Friday, December 5, 2014

Memories of My Brother David



December 2014
    I have wanted to write about the members of my family.  Why am I doing this?  Many reasons, #1 so when I am in my nursing home bed maybe a family member can read these writings to me until I fall asleep to dream of the days gone by and the memories that I can no longer remember.  #2 As the years go by my memories are getting mixed up.  Just recently I was telling a friend that my first date with Pat was to a Three Dog Night concert at the Civic.  Later when sharing with Pat, he informed me that it was the Guess Who concert at the Music Hall not the Civic.  Two memories wrong!  #3 Trying to exercise my brain by writing, not like a friend of mine is doing.  She is taking a history class and an algebra class and had to get her homework done that day.  Ok I would enjoy the history.  I did love learning and teaching history.  I enjoy 0205listening to historical novels or watching historical movies.  I would hate taking an advanced algebra class.  Took it in college and taught algebra (pre not advanced).  I can find better mind building activities than working on algebra pre or advanced, such as Scrabble on my I pad with Pat or the grandkids.  #4  Writing for the grandkids, so they will know about their mom’s side of the family.  #5 Can’t remember? 

David Richard Bedrosky March 12,1955-December 5,2012

Dear Grandkids,
     This is my memories of your Great Uncle David, my brother.  When he was sick and in the hospital, we were praying for David.  Katelyn reminded me that David was the “funny one.”  He sure was.  He had a great and at times strange sense of humor.  I remember the times in Missouri when eating out that David would give the waitress such a hard funny time.  This got his daughter Theresa embarrassed and we were all laughing.  He will be remembered as the funny one along with other memories.

     David Richard Bedrosky was born in Omaha on March 12, 1955 to Richard Charles Bedrosky (3-18-29 to 9-11-97) and Deloris Helen Bussell Bedrosky (1-14-30 to 2-12-14).  He was their third child.  David had two older sisters, Rene (7-1-52) and Nannette (3-9-54) and Gary (2-6-56) a younger brother.  He lived in the neighborhood of 48th and A in a house that his father built.  The kids bedrooms were never painted due to the fact that the Bedrosky kids were allowed to draw and decorate the walls.  We moved to 1403 Elm when David was in Kindergarten.  This was in the area of the zoo and stadium.  He attended St. Patrick’s grade school.  He was held back to repeat a lower grade, so the rest of his school years he had his brother Gary in his class.  He attended South High. 

     David had a great childhood growing up on Elm St.  It was a dead end street with only a few neighbors, and a huge hollow behind our house until they began to fill in the hollow with old buildings, bridges, and people used it as a dump that we would explore and find things.  We all built forts, ice skated, played games, climbed trees, and other kid things.  David and Gary had guns and would go off and shoot rats and probably other animals and birds.  I remember getting shot in the butt with a BB as I was walking up our street.  Not sure who did the shooting.  On Sundays our parents would send up off to mass at St. Patricks.  Our parents only went to church for weddings and funerals.  We were required to attend mass.  David and Gary never made it to mass.  They were off hunting, fishing, and exploring, or hanging out with friends.  It was the one time that all the kids were out of the house on a non school day. 

      As David got older he did more fishing, took up riding motorized dirt bikes down by the river.  School was not easy for David, he would rather work with his hands building something.  He learned a lot of the building trade from his father who did it for a living.  David and Gary build tree houses and forts.  I remember a fire starting in one of those forts and a huge grass fire was started by one of them playing with matches or fireworks.  David had a thing about fires.  His job was to take the trash out.  He loved that job, since trash could be burned in a huge barrel.  He loved getting a big roaring fire going and then throw in an aerosol can to blow up.  He built go carts and skateboards back in the day.  We did not have a lot of money, so things were not bought but built.  Our walls were covered with mom’s art work, and the house was rebuilt and remodeled.  When we first moved it the first thing our dad did was built us a bathroom.  It had an outhouse.  We all slept in the same bedroom until he got around and remodeled other rooms.  I remember I slept on a lawn chair because I refused to share a bed with my siblings. Maybe that is why I have back problems?  

      We were not poor since we had food and clothing. Not too many grade school clothes were needed since we wore uniforms.  We always had money to go to the candy store to buy candy.  We had two candy/toy stores within walking distance and even could walk to a bakery.  We walked or took buses back then. I think some of our spending money came from our grandma Em or Great Aunt Marie (Auntie).  They both lived within walking distance.  We ate really well on Saturdays since that was baking and cooking day for our Grandma Em.  When it was David’s turn to walk and pickup the food from Grandma Em, I am sure he ate what he wanted from the bags or stopped off at friend’s houses to share a cookie or two.  

