I'm still trying to grip with the reality of her death. She was a vibrant, active, intelligent, animated woman who was brimming over with life. Always full of ideas and plans for her future. To have to die so carelessly is tragic.
As a youngster, I attended the Jean Lyons School of Music for several years. Miss Lyons was always a fixture there. She taught different levels of theory as well as individual piano lessons. Although she wasn't my primary piano teacher, I occasionally had a private lesson with her and she was always encouraging and constructive. And just when I thought she was stern and serious, she'd come up with some punchline to lighten things up.
Besides the music education and the life lessons and discipline that becoming a musician entails, going to music school built this amazing sense of community. There is still a group of us that get together once in a while. We've known each other since our early teens and although we've gone down different roads in our lives, we're still connected by Miss Lyons.
The ironic thing is that until recently, we never really knew how old Miss Lyons was. It didn't really matter either. We just thought she was timeless. Like she was going to be around forever.
