Sunday, July 31, 2011

Bon Jovi - Influenced My Life - Time Line

1974 - 2-17-1974 , Anne Delina Peddicord, is born.
1980 - my mom and dad get divorced
1981 - dad remarries, my half sister is born.
1982 - mom remarries
Summer of 1982 we move to Jettersville, Virginia from Richmond, Virginia
 and the store 
Mom, Michelle, me, Tricia.

1983 - Jon Bon Jovi Records “Runaway” and it gets put on a DJ album of new musicians.
I want to try out for cheerleading - and is told to either pick from my father or stepfather.
I am ready to runaway from home: Q94 starts playing “Runaway”

Me In 1983


1984 - Bon Jovi the band is formed, and releases “Bon Jovi” the debut album.
1985 - Bon Jovi Releases 7800° Fahrenheit
           We move to King and Queen, Virginia, and starts getting into boys. The physical, sexual, and emotional
           abuse starts to intensify
1986 - Bon Jovi releases Slippery When Wet. The band becomes Superstars overnight.
My grandfather has a stroke.
Pictures of Grandpa in Rehab:
 



1987 - Summer of mom leaves my step father, and my sister and I are separated,My sister goes with my grandparents,
and I go with my cousin to Tennessee.
Anne in 1987 with Christie Peak


Me, Mom, and Michelle, after leaving our stepfather.

1988 - Bon Jovi releases New Jersey

April 1988 I moving to Oregon, due to my step father fi nding us in Tennessee and fear of our safety we
fl ed.
1990 - Jon Bon Jovi releases - Blaze of Glory, and Richie Sambora releases Stranger in this Town.
I enter High school.



Prom 1990 / 1991 ( KUHS)
1991 - Student body president is killed in a freak accident with a deer.
1992 - Senior year for Anne, and Bon Jovi releases Keep the Faith.
1993 - Bed of Roses is my senior Prom Theme.

  
graduation
Prom:
1994 - Bon Jovi Releases Cross Roads. I am engaged to be married.
1995 - Bon Jovi - Th ese Days.
I move out on my own, into my fi st apartment. I am living with my Fiance.
1997 - Jon Bon Jovi releases Destination Anywhere.
My grandfather dies.

1998 - Richie Sambora releases Undiscovered Soul
I get married. I see Jon Bon Jovi promoting Destination Anywhere in Downtown Portland, a week after
I got married.
My sister graduated from Oregon State University and my mother graduated from Oregon Institute of
Technology Mag Cum lade.





Wedding Photo:

2000 - Bon Jovi releases Crush.
I graduate from college fi nally with a BS in Computer Science.
December I meet Rosie, on Backstage with Bon Jovi Chat room.
I move from Monmouth, to Portland, Oregon.
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College Graduation Pics:

2001 - I get my very fi rst Bon jovi concert tickets for Las Vegas show, for the One Wild Night Tour.
Bon Jovi released One Wild Night Live - may of that year.
I lose my fi rst job as an adult.
Sept. 11th happens as I start my career in Adobe Tech Support.
I got my Bon Jovi Tattoo.
2002 - Bon jovi releases Bounce.
Rosie and I are fast and close friends. We plan fi rst ever trip out to see her and meet her face to face.
My Uncle Charlie Died
Mom remarries again.
My sister also marries 2003 - I get front row seats to see Bon Jovi perform live, in Portland Oregon.

Rosie makes me a sign and I take it with me.
My marriage fully starts to fall apart it’s over at this point, the constant fi ghting.
My 10 year high school reunion, I missed, because I was in NJ watching Bon Jovi play Giants stadium
for the fi rst time. Little did I know I would soon be relocating here.
Bon jovi releases - Th is Left Feels Right.
My Grandma Rosie dies.
2004: After I return from my visits with Rosie, and with all her wonderful support and courage,
I leave my abusive husband.
Bon Jovi Released “100,000,000 Million Bon Jovi Fan’s Can’t be Wrong” Box Set.
2005: Bon Jovi releases: Have a Nice Day.
On Vacation we see Bon Jovi Open the Nokia theater ( Best Buy Theater) In NYC.


Jersey Shore Picture of me and Rosie - after seeing Bon jovi - open Nokia Theater:
Rosie at the end of the year was starting to get sick with her Cancer, but at the time we did not know
this.
I saw Bon Jovi in Portland, Oregon, for the last time that year.
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2006: May Rosie is diagnosed with Ovarian Cancer.
I leave my life and move to NJ to be close to her, to care for her.
2007: Bon Jovi releases - Lost Highway
Rosie is in Remission. We got tickets to see Bon Jovi open Prudential Center, in Newark, NJ. We have 7
nights of great fun.
Season Tickets for Philadelphia Soul are purchased.
2008: Season Tickets again purchased for Soul, and a second pair was purchased and donated to cancer patients,
so that we could get Sound Check to the Lost Highway Shows in Philadelphia.
Soul Win’s AFL Championship



Sound Check March 2 2008

2009: Rosie’s cancer has reoccurred in April. I lost my Job with Elie Tahari.
November: I begin working for Macy’s.
Bon jovi release - The Circle.
2010: March We see the last Bon Jovi show we will ever see together.
We get tickets to see them open the New Meadowlands Stadium, ( Giants)
Rosie is diagnosed with Brain Metastasis 3 weeks before the concert. I attended Opening night
and call her from the show.
Nov. 2010- Rosie is hospitalized with a collapsed Lung.
Bon jovi Release - the greatest hits “Ultimate Collection”
2011: Bon Jovi is completing their world tour at the End of July.
Rosie died, July 5th, 2011.
Final Photograph of Rosie -1 week before she died








Bon Jovi Influenced My Life - Friendshiip / Cancer


Again - Formatting if from another document and it's not copying and pasting well into Blog Format.