      I think David probably built his bike from bike parts.  Our dad was a hoarder (mom too) so we had lots of building supplies around to use, or a trip was made to the dump behind us to find what was needed for a project. David later on would go to work with his dad and help him at job sites being that extra pair of hands.  

      Another thing that David got from our father was the love of birds.  Our dad had a huge pigeon pen in the back yard and raised show pigeons.  David had a love for parakeets.  He had a few that would fly around the house, at times they would escape to enjoy the outdoors.  David would then try and call them done out of the trees.  Once Nan killed one of his birds by accident, she closed the door on one so it would not fly out.  We also grew up with pet rabbits, dogs, even a squirrel that lived on the back porch.  We also had those little house creatures like gerbils and hamsters that would get out of their cages to never be found again until the smell became overwhelming.  David even trained one of those critters to do some kind of a trick.  He had a dog Rolly that was Nan’s but soon became David’s.  Rolly followed David around the neighborhood.  David liked the big dogs and for years he had Junior one of his favorites. 

     David married the love of his life on 3-18-78.  He had been friends with Dee De (Catherine) and hung out with her brothers.  It was no surprise that he was marrying DeeDe.  They lived for a while upstairs in the house on Elm St.  Then they bought a house on 14th and Pasadena a block from the stadium.   They soon had a daughter Theresa that he loved dearly.  She was daddy’s little blond sweetheart.  David was an over the road truck driver for most of his working life.  It was hard for David to leave his family, but someone has to move our products and things we buy.  He seemed to enjoy driving and seeing the United States.  After he was no longer able to drive due to painful arthritis and the drugs for pain, he would talk about the different interstates and places that he made trips and deliveries to.  He and Nan would visit our mom every Sunday when they could.  David had a love for sea food like crab legs and shrimp.  He would bring crab legs or shrimp along with sweets for mom to snack on.  She loved his visits.  She had such a bond with David.  On the morning of his death, she was out of control and would not stop crying per the nursing staff.  The nursing staff could not get her settled down and she would not say what was wrong.  At that time she had not been told that David had died.  She knew he was sick with cancer.  We came up to tell her and she handled it better than we did.  I think she knew he had died that morning and needed to be strong for her children.  I was very concerned that she would not understand and/or deal with his death.  She chose not to go to his funeral due to the difficulties of going out. 

       Mother could get David to do anything for her along with lending her money.  Once after I had just giving her money, she asked David with tears in her eyes for money.  He handed her some cash and she turned around and smiled at me.  She had David wrapped around her little finger as the old saying goes.  She never paid him back, since she never ever paid me back.  David did not mind helping her out.  I learned to take paintings in trade for the money that I loaned her.  I have a huge collection of her art work but over paid for most of them.  

     When he was ill, we would stop by after visiting mom to share with him on how she was doing, since he could no longer visit her.  We would sit and talk about a variety of subjects plus along with the memories that we had and shared.  I learned that dad started the dump on fire because he was so sick of it.  It burned for years under ground.  On that land off of 13th by the zoo there is now a motel and McDonalds along with other businesses all built on top of a landfill/dump, our childhood playground.  

     David enjoyed spending time at Auntie and Great Uncle Charlie’s cabin along the Platte River by Hanson Lake.  He and Gary and friends would party at the cabin along with fishing.  David and DeeDe took good care of Auntie as she aged.  They did her grocery shopping and other things that she needed done.  David also took good care of DeeDe’s siblings when they need a place to stay.  David gained a son-in-law when Theresa married Sean Soucy.  David talked about being Sean’s roady for his band that he was in.  Some dads would be sad that they were losing their only daughter, but not David since he was gaining a son that he always wanted.   David was so happy on her wedding day and enjoyed the celebration.  Yes, he liked to party and be around family and friends.  A wedding of your only child is a special event.

      I am running out of memories of David.  Since I was the oldest and spent my time working, hanging out with Pat, and then moving away in 74.  I am not going to pretend that we were really close and I knew a lot about his life.  I am going to have to have his family write their memories of David for later generations or current ones.  

      Grandkids, I will have this in your binder to read when older. Others who may be reading this, it may encourage you to write down your memories of your loved ones before you forget those memories.  Trust me, you will later get memories mixed around or just forget.  Plus you may need something to read while lying in your nursing home bed.  I type and print out my writings in a big font, so if I am able to read in my later years because the font will be big enough.  Just something to think about…

     Still can’t believe that David has been gone for two years.  I still continue to pray for family members especially his wife and daughter as they go on without him.  Sure they have their memories along with pictures of the brother that I loved and are greatly missed.  But it is not the same.  One has to trust that the Lord Jesus Christ is in control; He gives life 3-9-55 and takes it away 12-5-12.  Through my tears, I need to thank the Lord for giving me David Richard Bedrosky as my brother, along with my other family members.  Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.  1 Corinthians 13:7.

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