Re: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

2013-01-17 Thread Nan
I'm so sorry for your loss, Billy.  A moving tribute.  Thanks for sharing.

Nan



 From: Greg mongrelti...@gmail.com
To: Billy Lang blan...@verizon.net; quad-list@eskimo.com 
quad-list@eskimo.com 
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:55 PM
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray
 

Thanks for sharing that, Billy.  I'm sorry for your loss.

Greg



On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 12:20 PM, Billy Lang blan...@verizon.net wrote:



So, as a tribute to Ray, my Buddy, here’s a message he sent me in October, 
2012 as an attachment:
 
 
Just in case I'm gone tomorrow
 
As I approach my mid-seventies, I am struck by the inevitability that the 
party must end. And one clear, cold morning after I'm gone, my wife will 
awaken in the warmth of our bedroom and she will be struck with the pain of 
learning that sometimes there isn't anymore.
No more hugs, no more special moments to celebrate together, no more phone 
calls just to chat, no more just one minute.
Sometimes, what we care about the most gets all used up and goes away, never 
to return before we can say good-bye, say I love you.
So while we have it, it's best we love it, care for it, fix it when it's 
broken and heal it when it's sick.
This is true for marriage.And old cars. And children with bad report 
cards, And dogs with bad hips. And aging parents and grandparents. We keep 
them because they are worth it, because we are worth it.
Some things we keep -- like a best friend who moved away or a sister-in-law 
after divorce. There are just some things that make us happy, no matter what.
Life is important, like people we know who are special. And so, we keep them 
close!
Suppose one morning you never wake up, do all your friends know how you 
really feel? The important thing is to let every one of your friends know 
your true feelings, even if you think they don't love you back.

 
RIP Ray, I miss you and the emails.
 
Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!
 
Billy



Re: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

2013-01-15 Thread Greg
Thanks for sharing that, Billy.  I'm sorry for your loss.

Greg


On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 12:20 PM, Billy Lang blan...@verizon.net wrote:


 So, as a tribute to Ray, my Buddy, here’s a message he sent me in October,
 2012 as an attachment:


 *Just in case I'm gone tomorrow*

 As I approach my mid-seventies, I am struck by the inevitability that the
 party must end. And one clear, cold morning after I'm gone, my wife will
 awaken in the warmth of our bedroom and she will be struck with the pain of
 learning that sometimes there isn't anymore.
 No more hugs, no more special moments to celebrate together, no more phone
 calls just to chat, no more just one minute.
 Sometimes, what we care about the most gets all used up and goes away,
 never to return before we can say good-bye, say I love you.
 So while we have it, it's best we love it, care for it, fix it when it's
 broken and heal it when it's sick.
 This is true for marriage.And old cars. And children with bad report
 cards, And dogs with bad hips. And aging parents and grandparents. We keep
 them because they are worth it, because we are worth it.
 Some things we keep -- like a best friend who moved away or a
 sister-in-law after divorce. There are just some things that make us happy,
 no matter what.
 Life is important, like people we know who are special. And so, we keep
 them close!
 Suppose one morning you never wake up, do all your friends know how you
 really feel? The important thing is to let every one of your friends know
 your true feelings, even if you think they don't love you back.


 RIP Ray, I miss you and the emails.

 Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!

 Billy




[QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

2013-01-14 Thread Billy Lang




 
 From: Billy Lang 
 Sent: Saturday, January 12, 2013 1:35 PM
 Subject: My Buddy Ray
 
 My Buddy Ray died last week. He had COPD and carried an oxygen tank along 
 with him everywhere he went. A few years ago he contracted pneumonia. He was 
 placed in a coma and put on a respirator. I never thought I would see him 
 again but he pulled through. This completely changed my perception . From 
 that day on I would never give up on anyone. Never in my realm of 
 experiencing loved ones dying did I expect Ray to breathe on his own once he 
 was taken off the respirator.
  
 Years later, after going out to eat with my parents, Bobbie and my wife 
 Paula, Ray fell and broke his hip. It was the beginning of a long desperate 
 battle that ended ultimately in his death. At the wake there were the same 
 platitudes namely it was his time, he couldn't fight anymore and he is 
 at rest now.
  
