I live life like a game and
I don't intend on losing.
-- Alison Gerlach.
I live life like a game and
I don't intend on losing.
-- Alison Gerlach.
Alison Elizabeth Gerlach was in many ways a typical seventeen
year old, and like all of us, was also unique in her own way.
Having graduated from Maple West Elementary School and Mill
Middle School, she was a Williamsville South senior who eagerly
looked forward to a college career at Roberts Wesleyan College.

Spiritually, Ali attended church at the Newman Center at the
University of Buffalo's Amherst Campus and felt that her love of
God and community was an important aspect of her life.
Athletically, Ali was in many respects a star. Named to the Erie
County Interscholastic Conference Division III first-team
volleyball team and a member of the Western New York Mizuno
Storm travel volleyball team, the Amherst Lightning travel
softball team and the Williamsville South bowling team, she
excelled in all.
To know Ali, however, was to know a young lady whose interests
and imagination were both varied and complex.
A fan of the Food Channel, Ali would spend hours watching her
favorite chef, Rachael Ray, and her favorite cooking show, the
Two Fat Ladies. She dreamed of someday working in the food
industry herself.
Possessing a witty sense of humor, Ali could quote most lines
from any Mel Brooks movie, her favorite being "Young
Frankenstein." She not only loved comedy but was never short of
impersonations of famous characters. In her sandals, white socks
and hemp necklace, Ali loved to entertain her friends.
Perhaps you think white socks with sandals is unusual? How about
a bedroom littered with teddy bears and decorated with the color
purple? Posters covered the ceiling, centered by a movie poster
for the Shawshank Redemption. It was vintage Ali.
Rosie O'Donnell, the Dave Matthews Band, the Holocaust, Stewart
from Mad TV and the family winter vacation to Anna Maria Island
were other interests that seemed to have no relevance to each
other, beyond that found in the mind of a vibrant teenage girl.
Ali had a social ease beyond her years and was comfortable in
conversation with those far older than her as well as those with
physical and mental disabilities. She had the gift of making
others comfortable.
That gift was reflected in Ali's most distinguishing
characteristic - her smile. She had a smile that could light up
a room as she entered and it was almost impossible not to feel
better when she was there. More telling, it was a smile that was
always present, no matter what the situation.
The day before the Super Bowl of 2003, Ali was struck with a
sudden and apparently inexplicable stroke. Four days later, she
was diagnosed with Moya Moya disease. This rare disorder,
involving blockage of the main arteries and blood vessels to the
brain, presently has no known cause or cure. Ali died three days
later.
Hundreds of friends and classmates gathered at her Williamsville
home for a candlelight ceremony and at the funeral home to honor
her memory.
But even after death, Ali lives on because of her gift of organs
and life to others. For instance, an eleven year-old girl
received her heart, a 40 year old woman received her pancreas
and a kidney, her lungs went to a mother of two and her liver
went to a 47 year old father. The Gerlach family donated these
organs to share the gift of life and to keep other families from
enduring the pain they experienced with the loss of Ali.
In life Alison Gerlach brought life and happiness to those she
loved. In death she has given life and happiness to many she
never knew but who will be forever in her debt. Your
contribution today can help preserve Ali's legacy and show your
love. Please click
here and make a contribution in Ali's name.
It would truly be the gift of life.