At my mother's memorial ceremony yesterday, I provided the below to all attending as a handout honoring the life of my beloved mom. 💜🙏 Molly
Nancy Marilyn Moesta Strong
June 5, 1926 – June 20, 2020
“She overcame much to embody an
awakening
heart and beautiful soul,
radiating
the miracle, beauty,
and
power of love.”
Nancy was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1926.
She
grew up in Grosse Pointe, a suburb of Detroit,
and
was the only child of Amalia and Marvin
Moesta.
Nancy was shy but well-liked by her
classmates,
graduating from Grosse Pointe
High
School in 1944 – where her twins would
also
graduate in 1969. Nancy enjoyed horseback
riding,
tennis, swimming in Sylvan Lake and Lake
St.
Clair, and helping in the war efforts during
the
second World War. She went on to attend
Duke
University and the University of Michigan.
Early in the year of 1949, Nancy met John Ward
Strong on
a blind date. Jack, as he was known,
was
a very handsome bachelor 11 years her senior
and
a chemist who was the lead researcher at
Parke
Davis, a pharmaceutical company in Detroit.
After a whirlwind
romance, Jack and Nancy were
married on
June 25th,
1949. They honeymooned
in Burmuda. Just
over 1-1/2 years later, on
March 25th,
1951 Nancy gave
birth to twins,
Molly and Johnny. This was both
a joy
and a great challenge.
Over the following years, Nancy's great passion for
travel
led her to plan family trips to Florida, Bermuda,
Washington
DC, New York City, Europe, and to the
western
and eastern parts of the country. After the
twins
grew older, Jack and Nancy continued to travel
to
the Caribbean, Europe, and Canada.
The following years of Nancy's life brought many
losses.
Jack died suddenly in 1975, and just over
two
years later John committed suicide. There were
three more
marriages which followed, each ending
in divorce or
death. In the midst of travel adventures
and various moves to Arizona, back to Michigan,
and then to Florida, there were these great losses.
Then, in 2013, Nancy moved to live near Molly and
her family
in the Pacific Northwest. It was this part
of Nancy's
life that brought the greatest gifts, grace,
and
miracles. There was the loving presence of Molly
and Ron, grandsons Brian and Kevin and Matthew,
and great-grandchildren Oliver, Eleanor, and Ethan
who were born. This was the time when Nancy was
able
to “let sorrow be the doorway into an open
heart.” Over the last seven years of Nancy's life,
it was the power of compassion, grace, and love
that made the impossible possible. It was the
power of love that changed everything.
“The more we love, the more real we become.”
–
Stephen Levine
Our true nature
is a beautiful jewel
in a lotus flower
floating on a lake
in the center
of our heart.
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