 Today, I got back on my old desktop computer and realized I had no new jokes. 
 For at least the last five years Ray had been sending me emails of jokes, 
 prayers, lessons on life, politics (mostly against Obama) and the occasional 
 e-card. Now, Ray did not send one a day. He would send five or the occasional 
 seven emails. Up until the middle of 2012 he would send the emails as 
 attachments where you annoyingly had to click open the email he sent then 
 click open the attachment and If the attachment opened a web address or a 
 movie there was another click. It got so frustrating that I really didn't 
 care if the email was funny.
  
 So, as a tribute to Ray, my Buddy, here’s a message he sent me in October, 
 2012 as an attachment:
  
  
 Just in case I'm gone tomorrow
 
 As I approach my mid-seventies, I am struck by the inevitability that the 
 party must end. And one clear, cold morning after I'm gone, my wife will 
 awaken in the warmth of our bedroom and she will be struck with the pain of 
 learning that sometimes there isn't anymore.
 No more hugs, no more special moments to celebrate together, no more phone 
 calls just to chat, no more just one minute.
 Sometimes, what we care about the most gets all used up and goes away, never 
 to return before we can say good-bye, say I love you.
 So while we have it, it's best we love it, care for it, fix it when it's 
 broken and heal it when it's sick.
 This is true for marriage.And old cars. And children with bad report 
 cards, And dogs with bad hips. And aging parents and grandparents. We keep 
 them because they are worth it, because we are worth it.
 Some things we keep -- like a best friend who moved away or a sister-in-law 
 after divorce. There are just some things that make us happy, no matter what.
 Life is important, like people we know who are special. And so, we keep them 
 close!
 Suppose one morning you never wake up, do all your friends know how you 
 really feel? The important thing is to let every one of your friends know 
 your true feelings, even if you think they don't love you back.
 
  
 RIP Ray, I miss you and the emails.
  
 Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!
  
 Billy
  
 
 


Re: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

2013-01-14 Thread bobbie299


Sounds like a wonderful cherished friendship. That was a very nice 
tribute.





-Original Message-
From: Billy Lang blan...@verizon.net
To: quad-list quad-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Mon, Jan 14, 2013 1:20 pm
Subject: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

From: Billy Lang 
Sent: Saturday, January 12, 2013 1:35 PM
Subject: My Buddy Ray


My Buddy Ray died last week. He had COPD and carried an oxygen tank 
along with him everywhere he went. A few years ago he contracted 
pneumonia. He was placed in a coma and put on a respirator. I never 
thought I would see him again but he pulled through. This completely 
changed my perception . From that day on I would never give up on 
anyone. Never in my realm of experiencing loved ones dying did I expect 
Ray to breathe on his own once he was taken off the respirator.

 
Years later, after going out to eat with my parents, Bobbie and my wife 
Paula, Ray fell and broke his hip. It was the beginning of a long 
desperate battle that ended ultimately in his death. At the wake there 
were the same platitudes namely it was his time, he couldn't fight 
anymore and he is at rest now.

 
Today, I got back on my old desktop computer and realized I had no new 
jokes. For at least the last five years Ray had been sending me emails 
of jokes, prayers, lessons on life, politics (mostly against Obama) and 
the occasional e-card. Now, Ray did not send one a day. He would send 
five or the occasional seven emails. Up until the middle of 2012 he 
would send the emails as attachments where you annoyingly had to click 
open the email he sent then click open the attachment and If the 
attachment opened a web address or a movie there was another click. It 
got so frustrating that I really didn't care if the email was funny.

