When a brain tumor took away
Dorothy Holm's ability to speak, she picked up index cards and began filling
them, edge to edge, with seemingly random, indecipherable sequences of letters. Her grandchildren saw her
scribbling and thought she was leaving them a code -- but it was one the preteens couldn't crack.
Eighteen years later, the puzzle has been solved after one of
Holm's granddaughters posted images of a card online. In just 13 minutes, a MetaFilter.com user figured out that
as Dorothy Holm was dying, she was writing out prayers. "It was kind of
relieving to have an answer, even if we don't know what every single
word says," Janna Holm, who posted the
card, said. "It's nice to know that they were prayers, and kind of gave some insight into what she was thinking and what
she was focused on in her last couple weeks."
Holm said Wednesday that her
grandmother, who lived in Shakopee, was diagnosed with lung cancer that
metastasized and formed a brain tumor. She died in 1996 when Janna was 11. In her final weeks, she wrote line
after line of capital letters on roughly 20 index cards, sparking her grandkids' curiosity. Holm said she, her
brother and two cousins -- then ranging in age from 8 to 12 -- spent a few months trying to figure out what
the letters stood for, but failed.
Holm's
father recently found one of the cards, and Holm, who loves puzzles, decided to
delve into the
project once again. She asked for help Monday on MetaFilter.com, a community blog, thinking her grandmother may have been
trying to remember lyrics, and that each
letter stood for a word in a song. "This is a crazy long shot, but rye
seen Mefites pull off some pretty impressive
code-breaking before!" she posted.
In the
image she posted, the letters fill the front of the card top to bottom. There
is some repetition, strokes that look
like backward commas and lines that look like stanza breaks. The back of the card contains fewer lines, marked with the
numerals 1 and 2. In minutes, MetaFilter members were on the case. One user --
looking at the back of the card -- thought about religion and realized that
each letter stood for a word in the Lord's Prayer.
"AH, YES! . OFWAIHHBTN
... Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name," the user wrote.
With that, more MetaFilter members worked on the front of the card. Holm
guessed it might be a personal prayer. Using
her own deductions and comments from the website, Holm compiled a prayer in which her grandmother was
giving thanks, and praying that her
loved ones would be safe, happy and healthy. Holm said she's not sure why her grandmother used a code, but perhaps, as her
memory was fading, she used it as a "cheat sheet" to help recall prayers. Janna Holm says it's been fascinating
to learn more about her grandmother,
and after a couple whirlwind days she has all the answers she needs.
The above
article was sent to me this week by someone nice and thought it was a good one to pass along. It's
fascinating to see the mystery of these index cards solved after 18 years! And as it turns out the woman created a way in
which she could remember prayers during her
failing health! It certainly helps keep in perspective how fortunate I am to be
able to pray to God as often as I wish. Which is a
sobering reminder to me that I simply can't
pray enough. Jesus prayed
without ceasing, and He is the author and perfecter of our faith! We must remember to pray every day as often as we can!
Eric