ForeverMissed
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This memorial website was created in memory of our loved one, Samuel Owens, 59 years old, born on June 27, 1952, and passed away on September 16, 2011. We will remember him forever.
September 16, 2021
September 16, 2021
It has been 10 years since you left us. You are missed so much. Rest well my Brother until we meet again on Heavens Bright Shore. Sister Shirley
September 16, 2018
September 16, 2018
To You Sam:
May the road rise to meet you,
May the wind be always at your back,
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
The rains fall soft upon your fields and,
Until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of His hand.
September 16, 2018
September 16, 2018
Sam missing you today, you left too soon. Celebrate today with Mother and Daddy and my beloved Burke who left just 5- months before you. You are loved and will be forever missed, your sis, Shirley
September 16, 2018
September 16, 2018
Hey Daddy. Missing you today. It's been 7 years, but you're never far from our hearts and minds. Sure wish you were here. Rhianna and I are going fishing today for you. The thing is, if you were here you would know the best secret spots. I'm still trying to find them.
September 16, 2015
September 16, 2015
Can't believe it has been 4 yrs. today since your passing. Miss you very much and my love for you will forever live in my heart until we meet again. Your sister Sue.
September 16, 2014
September 16, 2014
Sam-- you are so much fun and accepted my family into yours without hesitation... What a kind compassionate man. Thank you for taking care of my friends Judy Amy and Jennifer! You are missed!! Thank you for your kindness!
September 17, 2013
September 17, 2013
Dear Sam, You were like a father to me and I learned so much from youthank you!! I find my self wishing we had more time with you. You will always be loved and remebered by all that you have touched especially by me.Thank you for always treating me as your son I will never forget you. Love your son!!
September 17, 2012
September 17, 2012
Ah Sam, don't think you knew this about me, but after Van couldn't find work, I was teaching, maybe not a "_____ English teacher, but a teacher! SOOOOO glad we were friends for so long & Judy, Jennifer, Amy & we still are. Love & miss you.
September 16, 2012
September 16, 2012
Dear Sam,
   It's hard to believe it has been a year since you left us for a better home. I miss you more each day and look forward to the day we will meet again.
Your Loving Sister, Shirley
September 16, 2012
September 16, 2012
Dear Sam, It has been a year today since God called you to your Heavenly Home. I know Heaven is much brighter with you, Mother and Daddy, Burke and all our loved ones who are there with you. I'll see you there before long. I love you dearly. "Sue."
September 14, 2012
September 14, 2012
Dear Brother, It's nearing the anniversary of your passing. It will be one year Sun. the 16th. I still can't register the thought in my mind that you are no longer with us here on this earth. I know that you are at rest now and one day we will be reunited. There are no words to express my love for you nor how much I miss you. A big hug from Earth to Heaven. Sue.

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Recent Tributes
September 16, 2021
September 16, 2021
It has been 10 years since you left us. You are missed so much. Rest well my Brother until we meet again on Heavens Bright Shore. Sister Shirley
September 16, 2018
September 16, 2018
To You Sam:
May the road rise to meet you,
May the wind be always at your back,
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
The rains fall soft upon your fields and,
Until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of His hand.
September 16, 2018
September 16, 2018
Sam missing you today, you left too soon. Celebrate today with Mother and Daddy and my beloved Burke who left just 5- months before you. You are loved and will be forever missed, your sis, Shirley
Recent stories

The Best Middle School Dance

September 16, 2018

Middle School is the absolute worst period of school a child ever has to endure. Kids are full of hormones and emotions, and try to beat each other out for their stake in social standing. Friendships are formed and broken and formed again. "Relationships" that last a week feel like the end of the world when they crash and burn. You no longer have one teacher who nurtures you for 7 hours a day, but suddenly have 6 different teachers, all with different expectations and rules and personalities. Middle school is societies version of Hell on Earth, and you are expected to survive it from the ages of 10-13. Yet, somehow we do.

Middle school dances are the best place to witness these social dynamics. Mean girls circle the dance floor waiting for their chance to pounce on the socially awkward like lionesses stalking their prey. Boys huddle in the corner, laughing and punching each other, like a pack of hyenas. Cliques line up for group pictures, struggling to decide who gets center stage and who is relegated to poke their heads up from the back. Eventually a mass of bouncing bodies emerge on the dance floor and teachers circle the throng breaking up those hormonal preteens who press their bodies in a little too close. The air is charged with emotion: excitement, anxiety, angst. And tears...oh, the tears of middle school girls could fill an Olympic sized swimming pool.

I went to most of my middle school dances. Steve Sharp, DJ Extraordinaire, was a staple of my childhood. Usually I went with my clique, although we would never identify as a clique. We were a mix of popular, socially awkward, band geek, drama nerd, athletic, fit in everywhere and nowhere. But one dance stands out: Sadie Hawkins. 

Sadie Hawkins is the cruelest joke a school could play on a teenage girl. The dance where you ask a boy to be your date. Teenage boys are awful. But one year I got up the courage to ask a boy I liked...and he said yes!!

I dressed in my prettiest 1980s dress, the kind with ruffled collars, hideous, but fashionable at the time. I untucked my hair from it's usual location behind my ears, and feathered my mass of bangs. I even was allowed to wear a touch of blush and lipstick. I was smokin'!

My parents were having a party that night, but mom dropped me off in front of the school. I was supposed to meet my date at the outdoor stage in front of the cafeteria and didn't want to be embarrassed by mom walking me in. Nervously I waited, and he showed up, looking like a dream in his sport coat  and jeans.  One handed him my ticket and he took my hand. I was floating. Finally, I had a boyfriend!

That elation lasted 10 minutes while we waited to enter. As soon as we did, he left my side to find his friends. I stood there alone. As the cafeteria filled, I lost sight of him. I recall circling the dance floor looking for him, even recruiting some of my friends to help. And then I saw him. Slow dancing with one of the popular girls. In my bravada, I walked up to the couple and stood there with my hands on my hips. He looked at me and started laughing, then turned away. And so did I because the tears started to fill my eyes. I ran out of the cafeteria and begged a staff member to let me call home. I wanted to leave.

I don't remember who picked me up. I remember crying all the way home. What I also remember is getting home to my parents party. And here's where the memory of my dad comes in. 

He was never one to offer words that parents usually comfort their kids with. I think he felt uncomfortable dispatching empathy. So when he did, you knew it was coming from a place deep within. His words that night are words that have become a guiding force when faced with people who are jerks in my life. Right or wrong, they help me survive. He took me aside and heard me out through my tears and snot. "So this boy blew you off?" "Yeesssss!", I bawled. "Well then...fuck him". I stopped crying and just stared at him. "Huh?" My dad repeated it. "Fuck him. You don't need him." I don't remember the exact words that followed, but they were something to the extent that I was smart and beautiful and an Owens girl, and he didn't raise us to put up with crap. 

He changed the music to Journey or Boston. I wish I could remember the song. What I do remember is dancing with my dad in the middle of our living room floor. A slow dance with the only man in my life that was there for me, time and time again. He fell short in a lot of things that society expects out of parents. But he more than made up for it in moments like these, moments where I needed him to remind me that I was special and important and worthy. And no person could ever steal my sunshine because he wouldn't let them. 

These days when people let me down, I circle back to that night. I'm smart, I'm beautiful, I'm an Owens girl. And you either walk beside me or move out of the way. I have to dance today and you won't steal that from me.

Miss you Daddy.



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