A life spent working hard to help others
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Deepa Bharath
Helen Granneman always seemed to have abundant time and energy.
She had a smile and a listening ear for anyone who needed them.
She was everyone’s “mom” and “grandmom.”
Age was not a barrier for Helen. She got along with the oldest
senior she knew as well as she could play with a baby.
Helen was born and raised in Culver City. She was bubbly and
vivacious as a young girl. She loved to roller skate and often rode
the bus with her brother and three sisters to a roller drum in a
neighboring city.
She worked as a car hop in the late ‘40s at a drive-in restaurant.
It was fashionable back then when people liked to be served outdoors
in their cars.
Helen had wild stories from those days. She had seen tempers
flaring on the driveway. One of her customers was so mad about
something that he overturned the tray with the food. Sometimes,
people would leave behind a “penny tip,” which was the ultimate
insult to a waitress.
One of the wildest stories she told was about how one of the
managers would take leftover food from trays and toss it into the
chili pot, which would leave the girls horrified and disgusted.
But Helen treated it as just another job. She met her husband on
the job. He and his friends would frequent the restaurant. They got
married in 1948 and moved to Monterey Park. They moved to Costa Mesa
in 1960 because Helen wanted to be closer to her mother who lived
here.
They had two children. Helen was a stay-at-home mom for a few
years, but rejoined the workforce after separating from her husband
in 1967. She worked long and hard to feed, clothe and take care of
her son and daughter.
In a day when men dominated the workplace, she endured various
setbacks and put up a struggle to find and keep her job. She worked
as a machine operator, which involved a lot of lifting and moving.
She was tired when she came back home.
Helen was so tired she lay down on the floor in front of the
television after she came home. She’d nap for an hour and then wake
up and be mom again. It’s all the time she needed to recuperate.
She was a great cook. She cooked the basics -- meat, potatoes,
vegetables and salads. Nothing fancy. But the table was neatly and
properly set and dinnertime was always special.
She was simple, yet creative. She always took the extra time to do
something special for her children. When she made pancakes, she made
the bears and the bunnies with the eyes and ears. When the kids were
off to school, she’d play with their clay and they would find little
furniture, fruit and lunch boxes when they came back.
Helen was a regular at the Costa Mesa Senior Center. She drove her
black 1991 Mustang to bingo nights twice a week. She would never miss
bingo.
Helen loved to help. She thought of others more than she thought
about herself. When she saw a woman hanging out near the post office
on a cold evening, Helen went back home, brought back a few blankets
and money and gave it to her. Another time, she saw a woman at the
store who didn’t have money to buy food. Helen followed the woman out
to the parking lot and gave her the money she needed.
She could understand and relate to the struggles of others because
she had been through them herself.
At 80, she was more active than she had ever been. On Monday, she
was supposed to be at the senior center putting together earthquake
kits.
But she never made it. That morning she suffered a fatal stroke
that caused her brain to hemorrhage.
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