Remembering my father
Obituary
This obituary was originally posted by the Harvey-Douglas Funeral Home and published in The Daily Ardmoreite. I’m not sure how long that will stay up and available, so I’m hosting a copy of the text here.
Michel Evard
Retired physician, Dr. Michel Evard, 83, passed away peacefully on July 23, 2021 in Norman, Oklahoma. The son of the late Frederic Henri Evard and Jeanne (Gilles) Evard, Michel was born August 28, 1937 in Gland, Switzerland.
Dr. Evard is survived by his loving wife of 59 years, Janene (Odom) Evard; son Remy Evard and his wife Michele (Pezet) Evard; daughter Melina Evard; and grandchildren Andre, Rose and Joelle Evard. He was preceded in death by his brothers, Rene and Jean-Paul Evard and his sister, Christiane (Evard) Poublan.
Michel attended high school on the island of Mauritius and in Bogenhofen, Austria. Having traveled to the United States by ship, Michel attended Union College in Nebraska where he and Janene met. He liked to say he fell in love with her at first sight. They were married on July 22, 1962.
Michel graduated with his MD from Loma Linda University in Loma Linda, CA in 1965, then completing residencies for otolaryngology (Ear, Nose, and Throat) and general surgery as well as a year of post-residency training in head and neck cancer. He established his medical practice in Ardmore, OK in 1976 and was a beloved community physician for over 40 years.
Dr. Evard not only took care of generations of families, but also continued to study new techniques, including endoscopic sinus surgery which he introduced to the state of Oklahoma. Later in his career, he taught surgery as a volunteer professor at the University of Oklahoma Medical School and the Oklahoma City Veterans Hospital.
Michel played the violin for most of his life. He loved watercolor painting, photography, classical music, hiking, skiing, and his family most of all. He made sure to take his family to Europe as often as possible so his children could know their extended family, including their Swiss grandparents and relatives in both France and Switzerland. In retirement, he enjoyed travelling with Janene to visit his children, grandchildren and extended family.
He will be deeply missed by his family and all who knew him.
A Gathering of Remembrance for Dr. Evard will begin Sunday, August 1, 2021 at 2:00 pm with the family receiving friends afterwards till 4:00 pm at the funeral home.
The family asks that in lieu of flowers, memorials be made to the Adventist Development & Relief Agency ( https://adra.org/ or 1-800-424-ADRA).
My Eulogy to my Father
At the memorial service many of us in the family had a chance to share our memories with his friends and colleagues. Many of those gathered also shared fond recollections, which were heart-warming.
During the week after his death and before the service, I had been able to find some time in a few coffee shops to process my thoughts and pull together a few themes about my father that had been in my head for a number of years.
This is what I shared.
Remembering my Father
Like all of us, my father was many things - a son, a brother, a husband, a father, a grandfather, a friend, a physician, a hiker, a photographer… a provider.
In recent years, I’ve realized he was something to me that may surprise the rest of my family, and probably would have surprised him. As I grew older and came to understand him better, I started to see him as an inspiration. When I look at the choices I’ve made, I see that he probably was an inspiring figure for me from the beginning.
To understand my Dad, one has to understand his background and context - the challenges he grew up with and overcame.
He was the youngest of four children, the son of an Adventist minister and missionary, and grew up in Europe during World War II. Those four factors - the family, the church, Switzerland, and the war - were at the center of who my father was.
He didn’t talk about his childhood much. I heard more stories about those times from my mother and other relatives. My grandfather, according to those stories, helped Jews to escape from France into Switzerland. He housed refugees in their home, he carried messages across the border, and he maintained the strictest authority in his family to help keep them safe.
The family was in constant danger and was barely surviving on wartime supplies. When I asked Dad about those times, he only said that food was scarce, and that he’d heard stories about families in nearby villages being rounded up and killed. It was clear that he had lifelong scars from that time.
That brings me to the first of the ways in which he was an inspiration: while it would have been so easy to stay in the safe & conservative environment of his extended Swiss family, his small town, and the family history of being in the ministry, he instead took the bold step to leave home and country to come to the US for college and to pursue a career as a physician so that he could heal and cure others.
