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| Grandpa Roy and Grandma Lucille Nofziger | 
Dear friend,
I hope you'll indulge me while I get a  little personal today. I want to share about one of the most influential  people in my life, a woman from whom I received good taste, discernment and  sensitivity.
My grandmother went to be with Jesus on Saturday. She was 97 years old. She had been strong and healthy for her  entire life until she broke her hip on Easter Sunday. Even though I  haven't lived near her for almost twenty years, I will miss her  immensely.
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| Grandma  working on the farm as a young girl. | 
Grandma lived on a farm about four miles  from the farm on which I grew up, and she came  over frequently to help my mom  and dad raise us four kids. She played a  big part in my young life. I  was her oldest granddaughter. Even as I got married and moved away, I  always knew she was continually praying for me.
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| My two cousins  standing beside Grandma holding me. | 
She taught me things like how to take  a bath and how to wash dishes ("wash the cleanest parts first"), and the proper way to "rid the  table" (wash the table and counter-tops twice:  first with a hot, soapy, dripping-wet  cloth to get the crumbs and soften the sticky  stuff, second to collect  the remaining sticky stuff, and finally dry it to a shine with a 
clean  towel). She tried to teach me how to sew, mend, and quilt  too, but I  never took to it. How I could use those skills now!
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| Grandma is  helping Grandpa in his business. | 
Grandma had a good work ethic. She believed that behind every good man was a good woman. She dedicated her life to her husband and family living out Proverbs 31:10-31: "An excellent wife who can find? She is far more precious than jewels.  The heart of her husband trusts in her, and he will have no lack of  gain. She will do him good and not evil all the days of her life...."
I'll never forget the time I got to ride with Grandpa and Grandma to one of their  customer's farms to collect an overdue bill. We ended up on a dusty  turkey farm with loud, scraggly-looking turkeys running around everywhere.
This is how I picture my refined grandma and 4-year-old wide-eyed me standing amidst all those birds squawking at us while Grandpa was speaking softly and respectfully in a kind and gentle way to the debtor. 
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| Grandma, Mom,  me, Dad and Grandpa. | 
Grandma was one of my biggest  cheerleaders. "You can do it!" she would encourage. When I won a state  treasurer position in the Ohio FFA organization in 1982, Grandpa and  Grandma were right there with Mom and Dad in the state capitol to  congratulate me on the achievement.
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| Dad and  Grandma in 2008. | 
Grandma was an  elegant,  sophisticated, and worldly woman in our small, rural community. I was  told she had been raised in a well-to-do family. During her junior year  in high school she left school for a year and they traveled across the  country to California and back. That must have been quite a trip in the  early 1930s.
She was also gentle and sweet. She  did not want to be a bother or inconvenience to anyone. Although  she was shy and did not like a fuss being made over her, she was unflappable. She conveyed cool confidence even under pressure.
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| My nephew with  Grandma still looking elegant in 2009. | 
It was from Grandma that I  inherited good   taste. She is the one who taught me that quality reigns over  quantity, and "make the most of what you have" (less is more). Appearances, respectability, and first impressions were  paramount. Reputations could not be reversed easily once sullied. She was humble, but deep down  inside, I know she had a preference for the finer things in life, and she passed that on to me.
Rest assured, Grandma and  Grandpa are rejoicing that they are once again united. 
While I do grieve my loss, I celebrate  her   new inheritance in Heaven. I am thankful for all the time I was privileged to spend with her, and for all that she has given me. 
Grandma helped mold me into who  I am  today, and her influence affects my work, the clothing I order for you,  my dressing recommendations, and my style. I guess ultimately her  influence  affects you, too. 
With love,
Renee