The Joyful Mysteries for Jocelyn Nydam Redfern - Rosary held for Jocelyn - by Joanne Pearring
(in no particular order)
First Joyful Mystery, The Annunciation.
1. Jocelyn’s first “Yes” to God began with her birth in Manitou Springs, when our neighbor Jessie Stump called upstairs, ‘Do I hear a baby up there.”
2. Baby Josie went to work with us, greeting visitors to our office at Catholic Youth Ministries with a “Hi and a smile” until she was 2. She attended planning meetings, the weird Olympics, a track event at the USAFA, dances, retreats, and celebrations.
3. When her parents started working from home, Josie welcomed her brother Jeffrey on October 29, 1979.
4. At 5, she responded to my request to do something by saying, “Mom, that isn’t necessary.” And she was right.
5. A veracious reader at seven, she informed me that I needed to learn a second language for when I had my stroke. A second language is stored in a part of the brain not affected by a stroke, so I would still be able to talk to her.
6. Her first communion at Our Lady of Perpetual Help was a joy-filled gathering of family, friends, and Church community.
7. During our time at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Josie became the big sister to Jillian, Julia, Judith, and Jenelle.
8. In junior year, she called asking for permission to go to a party after the football game. But when we said, “OK,” she responded, “I understand. I will be right home.”
9. Jocelyn learned to read and speak a bit in German, the King’s French, Parisian French (reading Le Mis in French in a week as a senior), and Mandarin.
10. She was confirmed at Corpus Christi by her spiritual leader and friend, Bishop Richard C Hanifen.
Second Joyful Mystery, The Visitation.
1. As a young child, Josie would go next door to visit Jessie Stump. She loved spending time with her surrogate Grandmother.
2. Her childhood friend was Sara Kledzik, just up the street and around the corner. Her dad, Larry Kledzik, a Manitou artist and family friend, offered Josie art lessons so she would work with live models. She said, “No, thank you. I am just a Xerox machine reproducing the images. I am not inspired to create art.”
3. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter dinners were spent years with Pete, Linda, Andrew, and Marc playing Legos before and after the meal. The Michelins were the only ones brave enough to invite a family with six young children to dinner.
4. She traveled solo to visit her Godfather’s children, Barron and Alexa, in Rancho Sante Fe, CA. However, on one such visit, she refused the offer to drive her Godfather’s new Ferrari. She just wasn’t interested in a fast or expensive car.
5. She traveled with her brother Jeff to visit the seven Lang family cousins in Manhattan Beach, CA. It was the best of times, as they were also readers. Josie’s favorite visit was when the Langs surprised us by knocking on the door one Christmas morning. She quickly orchestrated winter jackets, hats, and boots for all seven of her California cousins.
6. At 15, she agreed to care for the infant of one of John’s business associates in Germany part-time for the summer. When the 20 hours turned into 40, she never complained or called to ask to come home. We didn’t find out until she returned home, and then it was from the baby’s mother, not Jocelyn.
7. Jocelyn was the Designated Driver for her friends’ gatherings.
8. In recent years, Jocelyn joined friends to revive the Manitou Springs Women’s Club and invited her mother to attend with her.
9. Jocelyn started “Fox & Shrew,” designing dresses with pockets and silk linings, sizing the patterns, choosing the fabric, and managing inventory, marketing, and sales for her dress company. You can still find it at https://foxandshrew.com.
10. Her motto: “We put conscience at the heart of our business model, creating exceptionally beautiful clothing that is made to last. We make every garment from cotton deadstock, sourced exclusively from other woman-owned businesses. We cut every piece by hand, to conserve materials and reduce textile waste. We donate all scraps for reuse by local textile artists. Each garment is handmade by a skilled artesian-you can find their signature on the care tag.”
Third Joyful Mystery, The Birth of Jesus
1. Dressed in scrubs at her brother’s bed in the ICU, just hours after he was born at home with complications, she leaned over him and said, “Don’t worry, he will be all right.”
2. We found her hiding behind a door on her first day at preschool. She didn’t want to return because “the teachers took her work from her before she was finished, and the kids on the playground were mean.”
3. Josie started the Pearring legacy at “Born to the Golden Mountain Montessori School,” which ended when her two sons, Zeke and Chi, graduated.
4. On the third day of 1st grade, she was reading Huckleberry Finn when the teacher asked her a question. She answered correctly before returning to her reading and was immediately promoted to the second grade.
5. In elementary, she wore dresses with pockets and hats, but hats were no longer allowed in middle school.
6. Her interests were Science, Music, and Art. She enjoyed spending time with Mrs. McGrew in the Gifted and Talented Program.
