In Memory

Kathy Eide (Frisby)

Kathy Eide (Frisby)

Kathleen L. Frisby

  • Sep 12, 2016
Kathy Frisby met life with a strength that inspired others. It was in that strength that she found the courage to end her remarkable 5-year-long medical battle with glioblastoma brain cancer and embrace the promise of her faith.
 

Kathy was born in Forsyth, the eldest of three children born to Louise (Lekse) and Lloyd Eide. From the time she was a little girl, Kathy loved to dance. Her first job was teaching dance in a Billings Parks summer program. She also taught baton at Lincoln Jr. High School to young girls, one of whom would grow up to be one of her caring nurses at Sweetwater Retirement Community.

Kathy graduated from Billings Senior High in 1966 as class valedictorian. Among her other academic honors, Kathy was selected to attend a summer program at the prestigious Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. She attended Eastern Montana College (now MSU-Billings) where she earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics. She began her professional life as a junior high math teacher in Maryland and Billings.

Kathy met her life's dancing partner, Tom Frisby, at a Burroughs Corporation training program at which they were both beginning work as computer programmers. Over more than 40 years, Kathy and Tom raised two children, started one business, bought and ran another, gardened, cooked and stole the spotlight on the dance floor together.

In June of 2011, just weeks before both Kathy and Tom were set to retire, Kathy was diagnosed with a glioblastoma brain tumor. With great personal fortitude and with the support of Tom, family and friends, Kathy wrote her own survivor's story. During those five years, she was a caring mother, a loving grandma and a true friend to so many, including others waging their own battles against cancer.

Her legacy includes cherished hand-knitted "Grandma Kathy blankets" that she made for her own children and grandchildren and the babies of family and friends. They will continue to bring happiness to others, and just as Kathy said that knitting them brought her comfort and closeness to her own mother who taught her to knit, their warmth and softness will be one of the things that keeps Kathy's memory so alive for others.

Kathy and Tom's family would like to express their thanks to the doctors, exceptional nurses and wonderful staff at Frontier Cancer Center in Billings, who cared with such skill and affection for both Kathy and Tom over the last five years. Dr. Benjamin Marchello, a mutual friend of Kathy and Tom's since high school and their oncologist until his retirement, is owed a special thank you for the care and support he provided Kathy and Tom as patients and as friends. The family is also deeply grateful to the neuroscience team at Stanford University, led by Dr. Lawrence Recht and Dr. Steven Chang, who set Kathy on the best possible path forward by providing her initial treatment in a clinical trial. This summer, the wonderful nurses and aides at Sweetwater Retirement Community in Billings, RiverStone Hospice and Synergy Home Care gave Kathy a security and peace for which she and the family are very appreciative.

In lieu of flowers, please donate in Kathy's memory to Billings First United Methodist Church, the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke University, or the charity of your choice.

A celebration of Kathy's life will be at 11 a.m., Sept. 15, at Billings First United Methodist Church, 2800 4th Ave. N.

Kathleen is preceded in death by her husband, Thomas F. Frisby, who passed away earlier this summer, and her mother, Louise (Lekse) Eide, and father, Lloyd Eide. She is survived by Tammy Frisby (Graham Mather), her daughter with Tom Frisby; Richard "Rick" Karp Jr., her son with Richard Karp Sr.; grandchildren Cory Karp, Jack Frisby Mather and Stella Frisby Mather; her sister and brother-in-law Sandy (Eide) and Dennis Anderson, and her niece Lisa (Anderson) Norby (Justin) and nephew Dennis (Sonia) Anderson; her brother and sister-in-law Mike and Dino Eide, and her niece Heidi Eide and nephew Scott Eide. She is also survived by a host of wonderful Lekse relatives and by a strong support net of friends, in whom she found great enjoyment and comfort into her final days.

Michelotti-Sawyers Mortuary has charge of arrangements. Remembrances may be shared with the family by visitingwww.michelottisawyers.com.

 

 



 
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09/15/16 11:45 AM #1    

Gary Armstrong

On occasion Kathy would remind me that she was not my oldest friend - but she had been my friend the longest.  My family moved to Billings in June, 1957.  We were next door neighbors to Kathy's grandparents, and Kathy was spending most of the summer at her grandparents home that year.  We met on about my first day of living in Billings, and have maintained that friendship all through the years since.  My wife and I have often visited Kathy and Tom on our trips to Billings.  The last five years the visits have taken on a deeper sense of connection as Kathy (and later Tom) both dealt with diagnoses of cancer that did impact their bodies.  'Their faith and their sense of connection with deeper dimensions of life was inspirational.  We were neighbors nearly all the time I lived in Billings.  We were each other's first date and first ballroom dance partners.  I feel a deep sense of loss in knowing that my friend of longest standing will no longer answer the phone when I call.  I will miss my friend, but will cherish the memories of how my life has been blessed through my friendship with Kathy for most of my life.


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