A Letter To The Perfect Girl

February 26, 2009 by Puna  
Filed under Signatures

mygirl4

When you were a baby, you had a twitch. Your little shoulders moved up and down seemingly involuntarily. The doctors wanted to give you a full pediatric check up and that wasn’t available in Northern Japan where you were born. So they sent you and me to the big pink hospital in Honolulu Hawaii. You and I flew there in the back of a big cargo plane. We both had ear plugs and yours kept falling out because your ears were so tiny. Finally a nice man came over and gave you a big set of earphones that was almost as big as your head. You then slept onĀ  my chest almost the entire way.

Your Daddy and your brother flew out a day later. We all wanted to be there for you.

Because you had to have an MRI, you had to be sedated. I remember sitting at your bedside, praying.

The doctors gave you a clean bill of health. To this day you remain to your parents, your brother and your family, exactly what the doctors deemed you were the day your tests came back.

They said you were perfect. And so you are.

Happy birthday, our perfect girl.

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Comments

14 Responses to “A Letter To The Perfect Girl”
  1. Captain Bruce & Tracey says:

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Hope you get the picture perfect gift!!!!

  2. Kelly says:

    she’s beautiful…

    (Here from SS)

  3. Barbara says:

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY GIRLY! WE LOVE YA, you are not only perfect, you’ve grown into a beautiful yound lady!
    Jay, Barb, Tami and Bobby

  4. junedel says:

    Wow! That’s the military life for you. Happy birthday to your girl!

    Oh and I always wonder why the hospital was painted pink. I haven’t been there yet, but I’m going to try to go there and take pictures one of these days.

  5. Big Daddy says:

    Junedel, here you go:

    Tripler Army Medical Center sits atop a ridge in Moanalua — one of the most modern medical facilities in the world, serving at least 400,000 people in Pacific basin.

    But many are more interested in why the hospital is painted pink. “And even after they are given the official answer,” said Donald Devaney, Tripler’s provost marshal, “they are not satisfied.

    “People don’t want the answer,” said Devaney, 71, “they want the myth.”

    It’s a question repeatedly asked of the Army hospital, which was dedicated 60 years ago.

    One of the most repeated “myths” surrounds millionaire businessman Henry Kaiser, who had an affinity for pink and used that color scheme for everything he constructed in the 1950s. But Kaiser didn’t come to Hawaii until after Tripler was constructed and painted.

    Another myth involves a soldier who ordered the wrong color — 30 million gallons of pink — instead of blue. So pink was used until that supply was exhausted. Or there is the explanation that construction practices after World War II involved using whatever material is available. Mixing white mortar, crushed coral and Moanalua red dirt results in pink.

    A variation of that “myth” deals with a disagreement over the color and a lottery being used to select the final color, while another story says pink was used during World War II to camouflage the building. However, the war was over by the time hospital was completed.

    There is the myth that the woman who donated the land specified the paint. However, the National Archives reports that the royal family, which provided the land, never made such a request.

    Devaney said a persistent story involves Robert Thompson, who was the landscape architect for both Tripler and the “Pink Palace” — Waikiki’s Royal Hawaiian Hotel.

    “But that’s just coincidence,” said Devaney who also serves as Tripler’s informal historian.

    “Let the myths live on. People want to have their own version of the Pink Lady.”

    Officially, Army engineers in 1948 wanted the hospital and its surrounding nurses’ quarters, fire house, chapel, bachelor officers’ quarters, mess, theater and enlisted men’s barracks to avoid an “institutional atmosphere.” Instead, the planners wanted “to create the impression of a residential community and chose a “pink stucco finish,” Devaney said.

    This year marks the 60th anniversary of the construction of the “Pink Lady,” which will be celebrated on May 2. The actual completion and dedication date was Sept. 10, 1948, but because of scheduling and other conflicts the anniversary of the 375-acre medical facility will be celebrated next month.

    Although the hospital has been at Moanalua for 60 years, the original facility was built at Fort Shafter and named after Brevet Brig. Gen. Charles Stuart Tripler in 1920. By the time the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, it had 450 beds and grew to 1,000 beds. Plans for a new Tripler at Moanalua were drawn up in 1942, but actual construction didn’t begin until 1945.

    Besides the 231 beds, Tripler is the home of the Spark Matsunaga Veterans Affairs Clinic, which includes a 60-bed Center for Aging completed in 1992, the Center of Excellence in Disaster management and Humanitarian Assistance and the Pacific Telehealth and Technology Hui.

    Devaney, who retired from the Army as command sergeant major with 30 years of service, said many mothers, who gave birth at Tripler, have returned.

    “Some even want to see the birthing room,” Devaney said, “which is now an office on the eighth floor.”

    “Others are disappointed that we don’t have a record of their birth. But those records are kept by the health department in town.”

    Special visitors get a Tripler Christmas tree ornament which Devaney, a Vietnam War veteran, has made and paid for since 2000.

  6. kerri says:

    Great memory to create a “perfect” birthday post! Hope she has a great day.

    Fun info about that pink Hawaiian hospital, too.

  7. Shannon says:

    She is an absolutely lovely girl. And what a touching story. Hawaii seems to be a theme today with many. It is memories like this that remind us of our blessings. Thanks so much for sharing.

  8. Gayle says:

    What a sweet post!

    I’m so glad you joined my blog party! I hope you come back again next week! It’s totally fine to link to something you posted at a different time!

  9. Ahh, what a cute post! She is beautiful!
    ~Kim

  10. Perfect post for a perfect girl! :)

  11. Puna says:

    Thank you Laura! Girls are very special!

  12. Puna says:

    Thank you Karen! She is the apple of our eye.

  13. Puna says:

    I’ll definitely be back Gayle! I love your crocheted guinea pigs…

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