Penny for his thoughts
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Deepa Bharath
Their first date was on Memorial Day -- May 30, 1946.
He was in the U.S. Army stationed in Ohio and she was a college
student in New York City.
Isidore Myers remembers it like it was yesterday. They met on a
blind date and had lunch at Tavern on the Green in Central Park and
then went and saw “Oklahoma.”
“It was a good date,” said the 87-year-old Myers, as he sat
reminiscing in the study of his Big Canyon home, on a recent
afternoon.
Life took a new turn for Myers and his soon-to-be wife, Penny,
that summer. They continued their relationship long-distance, got
married within a year and stayed that way for 56 years, until Penny
died on July 19, 2003, of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, better known
as Lou Gehrig’s Disease.
Her loss was so devastating to Myers that he decided to write a
book about their life together. He compiled hundreds of letters they
wrote to each other, little love notes and pictures that were worth
their weight in words.
What came out of his 11-month-long effort was more than a book. It
was a legacy for posterity, a memorial to Penny Myers and most of
all, a Taj Mahal, which bears towering testimony to the love this
couple shared.
“It was a way for me to relive a remarkable life,” Myers said.
What it takes to live such a life is a lot of love and even more
understanding, he said.
“Penny and I were as different as two people can be,” Myers said.
“She was very outgoing and expressive. She wanted to know what
happened at work and how my day was and I wouldn’t tell her. Well, I
just didn’t want to relive my day.”
AT WORK AND AT PLAY
Penny was a perfectionist, Myers said. She wanted everything
completed and flawless. Her husband was more satisfied doing one
thing at a time and could live with temporary fix-it solutions.
“She was always very open and giving, and she thought that I held
out on her,” he said.
But they worked it out. Myers’ family came from Poland in 1908.
Because they moved to the United States, his parents were the only
ones in their immediate family to survive the Holocaust. His father
started a family business selling tires; it flourished.
Isidore Myers was always busy. But he made a pact with Penny early
in their relationship, he said.
“I promised her that I would work hard, and I was a workaholic,”
Myers admitted. “But that I would also play hard and spend time with
her.”
Traveling was a passion the couple shared. They traveled to many
countries and continents.
“The best trip we took was to India,” he said.
The couple took a luxurious train tour of the marble palaces in
Northern India.
“The next best trip was our visit to mainland China.”
He and Penny also collected artifacts from the countries they
toured.
Penny was eight years younger than Myers, which made her death
that much more shocking.
“I never thought I would outlive her,” he said.
Penny was also a health nut. She was fanatical about exercise. She
walked, jogged, stretched, swam and went to exercise classes.
“And I just worked and worked,” he said. “Life has a way of
handing out surprises, I suppose.”
Myers believes that he owed it to his wife to chronicle their
lives together. It helped that he was a pack rat, Myers said.
“I save everything,” he said. “I save pictures, letters and
cards.”
An enduring example
Because of the personal nature of the book, he will only print 250
copies of it to give to family and friends, Myers said.
The letters, notes and cards sculpt spitting images of its
protagonists. They’re like a show-and-tell of their lives, times and
beliefs.
On Oct. 23, 1946, five months after their first date, Myers wrote:
“I always appreciate money, but I never thought I would care as much
as I do for a Penny.”
In a Dec. 4, 1946 letter, Penny writes: “Darling Izzy, our major
obligations are to each other, above all else, and if you give me
happiness and I return to you twofold, there’s nothing, absolutely
nothing, standing in our path.”
Emotions and feelings never seem to dull or wane in the letters
that the couple wrote to one another -- even the ones written after
more than five decades of marriage.
The Myers’ are examples to young couples, said Lina Matsumoto, who
helped Myers put his book together.
“This was something he did to leave as a legacy to his children
and to preserve Penny’s memories,” she said. “Their love never
diminished. It just grew with each year, until one of them left.
Their devotion, commitment and respect for each other is exemplary.”
What Myers is left with are the memories and countless images --
his wife’s beautiful face made even more beautiful by her smile. And
she smiled a lot.
“It’s hard to explain,” Myers said, leafing through the pages of
his manuscript. “I feel like the most important part of my life ended
when she went.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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