Sunday, February 1, 2015

Punxsutawney Phil: Up Close and Personal

Phil and Bill


Every February 2nd, just like many other people, I will pour my morning coffee and turn on the news to see what Punxsutawney Phil, the Grand Prognosticator, will predict. Will it be six more weeks of winter or an early spring?

A little known fact about me is that Punxsutawney Phil is a BFF of my family. My father was born in Punxsutawney in 1919, and graduated from high school there in 1937. After WWII, he returned with his new bride to look for work. His first post-war job was here in the Beaver Valley, where I grew up, but he maintained his ties with Punxsutawney. Our family eventually bought a farm there. My father built a house for us, and also a place for my grandparents. It was our weekend/vacation place the entire time I was growing up. Ultimately my father and mother retired there. My sister still lives in Punxsutawney. 

What does this have to do with Punxsutawney Phil? Stick with me on this, and I’ll share the story. 

Everyone in Punxsutawney knows Phil. He lives at the local library in a special enclosure where tourists can peer into through a huge glass window. You can watch Phil and his female friend, Phyllis, as they romp or mostly sleep their lives away. Have I ever been to Groundhog Day? Sure. Been there. Done that. Got the Groundhog hat. Checked off the bucket list.

On the night of February 1, 1981, my mother was dying at Punxsutawney Memorial Hospital of bone cancer. Once diagnosed, the end swiftly closed in on her. The pain was terrible. My father said he didn’t want her to die alone, so he, my sister, and I took turns in shifts staying around the clock at her bedside. On that night as I climbed into bed, I prayed that God would take my mother home. Her body couldn’t take much more suffering. 

About 6:00 a.m. the morning of February 2, my father called to say Mom had passed away. I headed into town to meet him and my sister. It was a bitter cold February morning, and uh-oh! I forgot it was Groundhog Day. 

As you might guess, getting into Punxsutawney on Groundhog Day is like going the wrong way in the roller rink. The mobs of people in town made our day so much more challenging as we went from the hospital to the Deely Funeral Home, where Mom would lie in state, and then stopped to get breakfast at the Punxsutawney Phil’s Family Restaurant (yes, there really is such a place!).

We were able to shoulder our way through the crowd at the restaurant and finally get a booth. As I watched the revelers thronging and pushing around us, resentment started to build against these loud and raucous tourists. Didn’t they know that not everyone was here to party? Real people live in Punxsutawney too, and we have lives beyond Groundhog Day. The hoard of people made a difficult day more difficult.  

Two years later, my father passed away out at the family farm. The Deely Funeral Home handled the arrangements for my father as well. Afterward, we knew that neither my sister nor I could afford or manage this large acreage of our family farm. While our family was trying to wrap up the estate business, Bill Deely from the funeral home approached us about buying the farm. He and his brother were interested in using it for a family retreat. A deal was struck and the farm sold.

So you may ask what does all this have to do with Punxsutawney Phil? You see, that jovial man that appears on stage each year with Phil is none other than Bill Deely, long-time president of the famed Inner Circle and Punxsutawney Phil’s personal handler. Yes, the same Bill Deely from the funeral home who bought our family farm.

So February 2nd is always a bittersweet morning for me. Seeing Phil and Bill together make me homesick. They confirm to me that I became an orphan at the age of 34. I realized then that it doesn’t matter how old you are when your parents both pass away. From that point on you become an orphan. It’s a sad and lonely feeling.

For all of you wise women who responded to the Boomer Babes Lifestyle Survey, 63% of you have lost both of your parents. So being orphaned is an emotion I know you can feel as well. Do we ever get over the passing of our parents? Are we ever too old to have our hearts broken with the memories?

The Deely family have been good to my collective family. They welcome us to the farm any time they know we’re around. I have so many memories there, from clearing the land to my father building the house with his own two hands. My children remember their idyllic summers at the farm and the good times and holidays with their grandparents there. We have taken the next generation of children there too so they can see the house that their great-grandfather built. Whenever we feel the need to go “home,” we can get in the car, drive to Punxsutawney, and walk the fields and woods that were ours as children.

On Monday, February 2nd this year, I will pour my coffee, turn on the morning news, and watch for the smiling face of Bill Deely as he lifts Punxsutawney Phil into the air to proclaim the forecast for this year. You will probably watch it too, but we will see different things. You will see a group of revelers paying homage to a gimmick that put Punxsutawney on the map. I will remember the day my mother passed away. I will see the memories of my long-gone grandparents, mom, and dad, and be thankful for the Deely family who will let us walk the farm again. 



2 comments:

  1. Donna, thank you for writing and posting this heart touching connection to Punxsutawney Phil and family. Reading this brings back so many wonderful memories with you, Zana, your mom and dad, and grandma and grandpa. Your cousin, Kevin

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    1. Hi Kevin, I actually was thinking about your family this morning as I was posting this. If you ever get back this way, we'll get in touch with the Deely's and do a walk about.

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