Bobbie Pantel stove to make others happy
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Deepa Bharath
No one heard Bobbie Pantel say “no” to anything -- she was just that
kind of woman.
She’d give the shirt off her back for a friend.
Bobbie was born in Boston. Her family moved to California when she
was a little girl. Tragedy struck early for Bobbie. Her mother died
when Bobbie was only 12. She died of cancer, the very disease that
would claim her daughter’s life 55 years later.
Bobbie met Barry, the love of her life, when she was 16. Barry was
in the Navy when he met Bobbie for the first time at the Pike in Long
Beach. She was with a girl he used to go out with.
But Bobbie caught his eye right away. She was petite and had a
radiant smile he couldn’t look away from. It was love at first sight.
One month and eight days later, the teenagers eloped to Yuma,
Ariz. and got married. Barry cajoled his father into mailing him a
letter of permission. He told his dad he wouldn’t come home
otherwise. Looking back he calls it “puppy love.”
But the passion lasted 51 years. Barry says the longevity was due
to “good communication.” But it was a lot more than that.
Barry and Bobbie were best friends. They raised five boys
together. They took trips to Las Vegas; they went to the comedy
shows. When Barry didn’t remember some of the jokes from those shows,
Bobbie reminded him. She could remember most of that stuff, and she
made them sound funny too.
They enjoyed growing old together. They absolutely loved playing
“Family Feud” every night -- it was quite a contest between the two.
They also liked to cook together. She made the turkey and he made
the special dressing. Barry loved her meatloaf, with corn and tomato
sauce.
Bobbie enjoyed reading and would read almost anything from romance
novels to sci-fi.
She was proud of her Jewish heritage and was active at the local
synagogue.
Bobbie was also active in the community. She went to all of her
children’s PTA meetings. She volunteered at the Fish Fry every year,
operating various booths. She just loved to help out.
Bobbie was small, but she stood tall. She always said she was
“4-foot-9 1/10.”
She was born on New Year’s Day. It was always a big, double
celebration at the Pantels’ on Jan. 1. But Bobbie often told Barry
about how she missed all the gifts and attention because she was born
20 seconds after the “first baby” of the New Year at that Boston
hospital.
Bobbie was a people person. She believed in spreading around the
happiness that she felt inside.
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