We’ve made it to 2006.
Rosie starts getting sick here She’s complaining of being slightly bloated in her stomach and just feeling very fl u
like. She asked me if I would begin reading to her to pass the time at night, and to help her relax since she wasn’t
feeling well. I began reading to her. Rosie’s favorite books, “Little House on the Prairie” by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
She absolutely loved these stories. Our phone calls consisted of listening to some Bon jovi, some Elvis Presley, a
radio show called “ Acoustic Storm” because we both loved Classic Rock. We’d debate music and albums by the
Beatles things of is the White Album better than Sergeant Pepper. John and Yoko’s relationship. We’d talk about
Bon Jovi’s infl uences, and she got me into Bruce Springsteen, more informed about the Beatles.
We also started in January planning for my Trips to New Jersey. I had purchased for her three tickets to the last
three shows of the Have a nice tour, which was ending at Giants Stadium in July 2006.
Th e year progressed with Rosie getting slightly better, only to feel fl u like off and on throughout the winter.
She got really sick however, in March / April of that year. She went to the ER three separate occasions complaining
of being short of breath, unable to eat, and being slightly bloated. On three separate trips, the doctors at JFK
hospital told her it was not Ovarian Cancer, that she was too young to get it, and that because she had children
she would not get it. Th ey shoved the papers are her, and sent her home, with a respiratory infection and stomach
virus. On her third trip she had a Lung tap because they felt it was possible pneumonia and drained the
fl uid that had built up in her lung. I was on the phone with her every night. I was very upset and worried.
I was not taking care of myself, and got a cold myself. But I got better aft er about a week. Aft er her third trip and
she was complaining of feeling like something popped inside of her. She went back to JFK, but to the Emergency
room. An older Doctor took her seriously and saw that she had already been in the ER 3 or 4 times previously
over the last month. He decided to give her a cat scan.
He found that she was indeed bloated, and he discovered that she had cancer. She called me May 12, with the
news at work. I was asked to come. I quit my job. I walked out. Bought suitcases, her parents paid for the plane
ticket. Because the doctor told her she had at that point 3 months to live. You do not know devastating news until
your best friend calls you and says I have Ovarian Cancer. I want you here with me. As Jon sings, “If I got that
call in the dead of night. I’d be right by your side.” I dropped absolutely everything. I called my estranged husband
so that he would know where I was going. I notifi ed my apartment manager - who said that I could leave,
the apartment, and it was not breaking the lease as they changed ownership. I was paid through the end of May.
I had one friend Scott Valentine who came by aft er work to help me fi nish packing my bags, and he said he’d take
over cleaning up and storing my stuff for me. I went to work, I walked into the building found a manager, and
said I quit. Chad and Dan both tried to talk me into staying and just taking a leave of absence. I said no. I then
broke the news to my friends on the fl oor. It was one of the hardest things I did. People cried, came over and
hugged me, and were just upset and sorry to see me go. Her parents paid for my ticket out of Portland. It was
$600 at the time. I took my last dollar, my Bon Jovi Stuff , and of course Leo the Lion and Mr. Monkey.
I let my birdie go. I let her fl y our of the apartment. She sat on my shoulder for the longest time, because she
Page 45
knew I was leaving and I wasn’t coming home. I loved her so much. Th at was one of the hardest things I ever
had to do. But my birdie also knew I had to leave and be here for Rosie. Rosie was everything to me. She was my
sister, my soul, my best friend the joy and light of my life.
I left Oregon, on a rainy Th ursday Night. I had a midnight fl ight with 3 layovers. Rosie gave her cell phone to her
parents so that I could keep them notifi ed of where I was in my trip. I fl ew from Portland to Seattle, from Seattle
to Minneapolis, and from Minneapolis to Newark, New Jersey. Rosie by this point was having a lung tap put in
that very morning I landed. Th e very fi rst I did, was open my suitcase, and Pulled Leo out. He had to come to the
hospital. I could not get there fast enough. I was nervous because at this point her life had changed drastically.
Her girls were with her boyfriend. Her parents whom she thought were dead were found alive. And their relationship
was re-established. Her parents are in denial and do not know about her children. It’s a secret I will be
taking to the grave. I was so overwhelmed by this news I just didn’t know what to do. I saw Rosie, hooked up to a
million wires and with a suitcase she called it fi lling with yellow yucky fl uid that was draining from her abdomen
and lungs. She was bloated. Th e doctors were deciding at that point if she should start Chemotherapy right away
or if she should have a complete debulking.
Rosie opted for the complete debulking. I walked into the room not long aft er she made that decision. I gave her
Leo, and gave her a huge hug, and kissed her and was sent home with her parents so that I could get some much
needed sleep. Kathy and Mike then drove me to their house. Rosie’s room was completely trashed because she
had been so sick for a couple of months prior. I brought in my stuff and began unpacking and sorting through
what few things I brought with me. I then called my mother, grandmother and my sister. Th ey were all concerned
about my well being but proud of me at the same time I started immediately looking for a new job.
Rosie had her surgery on May 18th, 2006. I had 2 phone interviews and scheduled an in person for the following
week. Her parents were generously allowing me to use her car. I fi led for unemployment. Rosie and I both found
great comfort in the music of Bon Jovi. She had her photographs of the band she’d taken over the years, and I
brought her the Video tapes of Bon Jovi I had, to the hospital. While she was recovering she would watch the
Crush tour, Slippery when wet videos, and Live from London, and en Evening with Bon Jovi. She passed countless
days and nights enjoying the music she loved so much. She found courage to fi ght this disease. She fought
and refused to believe that she was going to die.
Aft er her surgery was completed, they staged her cancer as Stage IV A or Stage III C. Th ey said they had left less
than a thumbnail of cancer in her body. Bon Jovi was wrapping up their Have a Nice Tour in Europe and fi nishing
out at Giants. Rosie already had 3 single tickets. Th e doctors cleared her to go. Th e problem then became getting
pairs of tickets. I went through brokers, sold what I had and bought one pair for the fi rst night, that pair was
$500 for fl oor seats second section on richie’s side. Th e second night, I spent another $350 as we got them early
in June, and we had pit seats. Th e fi nal night, I had bought yet another pair of tickets, for $500 or so, but I found
a Pit seat, for $800 and it wound up costing me $1000 for a single ticket. I bought it feeling it could have been the
last time she saw Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora live.
By July 5th I was employed and working at Elie Tahari as a Help Desk Coordinator. Rosie had completed one
