This memorial website was created in memory of our loved one, Frances Reardon Sinderwahl, 83, born on July 6, 1932 and passed away on December 26, 2015. We will remember her forever.
Tributes
Leave a TributeSuch issues were always close to Fran's heart and mind. She was a tireless advocate for the inherent dignity of all people. She told a story of being in the Altar Sodality (a women's group) at Our Lady of Sorrows (in the mid to late 60's). She advocated for the African-American members receiving Communion with the white members. Some of the white women thought the African-American women should wait until last . . . heart-breaking that we could ever have had that view of our black sisters. I'm happy that my mother was someone who had the courage to fight against racism before "anti-racism" was an idea and social movement. She was on the cutting edge in many ways, forging ahead with ideas and values that were ahead of her time.
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Please be patient.









In the morning
A portion of Fran's poem "In the morning"
in the morning . . .
. . . in the morning
i want to sit on the back deck before dawn.
the chairs and pots and table,
the chairs will all be damp from dewdrop
in the morning i want to go out without a sound
and wait with the dark for sunrise
i want to catch the first glims of light
that softly spread over the trees and fields
the barely-there lightning that is like
delicately-expanding sounds of a musical passage
masquerading as first light
creeping slowly towards me,
Synchronicity
Frances and I met about six years ago. We were on a Nonviolent Communication practice call together and I had not heard her on the call before. She was telling a story about how a friend was trying to give her some freshly picked pecans but she was feeling uncomfortable about taking them. One of the basic ideas of Nonviolent Communication is that we empathize with others (rather than advise or reassure), so I was empathizing with her sadness about not feeling comfortable taking the pecans. And then I said, "I can empathize with you on two fronts because I'm from Louisiana and I know how good fresh picked pecans can be." We became friends very quickly after that day.
I was born in Shreveport, LA and Frances was born and raised in Monroe, LA. I had visited Monroe as a child because my great aunt lived there. Then Frances told me she had gone to school in Shreveport for a couple of years when she was a teenager. Even though we were so far apart now - me in the Pacific Northwest and she in Alabama - just knowing of the same locations seemed to bring us closer.
Then I learned that Frances was a poet and the artist in her could always empathize with the artist in me when I was scared, confused, or disappointed,about putting my work before the public, as well as when I was excited and celebrating, It was wonderful that she understood how I felt. And I could do the same for her.
We talked once a week for almost six years. I am really missing her but also knowing that she is in a good place.
Love to you, Frances
ASHKARA
AKSHARA*
When a wind moves through the trees
All the leaves in its path flutter
When winds howl and roar
Everything shudders!
But when the winds no longer play about
And the spaces between the leaves are undisturbed
The woods settle into silence
I am as still
as the breath
inside a prayer
Frances Sinderwahl
Note: Fran shared this poem with me about 5 or 6 years ago. I love it!