{"id":77,"date":"2013-05-28T07:41:00","date_gmt":"2013-05-28T07:41:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/memoirmunchies.com\/?p=77"},"modified":"2013-05-28T07:41:00","modified_gmt":"2013-05-28T07:41:00","slug":"memorial-day","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/memoirmunchies.com\/?p=77","title":{"rendered":"Memorial Day"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The clock has just struck midnight and, as I will myself to go to sleep, I think about the veterans in my own life and those I knew of. My grandmother had a pack of brothers who served in World War II. One of my Aunt Ouida&#8217;s 17 year old brother who died at one of the attacks near Pearl Harbor. My husband&#8217;s dad served as well. I think of the names and young faces who are featured on the local news for having been killed while serving bravely. So many people neither you and I have ever even met, but they were important. They are missed by their communities, friends and <br \/>families.<\/p>\n<p>I also think of one of the bravest soldiers I know that passed away this weekend.<\/p>\n<p>My Uncle Jewel was truly a gem. His life could have easily been The Notebook or one of those other war love stories that makes you bawl and laugh at the same time. He was a soldier in World War II.<\/p>\n<p>Uncle Jewel was a lot of things to a lot of people&#8230;a brother, son, uncle, husband, stepdad, golf buddy, fellow soldier, and friend. He was my grandmother&#8217;s brother and the last of her 7 brothers to get married, in his 50s I think. He was handsome, a jokester and people flocked to his loving jokes and songs as much as they were attracted to his wife Ouida&#8217;s Southern charm and amazing cooking.<\/p>\n<p>Jewel taught my mom and her cousins all sorts of things, like how to swing a golf club, how to bowl, how to sing silly songs like Bill Grogan&#8217;s Goat an Mares Eat Oats. Oh, those songs. Then he taught those same lessons to my generation of cousins. He made each of us feel so special. I have so many memories of times on the lake in Hot Springs, Arkansas, learning life lessons from my great uncle&#8217;s stories while simultaneously swatting away mosquitos.<\/p>\n<p>Jewel was a real golf lover and pretty darn good, from what others told me. He was kind of a legend when he was still alive, and I mean that people just loved and respected him so much. He wasn&#8217;t always perfect, but I can&#8217;t think of a thing he ever did wrong either. Last July, my mom and I flew to Mississippi for the day, to go see Jewel and Ouida. The effects of Alzheimer&#8217;s were certainly setting in; you could see it on his face. But his stories of old were still clear to him. My Uncle Max (his brother) sent us with a copy of one of Jewel&#8217;s military award descriptions. I read it aloud to him, and Jewel recalled that day very clearly. The day he saved a group of men, saving their lives from certain enemy fire and death. That day earned him a Silver Star, an incredible honor. Jewel just smiled and said, &#8220;Yep, that was a tiring day.&#8221; No kidding.<\/p>\n<p>As you go about your week, I hope you&#8217;re able to think about people like Jewel who helped shape you into who you are. Sometimes it&#8217;s necessary to look back and swim in gratefulness for the gems that taught us what we know and those who positively encouraged us. I am thankful to be a niece to some incredible men and women, some who have passed and some who are alive and well. Either way, I thank God for the heroes and heroines (military and civilians) who allowed me such great freedoms. I also thank them for teaching me life lessons that I depend on daily.<\/p>\n<p>May God comfort Jewel&#8217;s family and friends, and may we see the beauty in celebrating lives who have passed. Goodnight and Happy Memorial Day.<\/p>\n<div>~Laurel~<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The clock has just struck midnight and, as I will myself to go to sleep, I think about the veterans in my own life and those I knew of. 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