round of Carbo / Taxil treatment and the CA 125 test results showed, that her counts started at over 435 and
dropped to 17 aft er one single treatment. Without the music of Bon Jovi, I doubt either one of us would have had
the strength or courage to fi ght through the fear, the unknown, and celebrate our time that we have together.
Aft er that last show at Giants, another favorite of Rosie’s was performing at the Readington Balloon Festival.
It was 99 Saturday on July 30th, and we baked all damn day in the sun. Was it worth it to see our Band, you bet.
We got every song, including Wildfl ower performed the second and only time live. We got Dry Country, we got
Page 46
Blood on Blood, we got all our favorites save for Mystery Train. Tired and all we got up the next day and with
our trusty google directions, for at least getting there, we took off to see the one and only Peter Frampton. What
an adventure that turned out to be. We had thrown out the directions aft er arriving thinking we could fi nd our
way home. We were so tired aft er that. But man was it a day not to be forgotten. We got lost and sunburned aft er
backing in the sun for the Bon jovi show the night before, then all day for the Peter Frampton show. We had a
hell of a time, going through hell trying to fi nd our way back to Route 22 E so that we could get home.
Rosie continues to go through 3 more rounds of chemotherapy. Without the music she would not have made it
through being sick for a week aft er each treatment, feeling terrible, and down in the dumps. But the chemo was
working her CA was going down steadily. On her 5th treatment, we went and saw the Goo Goo Dolls at PNC
Arts Center. I’m fi ghting to learn my way around a new company.
It is October 18th, 2006 and Rosie is declared to be in Remission, from her Ovarian Cancer. We celebrate. Life
moves forward. Every thing is going great, but by the following year I get news that my grandmother, has had a
heart attack. She survives, but it’s hard for me. Th en my great aunt Jean, is moved to California due to her illness
and health. Her kids move her closer to them from Seattle, Washington.
Moving into 2007: I turn the big 33. I spent my birthday with Rosie and family for the fi rst time. It was weird
for me actually celebrating my birthday but she insisted. For my birthday, I lost my shaggy look with the long
straight boring hair I had since I got married. Because my ex husband, refused to let me cut it short or perm it.
Th ank you Rosie. She insisted I update my look and that was her gift to me. She encouraged me to fi nd myself, to
do new things and not be afraid.
In June 2007 however, Bon Jovi Released Lost Highway. What a great Album. Richie’s father had died earlier in
the year, from Lung Cancer. I release personally to that having lost my Uncle Charlie, Uncle Andy, Uncle Roy,
Aunt Rachel and Aunt Anne all to that very disease. It’s a terrible and devastating disease. My Aunt Jean died
not long aft er that album released. When I lost my Uncle Andy, her husband, I had hand written out for her the
lyrics to Th ank You For Loving Me, as a gift to help her heal and deal with pain of his death. She died from a broken
neck, she fell out of bed and literally broke her neck. Mind you she was older, and suff ering from dementia.
Bon jovi are the announced they would be opening the new Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey 10 nights.
Guess who had to have all 10 nights, almost. We were able to get 7 nights. I did have a job, and she was on SSI.
At this point in our lives, Rosie’s still living high and in remission but things are changing. Her mother is getting
slower, and her father crazy. I’m providing everything for Rosie. I buy her food, paid her cell bill, our internet
connection and my bills. In the meantime I have season Tickets to see Jon’s arena Football team, the Philadelphia
Soul. What great times those were. Th e team wasn’t bad but they weren’t great either. We had seats in end
zone, and attended all the home games. It meant I took half days off form work to make it to Philadelphia, but I
made up the time.
It was Rosie’s dream to see the Arena football games. We were on TV a few times because of where our seats
were. We had such fun at those games. Rosie got her picture taken with Jon, since at that time he would walk
around the arena before games, signing autographs. Sadly, I was pushed and the picture is a bit blurry. I however,
was not as lucky. Rosie also got Ron “Jaws” autograph. She became fascinated with the game and began yelling at
the Refs but her favorite parts were Soulman, the team mascot. She loved hanging out with him.
We got our Bon jovi tickets, now I couldn’t aff ord great seats for the shows at Newark, not 7 sets of tickets.
We sat in the upper raft ers, for a couple of nights. Th at was pretty darn scary. Cause it’s narrow up that high.
But was it worth it? Need you ask two die hard Bon Jovi Fans. So far we’ve seen Bon Jovi Open Nokia Th eater,
Page 47
and now we saw them open Prudential Center.
We had a pair of fl oor seats, second row, on richie sambora’s side. I paid $600 and that was face value. We had
such fun. Th at was the night Big and Rich opened the show. We were dancing and singing and having a great
time. We were celebrating Rosie’s 1st year in Remission that night as well. I’m still working at a job I was starting
to dislike.
Moving into 2008, things get rough. My mother is sick, my grandmother has a stroke. Mom almost dies twice,
due to complications from Lupus / pneumonia. My Grandmother had 2 more heart attacks, and a stroke in December
of that year. Just a little pain, pressure from my job, that I wasn’t performing up to standards, and I was
struggling to get the support I needed to complete any projects or suggestions to get anything changed or done. I
was failing at everything, but I was still a friend. I was fi ghting for Rosie. I wanted to keep her healthy and happy.
She’d been through so much, so as a thank you for all the help and friendship she had given me. I bought a second
set of Philadelphia Soul Season Tickets, which included Bon Jovi concert tickets, for Jon’s birthday, 3-2-2008.
It included sound check. I had already renewed our Philadelphia Soul tickets, and moved us over a section so
that we weren’t directly under the fi eld goal bars. So I donated the game tickets to cancer kids or young adults
for the season, while I kept the concert tickets. For Christmas 2007, Rosie gave me 3-3-2008 tickets, in return to
see Bon Jovi play the second night. Th e seats were in the section off richie’s side, about 12 rows up. We a great
time we had.
But sound check we will never ever forget. We were right in front of Richie and Jon. I mean on the barricade.
Th ey did Mystery Train for sound check Rosie had tears rolling down her face, because it was her all time favorite
bon jovi song. I got Wild is the Wind, which they don’t do live since the Jersey Syndicate tour back in 1989.
Th e show itself, was fantastic, Jon was surprised with a birthday cake by his Football team, the Philadelphia Soul,
who was quarterback at the time, Tony Grazini said we’d bring the championship to Philadelphia this year. He
was right, Tony didn’t do it but team went on to win the 2008 Arena Bowl. Not long aft er that Rosie and I failed
to attend the concert in Central Park. Why? We had to see the football team fi ght for the right to play in New
Orleans. We were there when they won by a hair. We loved it so much.
Page 48
Rosie and I at sound check 3-2-2008


