Mike SciaccaRuth Rowley concentrated on threading a...
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Mike Sciacca
Ruth Rowley concentrated on threading a needle, glancing up on
occasion to deliver a few choice words of wisdom.
As the 92-year-old was busy working on her stitchery in the Surf
City home she shares with her daughter, Shirley Hoff. She sat
surrounded by family photos, some dating back to the late 1800s. One
was of Rowley at age 4 traveling by covered wagon in her native Utah.
Another was of her with the family dog, Wolfie, a 10-year-old
Dachshund, laying at her feet.
Rowley has been enjoying the art of stitchery her entire life and
continues to hone her skills through the Brazilian stitchery class
she takes with her daughter at the ABC Adult School in Cerritos.
“It’s amazing that she still does this at her age,” said Evelyn
DeVries, an embroidery instructor in the school’s home economics
department. “She is the oldest student in that class. She still is
able to learn to stitch new flowers and stitches. She sticks with it,
no matter how difficult. She just doesn’t give up and has a lot of
fun with it.”
DeVries was so taken by Rowley’s determination and love of
stitchery that she nominated her for the school’s Outstanding Adult
Student Learner of the Year award.
Rowley was one of 31 students -- the adult school has an
enrollment of about 16,000 -- nominated and, to her surprise, she won
the award.
She was honored on April 21 at a recognition ceremony at the
school and received a rousing standing ovation when she announced her
name and age to the crowd.
“At 92? Are you kidding me?” she said. “But I feel really proud to
receive this award. I’ve been going to school my entire life and if I
have any words of advice, it would be that you’re never too old to go
to school, to learn something new.”
Also honoring Rowley with certificates of recognition was Rudy
Bermudez, a member of the 56th Assembly District of the California
legislature, 4th District Supervisor Don Knabe, Rep. Loretta Sanchez
and State Sen. Betty Karnette.
When asked what she has learned from DeVries’ Brazilian stitchery
class, Rowley was to the point.
“It didn’t teach me anything I didn’t know, it only reminded me of
what I’ve forgotten,” she mused.
Rowley didn’t give up on stitchery -- or life -- when, in 1953,
doctors told her that her rheumatoid arthritis would cripple her and
make her wheelchair-bound the remainder of her life.
“I just looked the doctor in the eye and told him, ‘you’re
crazy!’” she recalled. “There was plenty more to do in my life.”
As she threaded the needle and continued to work on what was to
become a pin cushion, one could see in a few of Rowley’s fingers the
crookedness that’s a reminder of the prediction that never came to
fruition.
She learned stitching from her mother, Nora, who died when Rowley
was just 6.
“I could do a few stitches of embroidery when I was 4 years old,”
she said. “My mother could do any type of handwork, and I’d just sit
on the floor and copy her. It’s something I’ve loved my whole life
and I know she’d be proud.”
Rowley has taken other classes at the school in needlework,
beading, silk ribbon, embroidery, tailoring, upholstery and ceramics.
Brazilian stitchery gets its name from a rayon thread that came
from the country, and its style is derived from stitching done on the
surface.
Rowley has stitched pin cushions, T-shirts and other articles of
clothing.
“I’ve given everything away, up until now,” she said, motioning to
the pin cushion she was working on. “From now on, everything I stitch
is going to be mine.”
To keep her mind sharp, Rowley plays two games of Yahtzee each
night with her daughter following dinner.
“Mom is a testimony to continued learning, to keeping the mind
fresh and sharp,” Hoff said. “She’s a treasure and a hoot to have
living with me.”
Hoff drives Rowley three times a week to the adult school and said
the two never tire of making the morning drive from Surf City to
Cerritos.
“We have such a good time together in class,” said Rowley, who
also belongs to two begonia clubs. “I’ve been going to school my
whole life and I guess you can say I’ll die in school.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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