Member Spotlights feature interviews with fellow Connect members. Learn more about members you’ve connected with and some you haven’t met yet. Nominate a member you think should share the spotlight.
ROSEMARY: What brought you to Mayo Clinic Connect?
@auntieoakley: After my husband was treated at Mayo Clinic and we spent most of two winters in Rochester MN, I would receive an informative email, Living with Cancer newsletter, from Mayo Clinic every month. It always had an invitation to Mayo Clinic Connect, and I was persuaded to check it out.
ROSEMARY: What motivates you to take part in the community?
@auntieoakley: I do not typically participate in social media so I was skeptical at best. I was pleasantly surprised to see how caring and respectful everyone was. I also felt that my stories might have value. I am always looking for ways to be of service, this seemed like a way to give back some of what I have been blessed with.
ROSEMARY: What about Mayo Clinic Connect makes you feel comfortable to share and to be open with the community?
@auntieoakley: The way Mayo Clinic Connect is designed to be a format where people get energy from each other and form a community. This feels like a place where people are heard. If a comment has value to someone, they can use it and, if not, they can look for one that they do find helpful. There is no judgement in doing that.
ROSEMARY: What groups do you participate in?
@auntieoakley: Mostly the Breast Cancer group because this is where I have a personal history as a breast cancer survivor. You might also find me sharing with adults who have autism in the Autism (ASD) group or talking about multiple myeloma in the Blood Cancers & Disorders group. I also occasionally wander the halls looking for a conversation on a totally unrelated topic where I might add value or learn something.
ROSEMARY: Tell us about a meaningful moment on Mayo Clinic Connect.
@auntieoakley: Honestly, meaningful moments are when I see I might make a difference in a real-world situation. I was able to recommend my really great doctor to someone who was just diagnosed with multiple myeloma and looking for an oncology having recently relocated to my geographical area. This member and I extended our connection to a friendship in person too. This changed my whole perspective about online connections.
ROSEMARY: What surprised you the most about Mayo Clinic Connect?
@auntieoakley: How difficult it would be to keep track of people and their stories without a picture or a visual in front of me. I know that seems strange to some, but I use visual recall. I can easily remember the words, but I don’t always remember who said them. Not everyone uses a personal avatar or profile picture. As people gain trust in the community connections, more members add a profile picture. I really care about the connections made here, and I think the depth of that surprised me.
ROSEMARY: What energizes you? How do you find balance in your life?
@auntieoakley: Hands down it is barn time when I spend my time rambling senselessly to a myriad of horses. I might be exercising one, or riding, or brushing, or helping out with barn chores. It doesn’t really matter – brutal heat or blessed rain – I am just happy to be at the barn breathing in the smells and enjoying my equine family. Horses are totally honest, and never have a hidden agenda, need, or want. They live in the moment and that helps me to do the same.
ROSEMARY: Tell us about your favorite pastime or activity.
@auntieoakley: Whatever my current passion is. It might be silversmithing, or collecting and learning about beautiful rocks, or spinning wool into yarn, or sewing costumes. I am currently knitting lace. My favorite pastime is an ever rotating and changing thing. Whichever thing I am doing at that time, I am wholly passionate about it.
ROSEMARY: Do you have a favorite quote, life motto or personal mantra?
@auntieoakley: “I shall pass this way but once; any good that I can do or any kindness that I can show to any human being; let me do it now. Let me not defer nor neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again.” Etienne de Grellet, a Quaker missionary. This was on a plaque hanging in my grandmother’s kitchen when I was growing up. She was the woman I most admired in life. She lived it every day. That plaque resides in my kitchen now. I try to live up to her example.
ROSEMARY: What food can you simply not resist?
@auntieoakley: Pesto, traditional basil, garlic, pine nut and Parmesan pesto. Whether on pasta, on crackers, on a cheese sandwich, or just on a spoon, I simply cannot resist it.
ROSEMARY: If Hollywood made a movie about your life, who would you like to see cast as you?
@auntieoakley: Betty Davis, she seemed to love characters that were underestimated or who didn’t always give up how clever or smart she was. It is difficult to feel like you cannot say what you know, but she made that better. She lived her life marching to her own tune – a tune likely only she could hear.
ROSEMARY: Puppies or Kittens?
@auntieoakley:My answer is neither. Parrots work well with my personality. I have 4 that were rescued or left on my doorstep. Three of them have outlived their families and are verifiably over 100 years old, and another one I raised for my husband. The old girls didn’t like to be handled by him after we were married, and he wanted a feathered friend. That was 25 years ago, we call him Baby Bird. Hahaha!
Rosemary deserves a medal for this one. She did all the hard work.
My blue and gold lived 40 years, he passed away last year after a mistake in his medicine at the compounding pharmacy. I still have the old girls (amazons) over a hundred years each, one is slowing considerably but the other two, not so much. I was diagnosed on the spectrum in my 40s if you can imagine how great it was to realize, yes, I do see things a little differently than most but it can be a benefit to others sometimes too. I appreciate you so much in the breast cancer conversations, you seem so level headed about it all. ❤️
Why thank you, I enjoy reading what you have to say, also, though you seem so much more accomplished than me. My husband was quirky and focused on what ever he was doing to the extreme. it made him successful and he was a good father. MY children and I decided he had Asperger's, also. My youngest daughter has two parrots that live The Life of Riley in her Victorian house in Portland, OR. It is hard to imagine birds 100 years old.
You are very accomplished, you raised children!
The old girls are 102, 106 or 107 (records are difficult to read), and our little old sleepy girl is a whopping 111. Last time I checked the oldest verified was an amazon in Alaska who lived to be a very sleepy old girl at 114, but that was many years ago and she was still alive at the time so I am not sure how old she got to be.
Wow interesting life. I to have had horses as a young girl. I had Quarter horses. I showed quite extensively on the East Coast with Championships. Seems like a lifetime ago. This is just another chapter in my life. I use to do Bulldog rescue for special needs dogs and also volunteer as a sidewalker for a therapeutic riding school. Right now in remission with year in with Metastatic Breast Cancer. This is my second bout with Cancer.
Nicely written article about a lady of may talents! Thank you for sharing a bit of your life with us! It helps us to see how different we all are here on Mayo Clinic Connect.
Ginger
It was nice getting to know you better Chris. You are quite the lady! I admire your drive and passion, and have been inspired to update my profile picture to help with your visual recall. 😊
@pampurr Thank you. I am really happy you are in remission. I cannot imagine my life without animals. I hope to visit with you more in the future.
@gingerw Thank you. I cannot tell you how much I value our friendship. Rosemary did all the hard work.
@rwinney Thank you. I really appreciate you and thanks for the picture.
Great profile, @auntieoakley You are one of the mentors that joined Connect after I dropped back to being an alumna and spending less time so I often saw your name but didn't really know about you at all.
You have had an interesting like, for sure, and have many talents.
There seem to be quite a few Connect members who love and keep horses, they are beautiful animals. I have never personally had much connection with horses being more of a city person, but my step-daughter did have a beautiful Appaloosa when I first married my husband.
It will be nice now when I see your posts to be able to put a person to the writing.
JK
Thank you, I am a rookie for sure, still feeling way around.