In Memory

Wanda Jean O'Rielly (Dilley)

Wanda Jean O'Rielly (Dilley)

Wanda j Dilley, 79, passed away, surrounded by her loving family, on January 7, 2022.  A memorial celebration of her life will take place in early spring.  

My mom was married to Kerry Dilley, the love of her life for close to 61 years.  They were childhood sweethearts, dating off and on since 8th grade.  Not long after getting married, they had their first born child, Cari Linn - then the kids kept on coming.  My mon was pregnant 8 times in 10 years, one ended in miscarriage.  One of the most devastating, and life defining moments was when they lost their second oldest child, Rhonda, at 8 years old when she was run over by a car while crossing the street near the bowling alley in Pierre.  How my mom handled this was both a gift to her family as well as an inspiration to others.  She almost immediately and openly forgave the young man who caused the death of her beloved Rhonda.  That doesn't mean she didn't struggle with this loss for many years, indeed, she was profoundly affected, missing Rhonda greatly right up until her own death.  However, growing up in a household absent the hate, bitterness and emotional distress common in these situations, was a gift of a lifetime, and positively impacted the trajectory of her children's lives.  We admired her beyond our ability to properly convey for showing us how to handle tragedy with dignity, grace, forgiveness and love.

My mom was a very strong, independent woman, who was outspoken, highly opinionated, and well read.  A great role model for any young woman wanting to make her way in the world.  She cared deeply about people, especially  those in need.  She had a strong moral compass.  Rarely veered from doing the right thing.  Loved, defended and protected her children like whe was a grizzly bear bit in the butt by a bee.  If her family needed her, she would have moved hell on earth to help them and, in some cases, had.  As a friend, she could be counted on for anything.  A more dependable friend surely could not be found.  She loved her friends deeply, invested her time in them, was loyal to her very core when it came to them, which is why she had so many peoople who called her friend.  She was the greatest listener, counselor and advisor of alltime.  We alway said, this should have been her careet path.  She listened intensely, and was full of empathy.  She gave the greatest advice.  It wasn't what you always wanted to hear, but almost always what you needed to hear.

My mom was an artist.  She rarely shared her work, but was an amazing writer.  She could write anything from a poem to a short story.  Her ability to express thoughts and feelings on paper was unbelievable, considering no one knew she had this gift.  In almost everything, she was incredibly creative. She could make anything, had very original ideas, and has created many, many beautiful things of which we are blessed to be left with.  Last year she painted a small cardboard box.  She made it into an adorable little yellow house.  It was painted inside and out.  She never ceased to impress us with these little projects of hers where she could create something beautiful from nothing. 

*We can't wait to share her writings, her paintings, and her many other crafts with you at her Celebration of Life service,  We think you too will be amazed.  My mom was an excellent interior designer.  She simply didn't have the degree for an official title.  Many friends and family members benefited from her advice on how to decorate their homes.  If she could have, she would have chosen to open a design business, but unfortunately for her, she couldn't stop herself from giving her ideas away for free.  Her creativity also extended into landscape design.  Her yard was her pride and joy and she spent an extensive amount of time working on it each day from spring to fall.  She beamed and bragged to every person that stopped by asking for a tour of her yard.  Her ideas for her yard never ended, as my dad can attest!  She had so many plants to water that last year we paid someone to come in and help water the pots ouside, because just those plants took an hour each day to water properly.  She was forever looking to change something to make it even better.  The Garden Centers knew her well and have lost a great customer.  She was extremely knowledgeable about plants and flowers.  Recently, when shopping with her at a landscape center in Sioux Falls, multiple times she would overhear another customer talking about the questions they had but were waiting for hellp arrive.  She would strike up a converation, offer them her solution, and when help would arrive, the "expert" advice was not different from my moms.  Her yard was often openly admired by people walking by.  This fall, when selling their house, they got an offer from one such person.  They asked to see the yard, then asked to see the inside of the house, and loved it so much, that despite not looking to buy, made an immediate offer.  That deal fell through, but we hope the current occupant enjoys my mom's much loved home and yard as much as my mom did.

My mom was young at heart.  She loved to stay up late, only wanted to listen to the latest music, got inspiration and energy from the young, and was open to new ideas through passionate dialog and discussion.  People were always shocked about her age.  I don't think it was so much that she looked young but that she acted young.  Many of her friends were decades younger than she was, always saying that it didn't feel like she was any older at all.  She took so much pride in this perception of her that she wouldn't allow us to have a 50th Anniversary Celebration for her and my dad because she didn't want people to know she was that old.  She was fun, would dance, and loved that she didn't 'act her age.'  Her favorite saying was that 'normal was boring.'  She definitely wasn't boring and made sure life wasn't boring for us either.  We would shake our heads at her, but we all secretly loved it. 

