Thursday, July 20, 2017

65th Birthday Letter Part 2





7-20-17
65th Birthday Letter Part 2
   I write birthday letters to my grandchildren about their births and things that happen in their lives. I kept journals of their mom’s life.  No one will be around to tell the grandchildren about the birth of their grandma.  So I am going to try.  One thing that I remember my mom saying was that she was going to name me June.  I was supposed to be born in the month of June, but I pushed my way out on Tuesday, July 1, 1952 at 1:45pm.  I did not want the name June Bedrosky, not that Rene Juanita Bedrosky was any better.  I was 22 ¾ inches long and weighted 8lbs 5 1/2 ozs.  My mother was Deloris Helen Bussell Bedrosky age 22 and my father was PFC Richard Charles Bedrosky age 23.  At the time of my birth he was in the army stationed in Germany.  I was born at St. Catherine’s hospital in Omaha NE by Dr. Anthony Ross Pantano.  My birth cost $125.25 while the hospital charged $9.50 a day.  My mother could see me at 9:30 am, 1:30 pm, 5:30 pm, 9:30pm.  My baby bracelets cost $1.00 upon leaving the hospital.  Does that mean I did not have it until checkout, so maybe I was switched at birth?  Fathers saw their child at delivery and then once each evening between 7:30-8:30. 
     I have a lot of information regarding my birth since I was the first child of four.  So my mother saved things like Reminders for Maternity Patients, bills for my birth and crib, presents, clothes, cards etc.  I threw out some of my baby things, five years ago when I was downsizing.  I saved paper things that could be kept in a three ring binder.  I have my baby hair samples and a 14k gold baby ring.  If I had remembered that ring, it would have gone to the pawn shop when we cashed in most of all the gold and silver we had for the money.  I even was selling my wedding band, along with class rings, etc.  When I got home I threw the bag that I had everything in a drawer.  Months later I got the bag out and there was my white gold wedding band.  I had lost weight and my current wedding rings were too loose, so I wear the smaller original band on top of the loose rings.  Speaking of saving things, I still have the necklace that my father sent me at birth from Germany.  I’ve worn it at times, but will be handed down to children or grands, or taken to a pawn shop when we need money for nursing care in our later years.  Funny thing about life, you come into the world costing $125.50 and leave costing thousands, if not more.  We have bought our grave sites and marker, so one less cost.  It was a weird feeling seeing our grave site marker.  I am not one to visit grave sites, but I checked my mom’s site maybe a couple of years after her death, and they had not entered her death date that I had paid for.  
    When I was born I lived at 1203 ½ South 11th St.  I think I remember my mom saying the house had a stone lion at the entrance by the side walk.  I later lived on A street by St. Thomas More in a house that my dad built in the so called country.  Too many neighbors, so we moved to 1403 Elm.  Elm street was in a hollow on a dead end street with just a few neighbors.  The house even had an out house until my dad added a septic tank and a bathroom.  All four kids shared a bedroom in the beginning. I was in 2nd grade when we moved to Elm St., and went to St. Patrick’s grade school.  
    I was baptized as an infant on 9-14-52 at St. Philomena, the church my parents were married at on July 28, 1951.  My dad must have had a leave from the army nine months before my birth, since he was in army during his wedding.  Maybe my mom met up for a visit when he was stationed in US for training nine months before my birth.  I don’t remember how my parents even met.  Kids, grandpa and grandma met at South High senior year.  Grandpa lived less that I mile from my house and we knew a lot of the same people.  We were in English class together, and I was the cute, thin, quiet girl with the long blond hair.  Grandpa had hair back then that was dark, and weighed a lot less because he played baseball.  Our families did not have things like chips, ice cream, sweet cereals, pop etc.  We gained the weight after we got married.  Brought the stuff we did not have as kids and even ate fast foods, or went to restaurants. 
      Grandkids that is just the little bit that I know about my birth, more info can be found in my binders. You will see other things like my old pay checks, report cards, and other things I saved.  I took pictures of the things that I threw out like books, art projects that I had saved from my childhood. I am still wondering if I may have been switched at birth.  Weston when you were born we thought you were, even though I was at your birth.  You had dark hair, and looked like a foreign baby next to the blondes’ of your siblings. You now look just like them, I still have a hard time telling you and Easton apart in pictures, and Katelyn has glasses now, so I can tell the girls apart now except in dance videos, since Kate does not wear her glasses.  I don’t think I look like my family.

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