eulogy integration



Clumsily Striving toward the Good

Welcome dearest friends and family. I would first like to extend my immeasurable

gratitude to all of you for the roles you played in shaping the young woman whose life we gather

to celebrate today. I would secondly like to acknowledge the elephant in the room (or perhaps in

the sky). Yes, it's me. Abigail Shannon Chittle – the one and only. The girl whose name is printed

on the worship aide that you are probably sitting on. And yes I am writing my own eulogy (I

apologize in advance for the somewhat jarring switches from first person to third person and the

confusing narrative point of view). It's a bit out of the ordinary, and trust me, it's quite an odd

experience for me as well. Despite the somewhat absurd impossibility of this situation ever

occurring, I will do my best to proceed with integrity (although I have to admit I may be a bit

biased). Alright then here we go.

“Happiness changes from moment to moment, day to day. Joy, on the other hand, is

much deeper and much more central, it comes from within, and it's a genuine rightness in how

one lives one’s life” (“Three Key Questions” by Father Micheal Himes Moreau FYE Week

Three). Abigail Shannon Chittle – known by most as Abby (with the exception of her dad who

called her Abigail) truly understood this and spent much of her life trading happiness for joy.

While she may have thought “Abby” was a boring and overused name, she loved that her full

name, Abigail, means “a father’s joy”. She sought to live up to the name and strove to be a

source of joy in not only the life of her father and all those she encountered but to her heavenly

Father as well. While she understood joy to be “a genuine rightness in how to live one’s life” she

didn’t quantify this by the college she chose, the grades she earned, the hobbies she enjoyed, or

the career paths that she considered but rather she believed that how she lived her life would be

determined by the her relationships with other people and with God.

https://canvas.nd.edu/courses/40299/files/467258?module_item_id=143051


It is often understood that  “the more we can contact others, the more, it sometimes

seems, we lose contact with ourselves.” (“Why we need to slow down our lives” by Pico Iyer

Moreau FYE Week One), but Abby could not accept this notion. While it was often hard for her

to overcome her insecurities about what other people thought about her, she genuinely valued her

interactions, connections, and relationships with others above any material possessions. This

being said, she often had times when she struggled with exactly who she was in the tangle of

relationships that defined her life. Although she knew that “people who possess greater insight

— which he defines as an intuitive understanding of ourselves — enjoy stronger relationships, a

clearer sense of purpose and greater well-being, self-acceptance and happiness” (“The right way

to be introspective (yes there’s a wrong way)” by Tasha Eurich, PhD Moreau FYE Week Six),

she often had to deliberately slow down, take a step back, and look inward lest she get lost in the

space between herself and others.

I could have spent these minutes giving you a chronological summary of the first two

decades of Abby’s life, but she herself would tell you that that would be a bit boring. She did not

think her life was very eventful, with the most notable aspects being her growing up as the

second of nine siblings and having her dad as her high school principal. She would tell you that

she never decided on a career path with the excuse that “There are so many career paths and

industries out there that it’s best not to limit yourself too much ” (“Navigating your Career

Journey” by Merulo Family Center for Career Development Moreau FYE Week Four). Abby

enjoyed so many things in life – reading anything from the classics to romance novels, singing –

whether on stage or in the shower, running (although she would tell you she hated to race),

children – whether they be her siblings or the cute kids in the church pew in front of her, learning

anything but calculus, writing in run on sentences, being outdoors in the beauty of creation,

https://ideas.ted.com/why-we-need-a-secular-sabbath/
https://ideas.ted.com/the-right-way-to-be-introspective-yes-theres-a-wrong-way/
https://ideas.ted.com/the-right-way-to-be-introspective-yes-theres-a-wrong-way/
https://undergradcareers.nd.edu/navigating-your-career-journey/
https://undergradcareers.nd.edu/navigating-your-career-journey/


acting in musicals in perhaps offensive british accents, losing her breath playing soccer (even

after being concussed by the ball), and being a little too competitive during family game nights.

But despite these many interests, she never felt that she had a deep “passion” for any specific

field. Rather, she found her deepest fulfillment living out her Catholic faith and helping others.

She strove to live her life according to Pope Francis that “When one realizes that life, even in

the middle of so many contradictions, is a gift, that love is the source and the meaning of life,

how can they withhold their urge to do good to another fellow being?” (“Why the only future

worth building includes everyone” by His Holiness Pope Francis, TED Conferences Moreau

FYE Week Seven).

Abby’s dad once commented that what she most valued and desired in life was “to do the

good in front of her, serve God, and submit to His will” (“Moreau FYE Week Five Discernment

Conversation Activity” by Erick Chittle Moreau FYE Week Five). Now Abby would be the first

one to tell you that while this is what she desired she most often fell short of this and struggled

every day to orient her life towards God’s will. Her faith was the source of her identity and

through her “faith [she]  learn[ed] there is meaning in struggle” (“Hesburgh” by Father Theodore

Hesburgh, C.S.C. Moreau FYE Week Two) as she strove to approach obstacles with

faith-founded optimism. She was by no means a saint or even close, but the promise of eternal

life was the ideal she strove for. Her life was a collection of clumsy stumbles (both physically

and spiritually) on the path towards eternal union with the Father aided by the guidance of many

of you here. Thank you all for the essential parts you played in shaping the life of Abby and as a

side note she will be accepting prayers for her soul’s eventual acceptance into heaven (God

willing).

https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-the-only-future-worth-building-includes-everyone-pope-francis
https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-the-only-future-worth-building-includes-everyone-pope-francis
https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yZ7hqvx-u4EuW2nlK-fRbWFiurQm1mZv_KpoeeiN4So/edit
https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yZ7hqvx-u4EuW2nlK-fRbWFiurQm1mZv_KpoeeiN4So/edit
https://notredame.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=10159379-7eca-4549-8581-ab9500c9ecd9