7. As an adult, she dropped “Josie” and became “Jocelyn,” continuing to wear dresses. Her shoes graduated to 4” heels, with a matching handbag holding the current book she was reading, a scarf, or other accessory.
8. The Birth of Ezekiel, “Zeke” in NYC on September 17, 2006. Jocelyn was the only one that night who didn’t have a C-section.
9. Malachi, “Chi,” was born suddenly and early on May 29, 2008, when her water broke.
Fourth Joyful Mystery- The Presentation in the Temple
1. In high school, Josie befriended a German foreign exchange student, Kristin, and discovered that Kristin’s living situation was not safe. The Morath family from Our Lady of Perpetual Help then sponsored Kristin. A few years later, Josie had us sponsor her sister Eva, who quickly became a part of the family.
2. A classmate, Cassie, was living in a dangerous situation. Josie welcomed Cassie into our home, giving up half her bedroom. Cassie went on to attend Colorado College on scholarship and graduated magna cum laude.
3. The Manitou Springs School Board voted to allow high schoolers to opt out of health because of Josie’s answers on the final. She received a failing grade for answering the questions according to her faith. To the question of the three reasons for suicide, Josie answered: “There are no reasons for suicide. God gives life and only God can take life. Life is God’s gift of love.” Her brother Jeff took Ballroom dancing at PPCC instead of health the following year.
4. At Mock Trail in high school, the judge came down from the bench to shake Josie’s hand and say, “I hope to see you in court someday.” She told me, “I could never become a lawyer because I would become mean-spirited.” She also decided against being a doctor because “I would have a lousy bedside manner.”
5. Despite being first chair flute, achieving all 1’s at competitions, when Mr. Nuccio told her, “Although you play technically perfect, you don’t play with feeling.” She agreed and quit to make way for someone else.
6. In High School, Jocelyn wrote about my friend Karen’s Multiple Sclerosis, winning a $25,000 scholarship to college.
7. At graduation, as President of the Senior Class, she introduced her predecessor, James Bixler, to get the recognition she felt he deserved.
8. During college she renovated her four-unit brownstone in Montreal, plastering, tiling, bricking, rewiring and plumbing by reading instructions on the internet. She gave the profit from its sale to her parents to use as down payments for two of her siblings’ property purchases.
9. After the Manitou flood, her family welcomed Lorilei, an artist, into their home until she could recover from losing everything.
Fifth Joyful Mystery- The Finding in the Temple
1. At every University she attended — McGill in Quebec, Trinity in Dublin, Columbia in NYC, and Regis in Denver — she only took undergraduate and graduate theology courses. She never received a diploma. “What job would a degree in theology be good for anyway?”
2. Jocelyn loved to walk everywhere, from the trails in Manitou to the mountains of Europe and Asia and big city streets. She completed many day-long journeys, one of which was the perimeter of Manhattan with friends who joined her for sections along the way—a 32-mile hike.
3. In 2000, when the baggage equipment at the new DIA lost her luggage, she continued to San Francisco borrowing clothes from her sisters for Grandma Louise’s funeral.
4. When she returned to DIA to pick up her suitcase, the new automatic baggage handling equipment had destroyed it. They gave her a new suitcase and a check for $56.37 for the 32 items missing, mostly paperbacks sawed in half by the machinery. I pointed out to the baggage agent that they were lucky it wasn’t her younger sister’s suitcase … one pair of jeans was more than the $56.37.
5. In 2001, she came home from Taiwan without being asked, leaving behind her teaching job and friends to help her parents in their time of need.
6. As executive assistant to the Chairmen of the Board of Tishman Speyer, she handled all his correspondence, including invitations for the annual “American Christmas” at Rockefeller Center. Her boss negotiated the contract for her next job as Director of Marketing with New Wave Media, a publishing company with multiple monthly maritime magazines.
7. Back in Colorado, she delayed the launch of her clothing line, “Fox & Shrew,” to stay home with her sons, Zeke and Chi, during the COVID school shutdown.
8. Jocelyn renovated her clothing store, leveled the floor, and built dressing rooms, a dais with full-length mirrors, a back room for inventory, and a photo booth for marketing shots. She also outfitted a Metro Van so that her models could change outfits as she drove to different locations for photo shoots. Her dresses are featured in a NYC SoHo boutique.
9. She was the only family member to make the time to read and understand her sister Jillian’s doctorate and subsequent published papers.
10. Before she died, Jocelyn gave away her dresses, shoes, handbags, and accessories to her siblings and girlfriends. May she be clothed in the glory of the Lord.