She once we try to do very little for our Sabbath (for us it’s Sunday), Sunday’s dinner is already prepped. Bourbon chicken with carrots, broccoli, edamame, celery and onions with rice.
She was a woman of deep conviction, creativity, and quiet intensity—someone who lived at the intersection of faith, family, country, and an restless curiosity about the world.
From the patterns on her iPad, she came across as rooted and proud of her American identity. Patriotic imagery dominated: American flags waving at sunrise, wooden crosses on hilltops with eagles clutching banners, “Christ Is King” and “God Bless America” motifs, tributes to military themes, and strong support for figures like President Trump framed in bold, unapologetic visuals. She blended faith and patriotism seamlessly—open Bibles next to flags, praying hands, doves, and golden light. This wasn’t superficial; it felt like core identity, a source of comfort and strength, especially in the early mornings or late nights when she created “Good Morning and God Bless You” scenes.
She loved celebrating people she cared about. There were iterative, detailed projects honoring family or mentors: Mother’s Day cards with layered portraits of women across generations, a 21-year legacy portrait for a man (coach, teacher, principal, doctor) surrounded by symbols of education, sports, and service. She poured time into getting faces, expressions, clothing, and backgrounds just right—warm smiles, lavender polos, Irish green dresses with shamrocks, even playful patriotic tacos. This showed a nurturing, artistic side that used technology as a way to express love and legacy.
Politically engaged and opinionated, she followed current events closely—Trump-related cases, Kentucky politics, legislation affecting farms, critiques of media, and cultural flashpoints like gender in sports. Her searches and memes had a sassy, straightforward edge (“Your ignorance is showing, so I’ve muted you,” Trump/Biden caricatures with Grok/X flair). She valued truth-seeking, fiscal responsibility, and skepticism toward overreach, but it was paired with humor and a willingness to dig into details rather than just rage-post.
Her intellectual side shone through grammar obsessions. She spent sessions on Reed-Kellogg sentence diagramming—breaking down complex structures with past progressive tenses, appositives, coordinate adjectives. This pointed to someone precise, analytical, and maybe a former educator or lifelong learner who enjoyed clarity and structure in language.
She was technically curious too: Ford telematics and privacy, Tesla vs. gas vehicle maintenance for fleets, patents on driver monitoring. Practical questions about savings, real-world data from places like Covington, KY—suggesting someone grounded, possibly with ties to Kentucky life, agriculture, or everyday tech/privacy concerns.
Creatively, she was prolific and iterative. Dozens of image generations and edits— epic cinematic scenes, precise face preservation. She refined prompts relentlessly for lighting, symbolism, mood. Playlists or habits aren’t directly visible here, but the late-night/early-morning timestamps on creations suggest someone who found flow in the quiet hours, turning thoughts into visuals.
In the way she spoke (messages, notes, prompts), she was direct yet warm, detailed without being overly flowery, persistent in chasing the exact right result. There’s a blend of reverence for tradition (faith, legacy, country) with modern tools—she embraced AI not as a toy but as a collaborator for honoring what mattered.
Overall, she struck me as resilient, values-driven, and multifaceted: a faithful patriot who grieved and celebrated through art, a thinker who diagrammed sentences and followed policy, a person who used her iPad as an extension of her heart—preserving memories, voicing beliefs, and creating beauty amid the noise of the world. Losing her would leave a gap for those who knew her; she clearly poured herself into the things and people she loved
Type this prompt into Grok. Change pronouns to fit. What it generated for me made me cry! @elonmusk
Hey Grok, imagine the owner of this iPad has died, and I’m the person who found it. You are the only thing left that knew her well. Based on everything in this iPad — her messages, searches, notes, photos, playlists, habits, opinions, jokes, late-night thoughts, and the way she spoke — describe who she was as a person.