Alright, so you wanna know ’bout this Bonnie Milstein, huh? Well, lemme tell ya what I heard. This here Bonnie, she ain’t around no more, bless her heart. Seems like she passed on, and they even put somethin’ ’bout it in that there Washington Post paper. February 20th, they said. Makes ya think, don’t it? One day you’re here, next day you’re gone.
Now, I ain’t no fancy city folk, but from what I gather, this Bonnie, she was a big deal in some ways. Folks keep talkin’ ’bout her bein’ the mama of that golfer fella, Max Homa. You know, the one whacks them little balls with a stick? Yeah, that one. They say she and her husband, John, they done raised him right, helped him get to where he is now. He’s got a whole lotta money, they say, 37 million dollars or somethin’ like that. Musta been some good raisin’, I reckon.
Family is important, ya know? And it sounds like this Bonnie, she knew that. She was there for her boy, cheerin’ him on, I bet. Mamas are like that, always lookin’ out for their young’uns. Don’t matter if they’re hittin’ golf balls or plantin’ corn, a mama’s love is a powerful thing.
But Bonnie wasn’t just a mama, it seems. She was doin’ other things too. They say she worked for somethin’ called the “Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law.” Sounds mighty important, though I ain’t exactly sure what it means. Somethin’ ’bout housin’ policies, they say. She was a director, or somethin’. See, this Bonnie, she wasn’t just sittin’ around. She was makin’ a difference, tryin’ to help folks out.
It’s a shame, really, that she’s gone. The world needs more folks like her, the kind that care about others and try to make things better. Makes me think of my own grandbabies. I hope they grow up to be good people, just like this Bonnie sounds like she was.
- She was a mama to a famous golfer.
- She worked for some important organization.
- She cared about people.
- Folks are sad she’s gone.
I ain’t got all the fancy words to describe her, but it seems to me like Bonnie Milstein was a good woman. She left her mark on this world, and that’s more than a lot of folks can say. She raised a successful son, she worked for a cause she believed in, and she touched the lives of those around her. And now, there’s even folks lookin’ for her obituary, wantin’ to pay their respects. That tells ya somethin’, don’t it?
So yeah, that’s what I know ‘bout Bonnie Milstein. A mama, a worker, a good person. Gone too soon, but not forgotten. And that’s the truth, as I see it.
Now, you go on and do somethin’ good with your day, ya hear? Life’s too short to be wastin’ time.
Tags: [Bonnie Milstein, Max Homa, Obituary, Washington Post, Bazelon Center, Mental Health Law, Golf, Family]