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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Memories Live On

            Do you ever sit and question life and wonder what it would be like to be born into a different family?

            It is as if my family has this unspoken standard to live up to. I do not follow that standard though. Instead of following my parent’s dreams for me, I am pursing my own.
            I have learned that you must do what makes you happy because you are the one who has to deal with your choices in life and it is your life to live. That’s a lesson I learned from the years I spent with my grandpa up until cancer finally won the battle.

            I love my grandpa’s story. I wish I could truly capture the essence of what he went through to get to where he was in life the day he died. I want to see the pain and the struggle of his earlier years, because I am fully aware of what the end result is and what his hard work brought him. But to get to this end there was a beginning. All stories have a beginning. And this is my grandpa’s…


            My grandpa came from a humble beginning that shaped him into the kind and generous man who people remember today. He was born to Italian immigrants in the small town of Coal Hollow, Pennsylvania on December 18, 1938.  After high school, he worked in various industries before becoming involved in construction in the mid 1960s. 

He always said he was not a doctor, lawyer, or accountant, so he had to find something that he could master in order to provide for his family. He knew manual labor was his specialty and an area in which he could thrive.

Varischetti Construction began as Pop-Pop, one employee, and an old Ford pickup to get them to and from the small excavation jobs they worked. In 1967, he purchased a sanitation business and named it Varischetti Sanitation. Pop-Pop grew the business from just one truck, to one of the larger, privately owned sanitation businesses in Pennsylvania. In 1986, he finished the construction of Greentree Landfill, which was the first completely lined, state of the art landfill in Pennsylvania. After 19 years in the waste management industry, he sold Varischetti Sanitation to Browning-Ferris Industries but remained with BFI for a short time as a consultant. In 1989, he started Apple Tractor, which still operates today as a construction equipment dealership. He began Varischetti and Sons, Inc. in 1991 to provide consulting services for the waste industry, as well as real estate development. In 1995, Pop-Pop, along with my dad and uncles, started Guardian Elder Care, to purchase and operate nursing facilities. Guardian today owns and operates 33 nursing facilities and includes, a rehabilitation services company, a long-term care pharmacy, and a home/health company.


            His name is most often associated with the qualities of hard work and generosity. He was a charismatic and motivational leader, and also the first one to lend a helping hand. Pop-Pop was a very hard worker who always had a vision and a drive to succeed. In addition, he was a charitable man who gave from the bottom of his heart and never expected anything in return. He was a strong advocate for giving back to his community and helping those in need. He believed everyone was equal and deserved to be treated with respect, which is what made him so likeable.
           
He had his share of adverse situations, but he never used those as an excuse. Instead, he worked as hard as he could each and every day and never accepted handouts. He paid his dues to get to where he was in life. He valued the gift of life and always said every day was to be enjoyed and was a blessing. He lived by the saying, “Dream big, work hard, and have fun.”

            Every single day I question God and ask why he took my grandfather from this earth so damn early. I know that I, and I speak for the rest of my family, as well as my community, had far more to learn from him. He had so much more life left in him.

            I would do absolutely anything to be able to live one more day with him. I would use the entire 24 hours to my advantage. I was seven when he died. I had no idea what was going on. Cancer was a foreign word to me. All I know is it meant that Pop-Pop lost his hair and we spent a lot of time in the hospital. But one day, he just stopped being able to play with me. He would just sit in his chair and I never understood why he didn’t want to play anymore. He was my best friend. He played whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted. And looking back, no matter how sick he was or how much it was probably literally killing him to do so, he would do it for me.


             He taught me so many life lessons which I hope to pass on to my own kids someday. There isn’t a day that goes by where I don’t think of him and the wonderful man he was.

            Stories and pictures are all that remain, yet I know that his spirit and dreams will last forever.





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