Life on October 17th.
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We are better people for having Guy as our friend for more than 50 years. 

Our entire family has many fond memories of our time with Guy, Andrea and family.  We loved him and will miss him.  Even in their grief this loving family held a Memorial Service which was a genuine tribute to Guy, the man, husband, father, grandfather and friend. 

We so loved Guy, our wonderful "tugboat," and will miss him terribly.
Pam/Glen
Guy Fincke is yet another of the 30+ years guys upon whose shoulders the great legacy of TEC/Vistage was built and grew...

Guy, like the other 1980s standard bearers in our international organization, Peter Baiardi, Jeff Babcock., Bob Waterloo, Ozzie Gontang, Larry Cassidy and John Walker, planted the flag, set our standards and lived our values...
I was honored to be in the 1987 new chairman class with Guy... I knew him to be soft spoken, unflappable, of impeccable integrity and, to all who ever had conversation with him, a friend...

God speed

Dearest Andrea, Adrienne, and Leslie. With deepest sorrow and love I extend my condolences to the three of you, Guy's three beloved roses. He gave so much of his wisdom, empathy, and friendship to me and left an admirable legacy for all of us who had the gift of knowing him! When my mother passed away he gave me this beautiful poem from Victor Hugo, which has accompanied and given me comfort and serenity for over 30 years. I would love to share it with you now.

I am standing upon the seashore.

A ship at my side spreads her white

sails to the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean.

She is an object of beauty and strength.

I stand and watch her until at length

she hangs like a speck of white cloud

just where the sea and sky come

to mingle with each other.

Then, someone at my side says;

"There, she is gone!"

"Gone where?"

Gone from my sight. That is all.

She is just as large in mast and hull

and spar as she was when she left my side

and she is just as able to bear her

load of living freight to her destined port.

Her diminished size is in me, not in her.

And just at the moment when someone

at my side says, "There, she is gone!"

There are other eyes watching her coming,

and other voices ready to take up the glad shout;

"Here she comes!"

And that is dying.

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I had the pleasure and privilege of working with Guy as a fellow TEC/Vistage Chair here in the Boston area. He was a wonderful man and a masterful Chair. Thinking of all the family, friends, and colleagues who knew, loved, and will miss Guy. 
TEC Chair Community at 30th A…
1987, San Diego, CA
TEC Chair Community at 30th Anniversary of founding in 1957
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Robert Heckman
2016, Sterling Heights, MI, USA
I was at my lowest point during very painful throat cancer radiation treatments. Guy called me and I was able to unload on him about my pain. He was so sympathetic and caring that I was able to get through the worst time of my life. I will never forget his kindness and support. I don't have many really close friends and Guy,s passing leaves a huge void in my life, but I know he would tell me "suck it up, life must go on". We can all learn so much from Guy. His legacy will live for years to come.
'
During my tenure as CEO of the Butcher Co. the company enjoyed considerable success.  Many people helped me and contributed to the results.   No one - NO ONE, helped me more and made a more positive difference in my ability to lead.  Guy literally helped me see organizational life and performance differently.  He changed my perspective, without which the values, people development and value creation would not have happened.  Thank you Guy, you made me a better person.   JIM NELSON. 

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