Rolling into a very rough 2009. My company, is downsizing, the economy crashed and the arena football league
has suspended operations for the year. I wind up a casualty of the economy. I get laid off April 19th, 2009. I was
told that my boss needed more out of the position and I wasn’t stepping up enough. I refused to see his band
play and this is the same man who claimed to know Jon Bon Jovi’s son, and Jon himself. Enough said. However,
in March of 2009 Rosie had a Biopsy performed, to determine which type of cancer she had. Something had
recurred and was causing her grief. She had to have a piece of the tumor removed from behind her wind pipe.
We had scheduled this Biopsy with Dr. Bastides, three times since Sept. 2008. He cancelled once on the table
in November, we couldn’t reschedule with him again until January, she’s prepped and he cancelled again on the
table, another month goes by, more pre-op test are done again, and she is fi nally taken care of. He tells her got
most of the tumor out but felt it was cancer.
Meanwhile in the 6 months it took for her to have this Biopsy performed, she was getting progressively weaker,
and sicker. She was not being treated. She had a double hernia she could not get repaired due to her impending
biopsy / chemotherapy. I took her for the biopsy in March 2009. Th ey determined it was a recurrence of Ovarian
Cancer, in her lungs not Leukemia which they felt it could also be. She had to wait another 3 weeks or so
for the results and the biopsy to heal fully before she would be starting Chemo therapy again. Remembering this
time however that she was allergic to Cisplatin, which meant they would have to drip the drugs into her slower,
and give her more steroid to try and prevent another reaction.
By this time, Rosie had also been diagnosed with High Blood Pressure, and a diabetic, plus she was well over 300
pounds due to the Chemo from a few years ago. It took her longer to heal, and certain drugs caused her sugar to
spike out of control and remain dangerously high. Rosie was so hurt when I was fi red from my job at Elie Tahari,
but not as much as I was. I was afraid of losing my car, my lease was up the following year. I was worried about
student loans, and my bills, and supporting the two of us. I live with her and her parents. I pay them rent, do
housework, and run all the errands. What a year. Rosie’s sick and needs chemo every three weeks. I take her to
chemo, and then I’m trained on how to give her insulin, and become responsible for all her pills and schedule ad
all her medicines.
I’m home job hunting as well. Unfortunately I work in technology and that was the segment hit hardest by the
recession. IT felt it fi rst. I was collecting unemployment. Fighting to keep everything turned on and balanced,
and supporting the two of us. I was so tuned into “Keep the Faith, I believe, Falling from Graceland, Story of my
life, Stick to your Guns, Father Time, Th e Answer, Destination Anywhere, Any Other Day, to name a few songs
Page 49
I would repeat to fi nd a reason not to quit. I would sit and apply for job aft er job aft er job. Sometimes I get an
interview, over the phone. I had a few interviews in person. I was learning where in Jersey things were. I was
worried about Rosie. Th ey had to change her treatment to straight single agent Taxel because she had another
allergic reaction to the Carbo.
I was fearing for the future, trying my hardest not to think that maybe Rosie won’t be ok, maybe she will die.
Th ey defi nitely ran through my head, and heart. I wanted her to be the person who beat this disease. She began
to fall into a very deep depression. I pushed her to continue to live her life. I fought her to listen to Bon Jovi, she
loved Taylor Swift , though, and Sugarland, Kenny Chesney and Jimmy Wayne. We had so many dreams.
November 2009 I was again gainfully employed as a contractor for Macy’s, working in MCIS, or Macy’s Creative
IT Support. What luck to have a job working in NYC, at Macy’s yes, that Macy’s, the one in Miracle on 34th
Street. I work above the store.
Bon jovi released Th e Circle, the week aft er I started working for Macy’s. I ran to buy the new album. I had to
have it. Rosie now, is dealing with Chemo, and I’m commuting for an hour via NJ transit each way into the city
and home from the city. We buy tickets of course even though she hates the album. She hated every song on it,
could not fi nd a track that suited her. But loyal to the band none the less. I however connected to the single “
We Weren’t Born to Follow and I fell in love with Superman Tonight, and Live Before You Die. For my Christmas
present / birthday present, we each bought a pair of tickets to see Bon Jovi play in March 2010. Her birthday gift
from me, however was a pair of tickets to see Taylor Swift performing a few days later in Philadelphia.
Welcome to 2010.
Year of changes. How fast time goes, and it just really can escape you. By January 2010, I thinking my contract is
almost over but it gets extended, and I’m off ered a full-time position with Macy’s. It took me well over a month
and half to get through all the formal processes. Job opening interview, and so forth.
I was off ered and accepted on Feb. 17th, 2010, I had just turned 36. Rosie was so happy that I had been hired
full-time. She was proud of me. Mom just asked me if I could get her parade tickets. I had been by this time
diagnosed with this condition called Fibromyalgia. But it hasn’t stopped me, it fl ares from time to time, but St.
John’s wort appears to help with my depression and the pain from Fibro. Rosie’s not feeling well and starting to
have issues with her breathing.
Chemo she is driving herself., Rosie is also giving her own insulin shots. Her mother lost her job in November
2009. Her beauty shop closed. We roll into March, and I’ve been given the time off to see the concerts as I had
previously purchased tickets before I was hired. Th ose were the last 2 Bon Jovi shows we saw together.
She was sick and dizzy and felt awful when we went to the fi rst show, but she was so very happy because we took
my new car to Philadelphia. She drove it once. In April 2010, aft er her Cat scan, she was told, the cancer had
grown. Th ey were changing her treatments to be Doxil. No big deal, Doxil appeared to give people a longer life.
Th at’s all the mattered now. Rosie was not ready to quit and absolutely refused to throw in the towel.
April 2010 Bon Jovi announce, they are opening the New Meadowland Stadium. We rush to get our tickets. We
got the fi rst night and the last night. But little did we know Rosie would not attend those shows. In May, aft er
completing her fi rst round of Doxil., Th ings appear to be going well. She’s not suff ering from side eff ects other
than bad nausea. But Friday morning, I believe it was May 7th, she had a seizure. Her mother called me at
work, and said not to come home, and not to go to the hospital. I told my boss, and she said leave now.
Page 50
I rushed to hospital. Th ey had just told her, the cancer, had metastasized to her brain. Emotions were running
high. I never thought it would be her. Th ey started her immediately on Whole Brain Radiation. I took the next
week off to be with her, to take her for the rest of her treatments. She completed 10 rounds, the fi nal one the day
Bon jovi opened Giants. Th e doctors cautioned her about the lights and possibility of having another seizure.
She was afraid and just too exhausted from the radiation to attend the show that night. However, we had just
upgraded to Iphone 3Gs. She insisted I go. I was to call her from the show so she could be there in spirit.
I did just that. She was there on the phone. I described Train, she said call me back, I don’t care for them and save
the battery for the boys. Now Rosie still hated the new album. But she loved the set, because they were pulling
out old stuff they hadn’t done in years. She got a few of her favorites, but I was so happy to have gotten Blood on
Blood. Rosie cried the entire night, she was so upset that she could not attend either show. She was just too sick
from her treatments. Little did I know it would be the last Bon Jovi show she’d ever listen to.
She stared a 5 day treatment every month that required me to take off from work early to pick her up from
chemo. She was very ill throwing up and unable to eat. Over three months she lost 45 pounds. I won tickets to
see Bon Jovi play the PC Richardson Th eater in October, performing the new single before they released their
great hits album. I had to turn them down, because she was fi nishing up chemo, and just too sick to attend a
private 200 member audience show. Well, that brings up to October and Rosie’s decline and the cancer starts to
win the war.
In October of 2010 at the end of the month, Rosie is taken to ER complaining of severe shortness of breath
and the constant cough she’d been complaining about since January. Her left lung had collapsed, and she had
a blockage in the lower bronchial tube. Once again another 3 or 4 days in the hospital. Rosie at that time, was
given 2 brachotherapys to remove the tumor and to see if the lung would begin to infl ate. Now treatment for the
brain stopped at this point.
November 2010:
Radiation to her chest is decided as the next course of action and debating whether or not she should take
Temador for her brain began. I have never been more frustrated with doctors. Th e Gynecological team said
they’d talk to Radiation but never seemed to connect. One said take it aft er Th anksgiving, one said no wait until
you start Radiation and back and forth they went. Radiation didn’t even start until January 2011.
Jan. 2011.
Th is year has been hell and we’re in August almost. Rosie is again back in the hospital due to shortness of
breath. Th e determine the lung is not collapsed but has gunk pressing against it that is preventing it from fully
infl ating again. Rosie not complaining mind you she is fi ghting for her life. She was not “Backing down and was
going the Distance” So they start her on radiation to Her chest. She was scheduled for 15 rounds.
5 Rounds were completed in the hospital.
I would work all day, go to the hospital everyday aft er work which added to my commute another hour. 30
minutes in and our, then I’d have to drive the 20 minutes home. WE laughed and argued about how much she
hated the new album. Bon jovi are currently touring and releasing a new Greatest Hits. I ran to pre-order the
album and of course I have it. She hates the new songs, feels they’ve done better. I like the one song “What do
you got ?’ and “Th e more things change”. My boss at Macy’s is a saint, and my entire team, stands behind me
100%. Th ank God, I had to work 1/2 days to complete her last 10 rounds of radiation. Th en through in 31 inches
of snow blizzard, a week later 24 inches of snow, and then sub 0 temperatures. Rosie physically only completed
10 total rounds of the 15 she was scheduled for. We were going to skip this tour because we had planned to go to
CMA Music Festival in Nashville, Tennessee. But in Feb. aft er rosie had her fi rst MRI to fi nd out what was going
Page 51
in her brain, all the plans in the world changed. We would have gone to see Bon Jovi play Philadelphia and
MSG, but it was not meant to be. Rosie on Feb. 26th got news that the tumors in her had grown, that there
was swelling, and she needed to come straight to the hospital and be admitted.
We went again to ER. Another week of her being it he hospital. Well on Sunday one of her doctors came in
and said You have 3 - 6 months to live. When Rosie said , I don’t believe you, what else can be done for me.
