Betty Ann Fischer 1933-2009

My mom lost the battle with Alzheimer’s last night. My brother was with her and I had just been there to see her. She was doing well at the new nursing home, but she just went into a decline. She was barely there when I saw her so I said my goodbyes. It was time.

With Alzheimer’s, Mom hadn’t really been Mom for the past couple of years. I really feel like I lost her then. My mom was very active politically and very liberal, so for her to have no idea what was going on in the last presidential race was hard. She lived long enough to see history but wasn’t aware of it.

So I prefer to remember my Mom as she was before Alzheimer’s.

My mom was the one woman in a boy’s household. I have two brothers and we did boy stuff. Camping, canoeing, hiking, sports. The toilet seat was always up. My mom just went with it. When I was little I just assumed that all moms liked doing boy stuff. Only later did I really I appreciate how much she did for the three of us.

Anyone who got to meet my mom would always say the same thing to me. “Your mom is so nice”. And she really was. An old friend of mine always referred to her as “three of the nicest people he even met”. People who knew both my mom and my dad would say to me “when you are being nice, that’s your mom, when you are being a smart-ass, that’s your dad”. Oversimplified, but fairly accurate.

She could even drive you crazy with niceness. I had this conversation with my mom about a thousand times over the course of my life:

“Steve, do you want anything to eat?” “No, Mom, I’m not hungry” “How about some cheese and crackers” “No thanks” “I have Doritos” “No mom, I said I’m not hungry” “Ice cream?” “No thanks” “Grapes?” “Mom…”

My mom could mix in with any crowd. One of my favorite memories was when I was first working as a programmer in NYC. My dad had recently passed away so Mom would come visit by herself. She’d arrive around 4:00, take a cab downtown and meet me at the office. And then she’d go out with me and the work gang. My mom, with a pint of Guinness, hanging out with 20 and 30 year olds. Very cool.

My mom even connected with my wife’s step mother, Indiana. Indiana barely speaks English and my mom barely speaks Spanish, but they still connected.

I remember Danielle visiting her in Milwaukee when Mom was still living by herself (before the Alzheimer’s was bad). Mom would play with her endlessly and Danielle loved it. In hindsight, early Alzheimer’s and a three year old attention span are a pretty good match.

She just had a way of connecting with anyone. That was her most special gift. And she was a great mom. I love her and miss her.

Comments

5 responses to “Betty Ann Fischer 1933-2009”

  1. Kenan Avatar
    Kenan

    Steve, you have my condolences on the passing of your mother.

  2. EuG Avatar
    EuG

    I remember seeing your mom in the office once…
    My condolences.

  3. CDUBYA Avatar

    I know the last few years have been really tough. Thanks for sharing a few memories with us!

  4. Kimberly Lauffer Avatar
    Kimberly Lauffer

    My condolences….

  5. Bonnee Voss Avatar
    Bonnee Voss

    Hi Steve,
    Checking through my Xmas card list, I have been wondering about Betty Ann, from whom we haven’t heard in recent years. I am terribly sorry to learn of her death after Googling for info just now.
    I worked with your Dad at the Wisconsin Conference of Churches for a dozen or so years and have fond memories of both him and your mother. John was so proud of his 3 sons and your mom truly was one of the nicest people I’ve ever met–and their politics weren’t bad either!
    I now live in Pennsylvania where my husband directs the PA Council of Churches. I’ve retired but ecumenical work carries on.

Leave a reply to CDUBYA Cancel reply