My mom has been a realtor since 1978, and was active through this year.  If you were lucky enough to have her as your realtor, you know that she made herself an expert in everything to do with a house, but more importantly, you know how much she would do for you.  If you needed your house cleaned, a builder to finish a project, a handlyman to fix something, a renter to get you by, your sidewalks shoveled for a showing, or anything else, she'd do it or have it done for you.  If you were even luckier, you realized she'd make a great friend, and made her one if you could.  Many special friends came through real estate.  She had a special bond with the FBI agents and their families as their realtor, then as their friend.  She loved them all.  She missed them greatly when they would move on to their next assignment, which sadly for her, happened regularly.  One FBI agent's wife said that when asked what they would miss most about Pierre, they immediately said Wanda.  My mom would go out of her way for more than just her customers.  She would sacrifice almost anything for someone in need or for a friend  She'd drive you across the state to take an acquaintance of her mom, to a doctor appointment.  Wait...that was multiple people to many doctor appointments.  If she cared, she was invested, no matter what that meant.  It might have been a grant that needed to be written for the reservation.  It could be that she had to bring attention to the fact that the waiting room for the jail wasn't up to standards, which meant that visitors would miss time to visit with their loved ones.  It might be that she wanted the original seating under the center of the Capitol dome so that people could sit to look up and admire the beauty of the dome.  It might have meant bathroom access, an elevator and ramp at the Veterans museum.  If she saw something that needed to be done, she would stop at nothing to accomplish it.  If you were the Governor, Warden, or anyone else and she could accomplish her goal by reaching out to you, expect a call.  No one intimidated her enough to deter her from a mission, when she had one.

So often when reading obituaries, you wonder what happened.  Well, I'm here to tell you.....My mom got cancer.  It turns out she had it for years, and we simply didn't know.  She'd been in the hsopital many times for sometimes the same complaint, sometimes new complaints.  All of the symptoms she was experiencing were cancer related.  By October, she was in the ER, or had hospital visits at least once a week, ofetn even more.  One ER visit in Sioux Falls led to a "suspicious mass".  In the end, a November 30th Mayo appointment confirmed our worst fears, that my mom's cancer was in multiple lymph node areas and she had multiple large tumors, one could be seen, one could not.  They advised her to take time to "do the things they always wanted to do".  Her heart and sepsis kept her from planning anything they would have wanted to do, some great trip to somewhere... Instead, a doctor in early December referred her to Hospice care.  She overcame the sepsis , because she really was a fighter, always seeming to beat the odds before.. but her cancer was a far stronger foe than she'd ever come up against before. 

She spent the last month of her life in Hartford, in my home.  The entire family came and stayed there so we could have one last Christmas with her, but we did even better.  We let my mom truly LIVE that month!  We all had one goal, which was to make it the best end of life ever.  She was surrounded by love..we laughed together, we cried together, we shared dreams, disappointments and regrets.  We provided many craft projects for her to work on, or we worked on them at the table together.  We bought her slot machines to play.  She literally complained about the poor service (her family) and that it took to  long to 'pay her out".  She took the cash (our cash) and never realized we would take it back to put in the machine again for a 'payout' again.  When she was up to it, we would take her to a real casino.  One night the family waited aound for her to get bored enought to come home, but that didn't happen until 7 a.m.  She could have asked for anything and we would have made it happen.  She was so full of joy that last month, she often cried, she was so grateful to us, telling us we were doing too much, but when you love someone, a good life is never to much to give them, especially when that life is ending.  Unfortunately, cancer presente the final card at the beginning of January.  We were by her bedside in the living room round the clock, taking shifts, managing the hourly tasks - medicine, suction, washing her, moving her, everything needed for care.. She was never alone, she always spoken to or had a hand holding hers.  She knew in every imaginable way that she was loved  beyond measure, that her passing would be felt by all of us, deeply.  This amazing month we had, gives us peace.  We had the opportunity to do and say what should be done or said long before this time comes.  We all had second chances to make sure all was right.  It was a gift.  A beautiful, heartbreaking gift. 