Th e doctor got upset and walked out of the room because she did not like how the conversation was going.
I was devastated, rosie was devastated. Her radiation team came in and said they felt she would be a candidate
for Gamma Knife. But her Gynecological said no, and off ered her Brain Surgery, which was also
explained, she was going to have the largest tumor removed, but they felt that wasn’t an option at that point.
2 Weeks go by and she is admitted into the brand new Gamma Center at Robert Wood Johnson University
Hospital. She is patient number 2. Th ey get her setup in the frame. She’s not afraid of the procedure as
much as the MRI she hated it.
She takes her pills before going, but due to some issues, she missed an aft ernoon dose of all her pills including
the steroid and seizure medication. Th e Gamma procedure, they play for her specifi cally some Bon jovi,
they asked her to bring her in favorite Cd’s. Th ey listened to Crush, and few other things she loved. Th ey
released home, with a script for pain relievers. Not 1 hour aft er I get her home. I go upstairs to shower, because
I have to work the next day. She’s fi ne when I leave. I’m upstairs all of 15 minutes. I come back down,
and fi nd her on the fl oor. She had a seizure. I ran up to get her father because I could not get her up off the
fl oor. She had 4 seizures that night. I called 911 and again had to back to the hospital.
It was determined that the missed dosage of her steroid is what caused her to seize. Another week in the
hospital. Th is brings us to the beginning of April 2011. We fi nd a new study and she wants to try this treatment:
Doxil / temador. It was a 4 week waiting period due to the nature of her gamma. Th ey wanted her to
heal before starting her on chemo. April passes with nothing happening other than a slight cough. Which
could have been anything.
May 2011:
She is treated but in early may before we go our on trip to Wildwood, New Jersey, she starts having symptoms,
spinning rainbows or beach balls, prisms she called them. Th e doctors in both Oncology and Radiation
said not to worry about them as she did not have any other symptoms. She started at that point of
complaining about being a little unsteady that she couldn’t balancer right. Again it was written off as a side
eff ect of chemo or the interactions of the drugs she was currently taking. Meanwhile. At work, I was told
straight out, I was not being promoted this year, due to my need for fl exibility, which was not a concern of
mine. I needed to be there for her and I was thanks to my team and my wonderful boss. My job was the
least of my concerns, my other job was taking care of Rosie. She was my responsibility, doctors, chemo, all
her health care, physical care and so forth. Note I am just 37 years old.
Right before vacation I scheduled her follow up MRI, and doctors appointment with radiation: Oncology
bullied her into cancelling it claiming insurance would not pay for it.
Very uneasy we went down to wildwood. Th e prisms had increased in duration and frequency. She was
getting them almost daily and they lasted anywhere from 5 - 20 minutes at a time. Rosie has forgiven Richie
for his role it he poor music on the new albums. Again they tell her it’s nothing to be concerned with and to
wait it out. She gets Chemo on June 19th. Th at day she’s complaining of seeing a yellow cast, and she’s very
weak and unsteady on her feet. Th ey tell her not to worry. Two days later, she’s in the ER. Th ey run a CT
and see that the tumors in her head well, there’s new swelling and what appears to be bleeding. But some
Page 52
of the lesions are gone. Out of 14 in march 6 disappeared, but 2 new ones appeared/ She cannot see well out of
her left eye due to a yellow hue. Friday - they tell her she’s getting radiation to the brain again, then it changes, no
then its back on again. Basically from what happens. Th ey told her not to bother that she was going to die. Her
biggest fear and mine. She starts Whole Brain Radiation therapy on Monday. So she gets the minimum amount
of time for the Doxil which is now toxic to leave her body. She can barely walk to the commode in her room. She
can’t breath she’s struggling. And they want her to have physical therapy for the most part they appear positive.
However, aft er the third round on radiation, she’s still complaining of sinus pain, and of this yellow cast,
she can’t watch TV. Leo is in bed with her, keeping her company she can’t walk or really get out of bed to use the
commode.
Th ursday of that week she fell out of bed. In a hospital. She can’t get the damn nurses to come when she pages
them. It’s horrible. I’m working and between calls at my job, I’m calling her and checking in and being the liaison
between her and her parents. Th at’s another story all together. Th ey weren’t there and then they tried to be
controlling of her the 5 years they were actively in her life. Th ey wanted her money and wanted her to be there
for them, but they fl at out refused to help her. Hence my role. I was the care talker. I had Power of Attorney. I
had supported her for everything . I fed, clothed, and supported her 100%. I was her mother, her friend and her
sister. I loved her more than anyone can ever imagine. Sunday, July 3rd, she feel again getting off the command,
it slipped out from under her and I could not get to her to catch her. I was in the room ,while she cried and sat on
the fl oor over 1 hour waiting for the damn nursing staff to get a lift and set of keys so they could pick her up off
the fl oor. It was horrible. She was struggling so hard to breath even then she was afraid, she was exhausted.
She kept repeating to me how much she loved me and how she hoped I knew that.
What a ride I have been on. I never in a million years ever thought I was going to have bury my best friend, my
sister, my better half, my world. On Monday, July 4th, I got the call at 2:00 AM. Rosie was complaining that
she couldn’t really see, all she was seeing was shadows. I got up and went to see her at the cancer ward of Robert
Wood Johnson University Hospital. Th ey were trying to calm her down, so that they could take her down for an
Stat Cat Scan (CT). She was also complaining she couldn’t catch her breath, and having a hard time breathing.
Aft er an hour they managed to get her transferred and down for the CT. Once the oxygen tank came off , she
was losing her color, and turning purple during the CT.
I had to watch her struggle for the last hours of her life. I sat there exhausted, helpless, holding her hands,and
telling her how much I loved her and to just relax. She was so afraid of dying and leaving me. She didn’t want
to die, she was afraid to do this alone. I sat there for 2 hours and watched as she labored with an oxygen level of
80-85% before the oncology ward even notifi ed respiratory she was having any problems. Th ey fi gured the mast
worked earlier in the day aft er she fell, which is another section to be penned in. My heart just is so broken, I
could do nothing but watch her go to God. I lost her, and I couldn’t save her any more, I couldn’t help her, take
away her fears, or be there as her support system, her Rock, her sister, her best friend. It was horrible to see her
say yes, put the ventilator in, so that she could breathe easier, and still be alert and know who I am. Horrible to
watch them get it in, but fail to restrain her. Rosie’s worst fear was tubes down her throat. Once they got it in, she
then promptly ripped the tube out. Th ey had to insert it a second time, note I had to watch all of this happening
between 5-6 am on July 4th, 2011. She then coded, Code Blue – 6 N – Code Blue 6 N, I was standing just outside
the room, and was asked if they should resuscitate her. Her parents weren’t there yet, and I had to make a phone
call, saying Cheryl is dying, you need to get here now. She is now code blue, do you want her resuscitated? I was
told yes, and they worked on her for 25 minutes before they got her heart started. 25 minutes I stood crying in
the hallway watching them and this massive swarm of people around her. I felt her leave me then, I knew she was
gone, but we saw her aft er they got her restarted in ICU, they told us she would last another 20 minutes, if we
were lucky, she lasted until Tuesday, July 5th, 2:30 PM. We made the decision, to remove the life support. She was
changing colors before my eyes, and I said it was not what she wanted to be left alive only by machine. My heart
Page 53
broke, the instant the tube came out, she was gone. Immediately.
She will be buried with our picture at the Bon Jovi Show, for Lost Highway, in Philadelphia, where were had
front row seats for sound Check, her Richie sambora Jacket I made her, a picture of me with Macy’s Santa, her
picture of Chet and her as a baby, Mr. monkey, Maxwell the last thing I ever bought her, and a pinwheel in honor
of her love for the Gieco commercials. Services will be held on Friday, July 8th, 3 days before Richie Sambora’s
birthday. It never fails to amaze me, the connections I have with this band and the mirroring of my life.
So very sad, I miss her this instant, and I oft en feel her watching over me. Her parents managed to leave me out
of her Service and Orbit, going completely against her wishes, but I can’t fi ght and win that war. I know and
people around me know how very much I loved her. Jon wrote or Richie wrote: “If I got that call in the dead of
night, I’d be right by your side, Blood on Blood” well you know what I got that call and I was right by her side, up
until she died. Pain, grief, confusion, shock, numbness can’t even express how I am feeling. I just can’t put into
words the agony I am in right now.
I remember her at the Taylor swift show last year, and the Bon Jovi shows, the Keith urban shows, where we met
Jimmy Wayne, and meeting Jon at the Philadelphia Soul Games, meeting her favorite player Mike Brown. It just
hurts, remembering all the fun we used to have, and now knowing that she won’t be here any longer. To be my
side kick, and my partner in crime. I love this line from Never been kissed, “Someone once told me, write what
you know not what you think you know”, So I’m writing I guess from my heart. Will it ever be published, who
knows at this point, but I would love to have this printed and bound and sent to Bon Jovi Management, and sent
to Richie Sambora’s agent. Maybe some good will come from this. Th is story is now well over 100 pages long and
has been a labor of love, of hurt, and healing.
For Rosie’s service, she will have Mystery Train played, Wildfl ower and Falling From Graceland, these are her top
Bon Jovi / Richie Sambora songs that she wanted played. Her parents honored this wish. I put the music together
with a few other selections.
Th is is the picture of the Denim Jacket I had cross stitched for her and she is buried in.
She took a picture of Richie with her, a copy of Crush, of Stranger In Th is Town, the
picture of us at sound check because it was such a happy memory. She took with
her Mr. Monkey, a set of Bon Jovi pins we both have.
As I write this I keep hearing “ She’s a ride on a Mystery Train.” I hope that this
makes into the Jon and Richie’s hands.
All I ask is for 10 minutes with the 2 of them. I would love to present this personally.
I just want them to autograph something and pose for a photograph with me, and a
hug. Much as though I’d love to be picked from the audience from the front row, to dance with Jon, I know that’s
not likely to happen.
Th e healing process for me has begun.
Th ank you Jon, Richie, Dave, Tico, Hugh, Alec, Bobby, Matt, Mrs. B, and everyone else, for giving these men the
support they needed to become the Rock Stars and legends they have become.









