“It couldn’t be better.”
That’s what Aunt Eleanor would say looking out there right now.
“It couldn’t be better” because of the life she had, the life she chose, the life she loved.
Did anyone ever seem to fit her life, belong in it, like our Aunt Eleanor? Was anyone ever happier just to be?
Who knew every birthday, remembered everyone at Christmas and Easter and was always looking out for us? Praying for us, backing us up, especially those who needed help?
I’m only now learning, thanks to our cousin Terie, how many roles she played in doing just that.
And could anyone have been happier to have her sister Agnes join her in the Sisters of St. Joseph, getting together with each other at each other’s convents for all those decades, sharing so many happy occasions with the family together.
I’m not up here alone.
I’m Aunt Eleanor’s nephew, Chris. But I am up here very proudly for my four brothers and for seven cousins.
We, all of us, the dozen of us, were Aunt Eleanor’s nephews and nieces. We “Boomers” were the first of those fortunate enough to be called her “little ones.”
From the first time we had our baby eyes on her she was a Sister of St. Joseph. To my brothers and cousins and I she was “Auntie Vincent” even if Grandmom and Grandpop called her that somewhat remote name “Eleanor.”
To us, she was “Auntie Vincent” – the one true constant of our lives. Other things would change in our lives. Auntie Vincent was always there.
A few days before our birthdays, the card came.
You could tell it by the perfect handwriting – the Palmer Method – on the envelope. Prayers were inside. Spiritual bouquets – over the years by the bushel basket. She would tell us when she was going to pray for us; and where.
At Christmas and Easter, the cards came – for all of us, for each of us – each personal – each prayerful.
Was she leading a happy life? You tell me.
%20%E2%80%9CIt%20couldn%E2%80%99t%20be%20better%E2%80%9D%20because%20of%20the%20life%20she%20had%2C%20the%20life%20she%20chose%2C%20the%20life%20she%20loved.’
I asked Aunt Agnes, Aunt Eleanor’s younger sister, what it was like when she told her parents she was becoming a sister, she said her mother blew up.
“Wait ‘til your father hears of this!”
Well, guess what? Grandpop said, “Whatever makes you happy.”
He was a tough guy, but maybe, just maybe, he saw how happy his Eleanor was in the convent.
You can bet Agnes did. It was as if Aunt Eleanor was saying “Come on in! The water’s fine!!!”
Aunt Eleanor had gotten the head start teaching first grade and then working with young kids who were challenged at Our Lady of Confidence. They must have noticed how patient she was, how gentle, how eager to tutor one at a time, whatever time it took.
She was on God’s time.
And she was always aware of the families and the parishes where they lived. Parishes were her GPS. “Oh, they live over in St. Athanatius.” I can hear her saying that.
There were three parts to every visit to Auntie Vincent. I’m sure my brothers and cousins remember them well.
First, sitting and talking in the community room – in the little spot along the long table that became our family area as we watched the other families visiting the other Sisters.
Second, visiting the chapel. She was so proud of how it was decorated for Christmas.
Auntie Vincent – she was still in the habit back then – would take us to the classroom where she taught what we now call “special education.” She showed us the ceramic figures her students made, religious articles of Jesus and Mary and St. Joseph. She was proud of what those kids accomplished. But she also smiled when she told their stories, of the fun it was being with them, the ones who could learn and those who couldn’t. She loved them all. They, too, were her “little ones.”
Did anyone enjoy being who they were more than your Sister Eleanor Shields? Did anyone love her work and her life more?









