Current:Home > Scams'Choose joy': Daughter of woman killed by Texas death row inmate finds peace -ProfitSphere Academy
'Choose joy': Daughter of woman killed by Texas death row inmate finds peace
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:25:33
When Texas executes a death row inmate for the murder of Nancy Adelman 27 years ago on Wednesday, Adelman's daughter won't be there. Instead, she's choosing to gather by a river with friends and family for an afternoon of "play and laughter."
Sarah Adelman was 16 years old when her mother Nancy was murdered while out on a jog in Houston on July 29, 1997. Now Sarah's 43 and a mother herself.
Although many victim family members decide to witness the executions of those who have killed their loved ones, Adelman is choosing something else.
"I think the greatest way to honor my mother’s life is to be present with the joy in mind," Sarah Adleman told USA TODAY. "We will have a gratitude and a forgiveness ceremony, a funeral of sorts. A letting go of the past 27 years."
As the execution of her mother's killer, Arthur Lee Burton, approaches, USA TODAY is looking back at Nancy Adelman's life, what made her special and the complicated emotions her loved ones are experiencing.
Who was Nancy Adleman?
Nancy Adleman grew up the eldest of three children in East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in a house built by her father, who bred orchids and named one after his daughter, Sarah Adleman told USA TODAY. Nancy spent many childhood days sailing in a small boat in a pond on the property and participated in summer stock theater.
Nancy got a theater degree from Louisiana State University and a master of fine arts from the University of Minnesota before moving to Houston in the late 1970s, her daughter said.
Nancy, who began writing poetry when she was 11, went on to publish collections throughout her life. She was also a playwright and before she was killed, was performing a one-woman play about four women from the Bible titled "Expectancies," Sarah Adleman said.
Nancy and her husband Mark had been married for 18 years and "watched the sunset almost nightly in the backyard," Sarah Adleman said. While Sarah was 16 when her mother was killed, her brother Geoff was 14 and her other brother Zach was just 6.
All of Nancy's children have married and combined have three children.
Sarah Adleman said she will always remember her mother as a joyful person.
"She woke most mornings to pray, meditate (and) write before anyone else was awake," Sarah Adleman recalled about her mother. "She understood that joy is a choice and taped pieces of paper all over our house that said, 'Choose Joy.'"
What happened to Nancy Adleman?
Nancy Adleman left her northwest Houston home around 7 p.m. on July 29, 1997, to go on a short jog along Brays Bayou, something she did often.
But she didn't come home that night and the next morning, police found her badly beaten body in a 4-foot hole in a heavily wooded area along Brays Bayou.
Burton confessed to attempting to rape Adleman and strangling her with her own shoelaces and later told a prison psychologist that the murder was "just something I couldn't help," according to court records. He was found guilty by a Texas jury in June 1998 and later sentenced to death, a penalty he's still fighting.
"For any woman who has ever exercised alone, or walked to their car alone at night, this case is their worst nightmare," Josh Reiss, chief of the Post-Conviction Writ Division of the Harris County District Attorney’s Office, told USA TODAY.
Sarah Adleman wrote a book about her mother
Sarah Adleman said she did not have the intention of writing a book about her mother, but rather "The Lampblack Blue of Memory: My Mother Echoes” started as her graduate thesis.
"I wanted to create something that enveloped the human condition and began the process with whiteboards and a few broad themes like 'Joy,' 'Cause & Effect,' 'Choice,' and 'Forgiveness,'" she said. "Under 'Forgiveness' I wrote “God forgives you and I do, too' − the last words my mother spoke to the man who took her life.'"
Whether Sarah Adleman wrote anything or not, she said she "had to go through it − move through the sorrow, feel the pain (and) invite it in."
"I’d certainly processed much of the grief over the preceding years, but I’d not returned to the memories of those first few days," she said. "There was so much to sit with. So often, we think we need to just 'be OK' or believe that everyone else is happy and untouched by sadness or grief. But loss is the one thing everyone experiences. Sorrow is what connects us to one another ... There is great comfort in that."
Sarah included some of her mother's poetry in the book, saying that she wanted her mother's words to continue on. It was published in 2019.
Family's plans for execution
Nancy Adleman's husband Mark and oldest son Geoff will be witnessing Burton's execution in Huntsville, just north of Houston, according to Sarah Adleman.
Although Sarah decided not to go, she said she hopes Burton has "found peace of some sort."
Sarah Adleman said she wants people to remember her mother as someone who "chose joy."
"Life is a constant choice," she said. "We may not have control over our external circumstances, but we do have control over our minds — our thoughts and habits. The choices we make today create the reality of tomorrow so choose joy. Choose connection. Choose love."
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Small town residents unite to fight a common enemy: A huge monkey farm
- Super Bowl bound! Taylor Swift shares a kiss with Travis Kelce as Chiefs defeat Ravens: See pics
- Felipe Nasr, Porsche teammates give Roger Penske his first overall Rolex 24 win since 1969
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- South China Sea tensions and Myanmar violence top agenda for Southeast Asian envoys meeting in Laos
- Michigan man changes up lotto strategy, wins $500,000 and plans to buy a new car
- A Rolex seller meets up with a Facebook Marketplace thief. It goes all wrong from there
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Biden praises Black churches and says the world would be a different place without their example
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Lenox Hotel in Boston evacuated after transformer explosion in back of building
- Teen awaiting trial in 2020 homicide who fled outside hospital is captured in Philadelphia
- Former NHL player accused of sexual assault turns himself in to Ontario police
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Small town residents unite to fight a common enemy: A huge monkey farm
- Halle Bailey Fiercely Defends Decision to Keep Her Pregnancy Private
- Nelly Korda defeats Lydia Ko in sudden-death playoff to capture LPGA Drive On Championship
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
2 teens fatally shot while leaving Chicago school identified: 'Senseless act of violence'
Ted Koppel on his longtime friend Charles Osgood
South China Sea tensions and Myanmar violence top agenda for Southeast Asian envoys meeting in Laos
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
'Gray divorce' rates have doubled. But it's a costly move, especially for women
Taylor Swift and Jason Kelce Support Travis Kelce at AFC Championship
A group of Japanese citizens launches a lawsuit against the police to stop alleged ‘racial profiling’