Bon jovi -influenced my life - Rosie's Story

Please forgive formatting -- THis is taken for a word document and not coping very well to the blog.

Th is was copied from her post on Backstage - as we are best friends, and the bond is unbreakable- here is her
story- written by her.
Hi there ... I remember a post, well over a year now about how bon Jovi and co had or has touched peoples lives.
I read each and every last one of them , and printed them to keep , for they were of great strength and comfort
to me . this last year has nor been easy for me , and I drew on many of those stories for hope and strength . bon
jovis music has been there for me from the very beginning for me . I always had the power of music to get me
through . I had a normal childhood till I was 5 , then lost my parents which aff ected me deeply . I went to live
with a aunt and lets say it wasnt good , I suff ered cycles of abuse and neglect , none of which I really want to
divulge , but I struggled just the same . aft er 7 years I managed to get away from the abuse and live with a aunt
who loved and took care of me through all the pain I suff ered . she was my rock , as well as bon Jovi being my
rock . hearing songs like , keep the faith , prayer and many more gave me a reason to have little hope , even if I
had no hope at all .
I ran away at 13 , cause things always seemed uneven to me . I began having fl u like symptoms at times , as well
as tiredness and depression , I didn’t know it then but I had what was called epstein barr , which attacks your
immune system , and makes you sick sometimes . when I left , I choose to stay with a dear friend , he guided me
through the process of trying to heal myself , I for one was not fully ready to accept the challenge , and the only
hope I had was bon Jovi. Richie especially played a factor. I’d sit night aft er night listening to one light burning
and think there might be hope if I tried to fi nd the hope and a inner peace , which my soul so very bad needed
at the time . stress began to take its toll , I began “”cutting”” which to me is /was a form a stress relieving . its not
meant to end my life , and its hard for people to understand but that’s what it is .
I fi nally managed at 18 to make it into college , I wanted to change my life so desperate and start anew ... so I
worked hard , and every step of the way bon Jovi or richie was there for me . id hold on to those songs , and it
gave me great courage to not be afraid , cause I so terribly was to achieve . I got into nyu ..and decided to pursue
my art talent .. for friends would tell me my art was terrifi c and I should try to make a living out of that. things
were fi nally goin ok , I was in college I was doing well . even managing to not cut as oft en . I was thrilled to
learn in the summer of 98 I was going to have a baby . even though I was not married I looked at this baby as a
blessing not a curse . I began giving my time to charity . cause aft er seeing Jon and richie do so much for so many
people and them touch so many lives . I wanted to do my part .. I wanted to make a diff erence.
I volunteered for LifeBeat , a charity for aids , and did much work for cancer , partly because of my daughter . I
tell you I helped so many people and the joy it gave me was tremendous , but I could never really help myself . id
go home , care for my child , work with sick or dying people, and try to show them that no one is really alone ,
we all are loved and wanted , maybe that’s why I do it . I feel every person deserves someone to love them . id be
drained .. id put on bon Jovi ... and id cry and let myself go , I felt that hey they were comforting me ..giving me
the courage and strength to go on , and not be afraid to forge ahead .
At this time I began to spread my time . I met a lot of wonderful people in the backstage fan club , whom to
this day I’m close to , but the one who is dearest to me is Anne Delina . her and I are the best of friends and we
met here . Anne was there for me ,... when things got bad .. and as my child got to the end she was there for me
... Anne knitted a afghan for my daughter and I placed that with her when she died on Dec. 31st of 2001. my
daughter as little as she was loved bon Jovi, especially Richie and we oft en listened to bon Jovi while we went for
treatments, it gave her great joy. Th e Answer was played at my daughter’s funeral, cause it was her favorite song
. it really holds much meaning to me now more than ever . in sept. , as well I lost my dear freind in the towers ,
Page 43
and again Anne was my rock and support , always giving me a word , and making me believe that it would get
better , as well as many of my backstage friends as well . her faith , never wavered in me , even through the dark
times I had ahead . I had her and the power of bon Jovi for they gave me great courage and power to move ahead
. they gave me the power to see that music really can heal your soul. I oft en say richie heals my soul as well as
spirit , that I’m so sure of .
I had found of in June of that year , I was preg again ..and it gave me great joy ... I have 2 little girls now and they
both doin wonderful . I forge red ahead and I now made my art my career , I gave my 1st art show ! I was thrilled
so many people loved my work . it gave me great pride as well as I hoped made my mom and dad up there proud
as well , as well as my daughter and best friend . I know they looking down on me , and there light falls upon
me .. so I’m never really alone . and to Anne ... my best and dearest friend ... you are my rock and my source of
inspiration .. u helped me to see I was worth it ... that I can make a diff erence ... I thank you .
I just came back seeing the boys in Japan !! and they were wonderful it was great to see richie and rock out to
him as well as the whole band . I felt I was privileged and honored to attend ...for I owed them so much in my life
. I know that people say the power of a band or its music or message cant change a persons life , but believe me it
has changed mine . I want to thank those men who changed my life and gave me a purpose Jon Dave Hugh Tico
and yes esp richie .. You given and shown me I can make a diff erence I can give my time, I can show the world
that we all can be imp and give what we can to strive and succeed. You have given me just that.
I have gotten better now and imp trying on working on not cutting, as much each day is one day at a time .. But
u know what?? I got bon jovi’s music and they help each step not seem like such a big step .. I know with much
work ill make it through this. My Epstein Barr comes and goes and my medication seems to help it .. ill never
truly be rid of it but I fi ght it each day cause Jon says “”don’t bend, don’t break , baby don’t back down”” well I’m
doin just that!!
id love to hear from any of u all of you , who’ve been touched by the power of bon jovi’s music .. I know there
are so many ,, and I feel since as backstage members “”we all a Jovi family “” we can all talk and share those
experiences. ill be seeing those 5 guys in Feb again in NJ .. and ill be clapping and singing my heart out to each of
those songs ... take care keep the faith and much love samborasrain