She leaves behind many people who are grateful to have been part of her life and who have the difficulty of trying to figure out how to live without her; our rock...or north star    our everything, starting with her most devoted and loving servant right to the very end, her husband, Kerry, her many children; Cari Linn Fossum, Dr. Shelly Ramos (Carlos), Kyle Dilley, Todd Dilley, Craig Dilley (Tessa), and Rene Stolsmark (JJ); her grandchildren from Shelly -  Austin, Forrest and Morgan, grandchildren from Kyle - McKenzie, granchildren from Craig - Nathan, Shelon and Noah, grandchildren from Rene - Paige and Tyler and others who loved her and who came long before us, sisters Patty Luecke and Diane Liebl.  She was looking forward to joining her mom whom she has missed for the last 16 years and for whom she cared for on a daily basis in her final years, Velma O'Rielly, her dad, Bob O'Reilly for whom she felt a particular closeness to growing up, brother Dean O'Reilly, and of course, her sweetest forever child, Rhonda.  We hope the reunion in heaven is a joyous celebration, there is much to catch up on.  We'd also like to recognize some special friends, Joni Hansen, Paula Hunsley, Bob Burke and Marck Pecora who she cared deeply for.

Condolences may be conveyed to the famiuly at www.feigumfh.com. 



 
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01/10/22 05:13 PM #1    

Harley Middleton

Wanda attended McKinley Grade School along with several other students whose families moved from the McKinley area of Pierre to the hillside. From that point on, I had very little contact with her.  However, I observed how she went from a bashful little girl to a very confident young lady.  My condolences to Kerry and his family.


01/11/22 01:29 PM #2    

Dorothy M. Huckfeldt (Neddermeyer)

Wanda reminds me of the song, Maria in the Sound of Music. Adaptation.....

Wanda 


She climbs a tree
And scrapes her knee
Her dress has got a tear.

She waltzes on her way to mass
And whistles on the stair.

And underneath her hat
She has curlers in her hair!  (or was it spaghetti?)

I even heard her singing when quiet is required.

She sometimes rushed in last minute,

But her reasons were real.

She was sometimes late,
Except for her taste for laughter.

I hate to have to say it
But I very firmly believe

Wanda's mischievousness was a wonder to behold!

I'd like to say a word on her behalf.
Wanda made me laugh!

How do you keep up with Wanda?

How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?

How do you find a word that means Wanda?

A flibberti gibbet!

A willo' the wisp!

A clown!

Many a thing you know you'd like to tell her,
Many a thing she ought to understand.

But how do you make her stay
And listen to all you say,

How do you keep a wave upon the sand?

Oh, how do you keep up with someone like Wanda?

How do you hold a moonbeam in your hand?

When I was with her I was amused,
Out of focus and bemused,
And I never know exactly where I am.
Predictable as weather,
Wanda was as delightful as a feather in the wind,

She was a darling,

She was devilish,

She was a lamb.

She'd out-pester any pest,
Drive a hornet from his nest,

She could throw a whirling dervish
Out of whirl.

She was gentle,
She was wild,

She was a riddle.

She was as delightful as a child always in all ways.

She was a headache!

She was an angel!

She was a formidable woman.

How do you find a word that means Wanda?
How do you catch a clown and pin it down?
How do you keep up with Wanda?
A flibberti gibbet!
A willo' the wisp!
A clown!

Many a thing you know you would have liked to tell her,
Many a thing she needed to understand.
But how do you make her stay,
And listen to all you say?
How do you keep a wave upon the sand?
Oh, how do you carry on without  Wanda?
How do you hold a moonbeam in your hand? 
                             May you have an easy and swift journey home.  Last Update: December, 18th 2013
One brief moment and all will be as it was before.
How we shall laugh at the trouble of parting when we meet again!
 

 



 

01/12/22 11:25 AM #3    

Jean Kruger (Thompson)

Perfect.  Beautifully done for Wanda. (My wish, to have really gotten to know her better through the years.)   God Speed, Wanda.    Jean Kruger Thompson


01/12/22 02:32 PM #4    

Barbara Kaye Randolph (Nichol)

What a wonderful tribute to Wanda. She was special and we all will miss her. She always lifted ones spirits. So happy to have had her as a friend. Kaye Randolph Nichol


01/12/22 02:55 PM #5    

Barbara Ann Barker (Knight)

This is beautiful Dorothy! Yes, she was a delightful free spirit, so very kind and loving. She was always so nice to me back in the day when I really didn't have many friends. She always had a smile and warm greeting, always making my day better! Rest easy sweet friend, be assured you will never be forgotten.

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