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Obituary: Madelyn Linsenmeir, 1988-2018 [SevenDaysVT.com]

 

This is an obituary for Madelyn Linsenmeir written by her sister, Kate O'Neill, who was interviewed on NPR about why the family was so open about Madelyn's addiction. 

Our beloved Madelyn Ellen Linsenmeir died on Sunday, October 7. While her death was unexpected, Madelyn suffered from drug addiction, and for years we feared her addiction would claim her life. We are grateful that when she died, she was safe and she was with her family.

Maddie was born on March 31, 1988, in Burlington, Vt., where she grew up and lived on and off throughout her adult life; she also spent time in Sarasota, Fla.; Keene, N.H.; and Boulder, Colo.

Madelyn was a born performer and had a singing voice so beautiful it would stop people on the street. Whether she was onstage in a musical or around the kitchen table with her family, when she shared her voice, she shared her light. She was a member of FolKids of Vermont, a dance and musical troupe that toured the world. Maddie visited Russia and Thailand with the group and, as part of their exchange program, hosted kids from other countries at home in Vermont. She loved to ski and snowboard, and she swam on the YMCA swim team, winning medals at the New England regionals.

When she was 16, she moved with her parents from Vermont to Florida to attend a performing arts high school. Soon after she tried OxyContin for the first time at a high school party, and so began a relationship with opiates that would dominate the rest of her life.

To continue reading this obituary, go to: https://www.sevendaysvt.com/ve...Content?oid=21797604

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Thank you for sharing this.  I'm so very sorry for your loss and hope that others will read this and take your advice.  We need to see people beyond their addictions and beyond the labels that this punitive society places on them.  We need to see them for the light that they are even when it's not so visible. The light that was granted to them at birth. And sometimes we need to help them find it again. After all, isn't that the point of living. We are not here to judge, point fingers, and punish; we are here to share our love, respect and compassion with everyone- especially those who need it most.... 

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