Bon Jovi - Influenced my life - New Jersey Adventures


Vacation are times we all like to remember and have a good time, well this is a true adventure not to be undone.
Th is is the fi rst trip that I will make without having to worry about my soon to be crazy ex-husband. Th e year is
2004. My vacations are always to the great garden state of New Jersey. Th is is where my best friend lives. It’s also
home to our favorite band, Bon Jovi.
Rosie and I are best friends, since we were both kids. We grew up in separate states. Rosie being a true Jersey
Girl, while I’m a Southern Belle. She grew up in the same town as Richie Sambora, Woodbridge, New Jersey,
while lead singer, Jon Bon Jovi, grew up in Sayerville, New Jersey just a little further down the Parkway. I grew
up in Virginia, Tennessee, and well I’m living in Oregon.
Rosie and I met in a strange and yet unique way. Rosie is very telepathic. As children, we were both abused.
I’m not getting into any further details. I recall hearing this little girl crying one day in my head, as I was being
abused, asked her what was wrong. She told me her name and age. She was older, by 1.5 years, than me. I was
9 years old when I met her She was 11. She asked me to be her friend. We grew up oft en laughing and joking
about Bon Jovi as the band began to take shape. Rosie was telling me stories about hearing them on radio and
which songs she liked that I didn’t and which ones I liked that she doesn’t care for. Th ings of that nature. We
would communicate through telepathy. She’d talk to me in my head and I’d be talking to her in her head.
We didn’t actually speak until much later in life. It was the year 2000, the year of Bon Jovi. Th ey had just released
Crush their 8th studio album. I was graduating from college. Rosie was getting her feet wet in her photography
business. We met in a chat room, dedicated for Bon Jovi, and over the course of about 8 months we became fast
friends, immediately recognizing one another, knowing instinctively, we grew up together.
September 11,2001 that’s truly when Rosie and I spoke on the phone the fi rst time. She called me, because she
lost a few friends in the World Trade Center Towers, and then found out her 4 year old daughter was dying from
Leukemia. My heart just broke for this woman. Again, I was her rock as she dealt with the pain of losing her
child and her friends on 9/11. We made arrangements to fi nally meet in person. Th is was Sept.. 12, 2002. I had
taken my vacation to fl y out to the great state of New Jersey, without my husband. He was going to Las Vegas for
a week aft er I got back. Like I said things were bad in my marriage.
Back in September, 2002, I made my fi rst trip to the great garden state of New Jersey, home of Bon Jovi. I kept
thinking holy cow. I’ve fi nally made it. I made it to where the best band in the world, and these men who were
there for me, as I grew up live here.. Dreaming and hoping to meet the band kept going through my mind. Th is
was not to be as the band were starting to promote their new album Bounce. Rosie and I met, at Woodbridge
Center Mall. I was really in a place where Richie Sambora hung out, where Jon Bon Jovi has been seen several
times. Rosie and I laughed and giggled, and did a whirlwind, Bon Jovi tour, for that fi rst week I was out there.
We did go to Seaside Heights our fi rst trip, with her driving, an experience, not to be repeated. She didn’t know
what the rumble strip was, which meant she drove on it briefl y to fi nd out what I was laughing about. As soon
as I got out of the car, in Seaside, I felt like I had gone back in time. I only saw the place, where the early Bon
Jovi videos were fi lmed. I was standing in the same place, that the men of my dreams had been and spent their
youth. Standing outside of Lucky Leos arcade, images fl ashed from the She Don’t know Me video, Only Lonely,
and Silent Night Videos. I saw in my mind’s eye Richie Sambora tall, thin and dark with his long shaggy hair
and black hat, white peace T-shirt, leaning against the wall. Rosie laughed said he was her’s, said I could have
Page 35
Jon, who was shooting people with a green squirt gun. We laughed and took pictures of the Seaside Heights life
boat, where Richie was fi lmed playing guitar. I returned home to another year of hell in my marriage. Bon Jovi
announced tour dates, and I got to see them 4 times on the Bounce tour, once in Portland, and my second trip to
New Jersey, was a dream come true, I got to see Bon Jovi play Giants Stadium, at home.
It was great fun, to be on vacation in beginning of August, and seeing her but seeing Bon Jovi live 3 times was
a real treat. It was the fi rst night there, rocking to Bounce, which we both love. Th e following night, was to be
the Bon Jovi concert, the fi rst of 2. Th e fi rst night, we managed to get to the show early so I could like absorb
the atmosphere that is Giants Stadium, and what it means for the Bon Jovi die hards to make this almost like a
sacred trip.
It was Th ursday Night, August 6th, 2003. Time for Rosie and I to head over to Giants. Th e weather was a bit
overcast. It was cloudy. We slipped past the parking guy, and didn’t have to pay to park. I suggested lets park by
the race track, as I was told by her, that way we would be able to fi nd our way back to the hotel which was about
10 minutes away. Rosie agreed it was a good idea but complained about how far we had to walk to the gate we
were going to be entering. We got out of the car and headed towards the Home of the New York Giants, and the
building itself where I would fi nally be seeing our favorite band, playing at home in the great state of New Jersey.
We walked around Giants Stadium. We saw the beach boardwalk, left over from the state fair, it said “What a
great place to be, Th e Meadowlands August 2003.” We heard sound check, we caught it briefl y but Rosie and I
both got excited, when we heard Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora both starting on the sound check, which was
closed to the public but we could hear it from the outside. Oh I knew, if there was any way we could fi nd a way
backstage and get in to meet the band we would fi nd one! But it was not meant to be.
Th e show, was so totally amazing. We had such fun, got completely soaking wet. It started to rain and more Jon
made comments about the rain, the harder it seemed to rain. We got every song we loved for the set, with a few
exceptions. But I was so was wrapped up in the experience, we moved into the aisle and were dancing and just
having a great time. I forgot that I was miserable at home. I forgot that I was married. I felt like I was with 60, 000
other friends and fellow members of Jonny’s Church of Rock N Roll.
Th e Second Night, was a beautiful night. Muggy but it did not rain. Th at was the night, Rosie and I were
separated it just so happened, that we didn’t get seats together. She was in Section 5 by Richie, while I was stuck
in Section 14 on Dave’s side. We agreed, since I was further back that I would wait for her out by the bathrooms
aft er the show let out. I gave her the camera, since she was closer to take the pictures. She had a great time. She
was drunk by the time she got to me. I took the keys however, and drove to the hotel. I was leaving the next day
at 5:00 Am because I had to return to my life and my job. Parting for Rosie and I was so diffi cult. We both hated
the separation, and couldn’t wait for the following year for vacation.
Rosie however, got very depressed aft er that trip, and I had to make a second trip in 2003. A week in September.
My husband was not happy, but I paid for it, and saved for it. He didn’t give me a dime. I bought my tickets, and
said like it or not she needs me. I need to see if I can save her from killing herself. She was very depressed, and
no one else seemed to be able to reach her. I managed to get through to her, using every bad Bon Jovi Lyric and
story I could pull together from all the albums, and found the faith to be by her side. Like Brothers’, Blood on
Blood. Blood on Blood reminds me of our friendship, and I feel oft en is an accurate description of our friendship.
Page 36
September of 2004
Bon Jovi Released the Box set in November of this year.
With Rosie’s help, I found the courage needed to escape my marriage. The day before I was come out to see her
for vacation, I went and found an apartment 2 miles from my job, that did not require a security deposit. I had to
get my pay check cashed, and signed the lease, without coming home late from work. I explained the situation
to the lady in the leasing offi ce, who agreed to keep my information private. She also knew to contact authorities
if my soon to be ex husband came looking for me.
I then went home, and packed for my trip. I had sent previously my important papers, similar to how Mom left
my step father in 1986 to Rosie for safe keeping. That was one of the hardest nights I’ve had to live through.
Going home, and acting as if nothing was wrong, just being excited to go visit Rosie again. Little did my husband
know, once I hit the ground in Newark International Airport, things changed. I took off my wedding ring,
and began the process of healing. Rosie gave me her computer, and access, her shoulder, and a place to crash
as I dealt with the loss of my dream, and realization I had failed at my marriage. She helped me setup my new
electricity, phone, and internet all while I was here visiting her. When it came time, to return home, we still did
not know for sure, if my husband was going to Las Vegas the following Friday. He was waffl ing on the decision.
She stuffed my suitcase, full of non perishable food, so that I would have something to eat until I got my fi rst
paycheck after I left him. She called me only after he was gone or leaving for work. We put the plan into action.
I have never been so terrifi ed in my life. He went to work at 4:00 Am. I got up, and shoved my still packed suitcase
into my car as soon as he left, and started shoveling whatever I could into my car, and into plastic bags.
The night before I had written him a letter and had closed and saved it, but he found it. I was terrifi ed for my
life. He threaten to kill me if I let the cats go, he claimed they were his only friends. Rosie was on the phone,
and heard all this. She heard him take the cell phone out of the apartment and leave. She had heard his threat.
She called me that morning at 1 Am her time, because she was worried about me. I told her what I was doing.
She said move, get it going faster. I had to wait until 7 Am to rent a U-haul. I was able to get a large one, and
just spent from 4:00 Am - 7:00 throwing anything in a plastic bag that meant something to me, including my
buddy Leo, all my Bon Jovi stuff, some clothes, my microwave, the computer so I could at least talk to Rosie, a
lap, and a few blankets. I took a few of my favorite movies. No one helped me move out, no one moved me, no
one was there. I did everything completely alone.
Rosie I had on the phone. After I signed my lease, and got my keys and did the walk through, I unloaded my uhaul,
drove it back across the bridge, and picked up my car. I had done it, and by 4:00 PM that afternoon. I was
free. Now the fear set in. I called my mother, she was not home or did not answer her cell phone. I called my
sister, she also was no where around. I called my grandmother, also not home. The only person who cared about
me, was Rosie.
She talked to me and let me cry and be hysterical all night. She was exhausted but loved me to death and stayed
with me that fi rst lonely night. It was me and Baby, my birdie. I had Bon Jovi. I put in Bounce, I put in Faith,
and I put in Crush and cranked it up. I found courage, strength, and hope. I loved the song from the box set,
Radio Saved My Life Tonight, because 20 years prior, Runaway had saved my life.
Page 37
November 14th, 2004
Wow have things changed in my life. Th ings move at lightning speed when you least expect them to. I
have moved. I’m not sure what parts of this story have been saved. My other hard drive died, and I’m not sure
the backup with my friend, has even been found. I have no idea where I’m going. I can barely tell you which
end is up on most days. I still can’t fi nd my head. I have taken a bold new step, I left my abuser. I did it. I left
on my terms, and on my time. I managed to get a new apartment. I managed to get out with my check aft er
visiting Rosie, in New Jersey. Without her support, and that a few other close friends who rather remain in the
background, I doubt I’d be sitting here, free. I have asked him for a divorce. I walked out the last day he was to
work before his vacation. It was my only chance to leave and take control of my life. With her help, and support I
was able to gather what little courage, what little money I had, and what little hope I had signed the papers on my
new apartment, the day aft er I returned from my vacation.
Life has a strange way of laughing at you. It truly does. Th e night before I left , he was in tears, begging me to not
leave him. Begged me to stay with him. He actually threaten my life, if I let the cats go, because and I quote “they
are my only friends.” He even had the balls to say he was not the monster in the letter I typed. Luckily I printed
that. I have it in writing. So that Friday. I got up aft er he went to work. I started shoveling things that really
mattered, that I absolutely couldn’t live without. I fi lled bags with things I couldn’t be without. Like my trusty
friend, Leo the lion, and my new friend Richie Monkey. I never unpacked from my trip. My dear friend sent me
home with dry foods, so that I could eat for the week before I got paid.
Now before I left , that Wednesday, because of the stress, I began developing cold sores, on my lips. By the time
Friday, just 2 days later rolled around, I had 6 cold sores, on my lips, and both lips were swollen. See the Picture
below for this evidence. Th is was taken Saturday. By the time 7:00 am rolled around, I found where I was picking
up the u-haul. I was terrifi ed. I had no help, of the people whom claimed they would help- every last one of them
backed out on me the day I needed them the most. I have lost all respect and faith in people who claim to be my
friends. It’s a shame. I struggled so much to know that I had friends willing to help me when in fact I was left
completely alone to walk away from an extremely dangerous situation. I have never been more afraid or unsure,
but I knew in my heart that I had to do this. I had to leave him or I’d be dead within the next fi ve years. My life Now I had picked up