Apparently, when he left Europe for the States, he only had $50 to his name. For me, growing up, his journey here and him being a doctor - that’s just how things were, it was a fact of life, it was just what Dad had done. But, looking back now, I realize what a courageous act that was for him, and I know now that it inspired and enabled me to take risks - much smaller risks - that changed the course of my life.
When he was in college, he started the second thing that I find so inspiring. He met, dated, and eventually proposed to Janene Odom, the woman who would become the mother of Melina and I. And somehow they stayed married and in love until the end of his life, for 59 years of marriage. In these times, that’s amazing.
It wasn’t all bliss. They had challenges from the beginning: massive cultural differences, tight finances, messy families, a demanding career, and a myriad of other headaches… like learning to parent together despite vast philosophical differences in how to handle complicated kids. I remember many wonderful times when growing up, but also some times that were very difficult for their partnership. My parents somehow overcame those together.
Part of that involved my father growing: learning to listen and be more flexible than his rigid childhood conditioned him to be, learning to share, learning when to be supportive rather than directive. Even as a teenager, I saw some of those changes in him, and I saw the quiet, complex, confident love and dedication that he had for my mother. Again, I learned from that. He inspired me to follow in a similar pattern in my own life, building on what I saw in my parents’ relationship.
Dad and I didn’t talk a lot. It just wasn’t a thing with him. In fact, in college, when I learned about personality types, I realized he was a classic introvert. He needed quiet time at home to recharge from all of his time with people in the office. He liked to observe the action, not to be in it, which, I suspect is one reason why he liked to be the photographer. And it’s why so many of many memories of him are from the quiet times together.
I remember one particular quiet moment when I learned a lot from him about his relationship with my mom. We were out on a family hike in the mountains. As usual, he and I were out in front… me with the daypack, him with his fancy camera and his favorite ugly hat. We arrived at a fork in the trail.
Mom was way behind, as usual. She says it’s because she likes to smell the flowers, but the impatient teenager in me was sure it was because she didn’t like to walk fast enough. Annoyed, I said to Dad, “so now we just wait?”. He nodded solemnly, looked me in the eye, and said “and we smile”.
That leads me to the third major he way he was an inspiration to me - the way he thought about his role as a parent. He had high expectations - and he also gave me the freedom to find my own way. I knew he was always there if I needed him, which gave me the confidence to grow.
As a parent now, I realize how challenging that balance is, and also how hard it must have been for him. His expectations were clear and strict: work hard, excel in school, take care of others, respect the family, do something with your life that matters.
He taught me those lessons by his own example, and through sparse directions like “try harder” and “stop feeling sorry for yourself”, mandates I heard many times as a kid. And yet, when I made choices that were different than what he’d expect - pursuing degrees in computing, not science or medicine; getting married at a young age; crazy career choices; choosing to live in parts of the country far from the rest of the family - he was supportive.
Once on a chair lift while skiing (which was one of the few places we would have discussions, because he was trapped there with me), he said “well, you have to do what you think is right, and I’m here to support you now”.
One of many examples comes to mind. Growing up, it was clear to me that, after college, I was going to be on my own… and yet, when I graduated and got married and prepared to move across the country for grad school, he quietly handed me a credit card and said gruffly “just in case”. I remember being completely stunned as I accepted the card… I wasn’t expecting that. I had thought Dad was happy to get me off the books.
A few weeks later, my young bride and I loaded up all of our possessions in a truck and a trailer and started our move out west. Our vehicle broke down in the middle of nowhere in Wyoming, and we had no money to pay for the necessary repairs. I remember being so relieved and grateful to Dad’s foresight and help. Without that, we would have been in deep trouble.
So, he set an example of balancing expectations, supporting my choices, and being there to help that has inspired and guided me in my own parenting journey.
The way he led his life, and in particular these three major themes - the bold choices he made to improve his situation and provide for his family, his long partnership with my mother, the way he pushed and supported his kids - those were inspirations and foundations for me.
I never told Dad any of this, at least not in these words. In part, it’s taken me a long time to really understand him and to understand how much he influenced me. And it’s been a long time since I managed to trap him on a chair lift for one of those chats.
But … he knew.