 
So, as a tribute to Ray, my Buddy, here’s a message he sent me in 
October, 2012 as an attachment:

 
 
Just in case I'm gone tomorrow

As I approach my mid-seventies, I am struck by the inevitability that 
the party must end. And one clear, cold morning after I'm gone, my wife 
will awaken in the warmth of our bedroom and she will be struck with 
the pain of learning that sometimes there isn't anymore.
No more hugs, no more special moments to celebrate together, no more 
phone calls just to chat, no more just one minute.
Sometimes, what we care about the most gets all used up and goes away, 
never to return before we can say good-bye, say I love you.
So while we have it, it's best we love it, care for it, fix it when 
it's broken and heal it when it's sick.
This is true for marriage.And old cars. And children with bad 
report cards, And dogs with bad hips. And aging parents and 
grandparents. We keep them because they are worth it, because we are 
worth it.
Some things we keep -- like a best friend who moved away or a 
sister-in-law after divorce. There are just some things that make us 
happy, no matter what.
Life is important, like people we know who are special. And so, we keep 
them close!
Suppose one morning you never wake up, do all your friends know how you 
really feel? The important thing is to let every one of your friends 
know your true feelings, even if you think they don't love you back.


 
RIP Ray, I miss you and the emails.
 
Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!
 
Billy
 




Re: [QUAD-L] Fwd: My Buddy Ray

2013-01-14 Thread Don Price


Loved it, Billy. Sorry for your loss. Ray sounds like an amazing guy.
 
I, too, have seen some amazing recoveries from sickness. I have seen miracles 
and it makes me want to keep fighting on. About 10 years ago I was in the 
hospital with pnuemonia. That was the sickest I've ever been and about the 
scariest time in my life. Lots of prayers and good friends helped me through 
that. I try to remember that moment to appreciate today.
 
Be thankful for every day.
 
Don.




From: Billy Lang 
Sent: Saturday, January 12, 2013 1:35 PM
Subject: My Buddy Ray


My Buddy Ray died last week. He had COPD and carried an oxygen tank along with 
him everywhere he went. A few years ago he contracted pneumonia. He was placed 
in a coma and put on a respirator. I never thought I would see him again but 
he pulled through. This completely changed my perception . From that day on I 
would never give up on anyone. Never in my realm of experiencing loved ones 
dying did I expect Ray to breathe on his own once he was taken off the 
respirator.

Years later, after going out to eat with my parents, Bobbie and my wife Paula, 
Ray fell and broke his hip. It was the beginning of a long desperate battle 
that ended ultimately in his death. At the wake there were the same platitudes 
namely it was his time, he couldn't fight anymore and he is at rest now.

Today, I got back on my old desktop computer and realized I had no new jokes. 
For at least the last five years Ray had been sending me emails of jokes, 
prayers, lessons on life, politics (mostly against Obama) and the occasional 
e-card. Now, Ray did not send one a day. He would send five or the occasional 
seven emails. Up until the middle of 2012 he would send the emails as 
attachments where you annoyingly had to click open the email he sent then 
click open the attachment and If the attachment opened a web address or a 
movie there was another click. It got so frustrating that I really didn't care 
if the email was funny. 

So, as a tribute to Ray, my Buddy, here’s a message he sent me in October, 
2012 as an attachment:


Just in case I'm gone tomorrow
 
As I approach my mid-seventies, I am struck by the inevitability that the 
party must end. And one clear, cold morning after I'm gone, my wife will 
awaken in the warmth of our bedroom and she will be struck with the pain of 
learning that sometimes there isn't anymore.
No more hugs, no more special moments to celebrate together, no more phone 
calls just to chat, no more just one minute.
Sometimes, what we care about the most gets all used up and goes away, never 
to return before we can say good-bye, say I love you.
So while we have it, it's best we love it, care for it, fix it when it's 
broken and heal it when it's sick.
This is true for marriage.And old cars. And children with bad report 
cards, And dogs with bad hips. And aging parents and grandparents. We keep 
them because they are worth it, because we are worth it.
Some things we keep -- like a best friend who moved away or a sister-in-law 
after divorce. There are just some things that make us happy, no matter what.
Life is important, like people we know who are special. And so, we keep them 
close!
Suppose one morning you never wake up, do all your friends know how you really 
feel? The important thing is to let every one of your friends know your true 
feelings, even if you think they don't love you back.


RIP Ray, I miss you and the emails.

Don't let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!

Billy