the u-haul and headed back to the apartment, in a panic, it was 7:30 AM. He would be home around 1:00 PM. I
had to get my butt in gear. So I started grabbing bags and loading up the truck by myself. I took the microwave,
I loaded the cockatiel, the only pet I took from that home. She is my friend. I loaded her into the front seat
with my purse, and my keys, and my wallet. I began quickly grabbing bags and started loading up the pictures,
posters, hangings, the few dishes I wanted, the little bit of food that I could take. I took my stuff ed animals, a
couple of pillows and a hand made afghan. I took my keyboard, took my guitar, took the computer because it was
mine. I took my clothes. I took my movies, dvds, cds, my fl ute. I got it all loaded without eating a thing by about
11:30 AM. By then I was heading out to my new apartment. I did this all myself and completely alone. I was
terrifi ed, my cell rang and My poor friend, Rosie, was in a panic because she hadn’t heard from me yet. I talked
with her as I drove the 26 miles to my new home. I hung up with her as I walked into the offi ce and got my keys.
I was on a time frame, I had to have the u-haul back by 4:00 PM. In just a little under 3.5 hours I had everything
unloaded. And moved into my new apartment. Clutching my keys, I drove the u-haul back to the place where I
used to live. I got in my car, put in Crush turned up the volume and let It’s My Life take on a whole new meaning.
Because at that moment, truly it became my life. I never knew though, how hard and how alone, how much pain
I’d had been suff ering. I called in this order, my mother, whom never answered her phone that entire night. I
called my grandmother, my little sister. None of whom were home. I then out of desperation called, my aunt,
whom was not home. Th en with my Rosie on my newly established land line, on one ear, I made the hardest call
I ever made. I called my husband using the cell phone. I told him that I left , and that I wanted a divorce.
I will never forget that day. Th e day I called him. It was the hardest thing I have ever done. I was nervous, I was
afraid, I had pain. I could barely talk because of the cold sores, I had a sore inside my lips, I had one on the
roof of my mouth. I couldn’t really drink anything. I had to make that call. Th ere was no fi ghting. Only a few
questions, “Are you going to help me pay rent?” “Are you sure this is what you want?” I said I want a divorce.
Th is is very foggy this conversation I had with him. I said I left him the cats, asked him how BJ was because I
couldn’t fi nd him when I left . I was able to say a fi nal goodbye to Gobbles. I called him, and he was very cordial,
Page 39
and pleasant almost. It was the strangest conversation I had with him. I called on Saturday, and he had gotten
a new apartment, gotten all the bills taken care of and changed into his name, got rent taken care of and was
picking up the papers. He gathered some of the stuff I left behind, and asked me to come pick it up, or to let his
friends drive it over to me. I’m still suff ering with the cold sores, now this is that pic above, that day. I reached
my mother, and she was shocked that I left him. Said at that point, that she never liked him, and wanted me to
leave aft er he got his DUII. Strange how 3 weeks prior to vacation, Mom said get marriage counseling. Mom
didn’t even off er to help me, in fact she told me to suck it in, and it would be fi ne. She didn’t ask me how I was
doing, didn’t ask to see if I was safe, nothing. She wasn’t even worried. What really hurt me, was the fact my
sister, and my grandmother could be bothered to call me. No one in my family to this date, have even off ered to
help me. My friends in New Jersey, were the only ones who were there for me during those fi rst few days aft er I
left him. I continued to work, dealing with the pain, of not being to eat for a week solid, not being able to drink
anything. But water. I was in a lot of pain, I was alone save for the phone calls from my friends. Mom called that
Saturday to see if I was ok. I said yea I’m fi ne. She then went on about how sick she was, how the dog was, and
how my sister was doing with her expecting her fi rst child. Th at’s all that mattered. I am so very tired. I plugged
my computer in the next week, and it popped and died. I was without any form of entertainment, except the
radio and my birdie.
I never knew how bad things were, until I left him. I’m still fi nding out just how little I had control in my life.
I’d go to bed on the fl oor, since I had no bed, with Richie Sambora’s “Stranger in this town” playing on the CD
player. I can relate to feeling like a stranger, and walking alone because at this moment, and at this time in my life
I feel very much like that.
Aft er a week of being on my own, I got a call from him asking me to come and pick up some of my stuff that was
left behind. So I called the one friend, and he agreed fi nally to help me move it on Saturday. I saw him, he was
totally relaxed, and not worried about anything. I still had the cold sores on my mouth. I said you did this to me,
and he said no I didn’t. He had the locks changed on the doors, so I couldn’t get in. He would not let me into the
apartment. Instead he brought out what belonged to me and helped load it on the u-haul I had rented. He was
very causal. I saw gobbles, he had the sore on his lip again. It bothered me. He wanted to see me though and so
I reached through door and scratched him under the chin. I just don’t know for 3 weeks I heard nothing from
him. He was the one who told my grandmother that I left him, and she was upset. So I had to calm her down and
explain why I left . It never fails. No one believed that he was abusing me. No one wants to see the hell that he put
me through. No one, accepts that I was abused as a child. It’s not fair. Never fails I struggle all my life to make
something, and my own family hates my guts. I can’t and have never ever had the support of someone believing
in me. Someone wanting to be there, and actually gave a damn about how I feel, how I am doing, not what I can
do for them. Just once, I would love to hear someone in my family be proud of me, for my accomplishments.
One of these days, perhaps the pain and knowledge knowing that I’m the most evil, and hated person according
to them, will heal. For now, it hurts more and more, the more I remember of my childhood, the more I struggle
through this divorce, feelings of being alone. Th ank God I had Rosie. She was my light, my rock and my support
during that fi rst year.
I begin planning for my vacation in 2005. Bon jovi heads back into the studio and records, Have A Nice Day.
It releases the day aft er I land in New Jersey. Rosie and I make plans. We buy tickets on Ebay to see Bon Jovi
Open Nokia Th eater in NYC. Wow, my fi rst trip to NYC and I was driving. Rosie was terrifi ed of the Lincoln
tunnel. But it took me three times, to get her through it, but We did it. We got front row, right in front of Richie
Sambora. What a show that was aft er Hurricane Katrina. Th at was my fi rst show, where I really just let myself go
and enjoyed the music. I could not believe how lucky we were. Th en on Friday of that week right before I left , we
Page 40
managed some how to get to the Today show.
Wow. What a trip. We celebrated my freedom. I thank my lucky stars, for Have a Nice Day. Th at album gave me
life, inspired me to never give up and never stop fi ghting for what I believe in. Th e songs off that album that are
me 100% are “Th e Story of My Life, I want To Be Loved, and Have a Nice Day.” I have said it through out this
story that all I ever wanted is to be loved. Now there’s a song about how I felt, aft er leaving my husband, aft er
being through hell and back one too many times. Rosie’s favorite song off this album was “Wildfl ower” and of
course we just couldn’t get enough of Who Says You can’t Go home , with Jennifer Nettles. Th is vacation this
year little did I know was going to my last one. I arrived in New Jersey aft er spending over 18 hours in PDX due
to mechanical problems with the plane. I had the cable installation guy coming to setup cable internet for Rosie
that day I landed. I was running on no sleep. Bon Jovi was premiering their episode of Crossroads on CMT that
night, with Sugarland. I still did not have a TV in my apartment and therefor could not watch the show at home.
Rosie’s power supply died in her computer and I had to get a new one, all while running on no sleep.
What fun we had, once the computer was fi xed, and we got hooked on this band called Sugarland, and this
opened Rosie up to Country Music, which I’ve always enjoyed over the years. We made our trip to Cape May of
course Nokia theater, was just something I will never forget. I saw the band perform from the front row in NYC
for the fi rst time in my life. Th ey did all my favorites that night. Rosie got some great photos from that show
and we made our annual photo book of our trip. Not knowing that she had cancer at this point. We had both in
January started a weight loss plan . We cut out all the fat, and cut our calorie content, and began eating health
and walking for hours a day. By the time I saw her in Sept. I was down to 190 pounds, and She was about 185. I
had lost 80 pounds, and she had lost 100.
Little did we know what was happening or how much our lives would be changing in the coming 6 months.
This photo is of the two of us I believe in Wildwood, 2005.

Bon Jovi had announced fall tour dates, and the tour would being in New Jersey. As a Christmas gift, I purchased
3 tickets for Rosie to go to the shows in at Continental Airlines Arena, which is located next to Giants
Stadium.
The deal was that she would call me from the shows. I was going to see them in Portland, once their tickets
went on sale in March of the following year.
December 2005 rolls around and Rosie is bouncing off the walls with excitement about her upcoming Bon Jovi
Shows. I had already gotten her a cell phone and was paying for so that we were not running up long distance
bills. It was a Go Phone, with unlimited calling between mobile to mobile. She somehow managed to get
their,by herself chanting Parkway South, Turnpike North, cars only, get off at exit 16 W follow signs to Giants
or Meadowlands sports complex.
She made it to all three shows, but during that time she had gained 20 pounds over 2 weeks. We chalked it up to
being overeating over the holidays.