Willing to work with his hands
Deepa Bharath
George Healey was the quintessential man’s man.
He loved to work with his hands. He enjoyed racing cars and
driving around in trucks.
He created, built and fixed things with his bare hands.
It was with little surprise to anyone in his family that he chose
to work in the building industry.
George was a third-generation Costa Mesan. His grandfather was one
of the pioneers to settle in this area, even before it became a city.
George went to St. Joachim’s Catholic School and later graduated from
Estancia High School.
He attended Orange Coast College briefly, but decided that college
and academia were not his cup of tea. George decided to follow in his
father’s footsteps. He started from scratch and worked his way up the
ranks. He learned everything he knew from his dad.
At 53, he was director of purchasing for a building company in
Irvine. George was loved and respected by his colleagues.
George had a soft corner for children. His friends called him the
Pied Piper because kids followed him everywhere.
He hung out with the children in the neighborhood, fixing their
bikes or just chatting with them in his garage.
George was a true blue Boy Scout. He was in the Cub Scouts, Boy
Scouts and the Explorer Scouts. He raced quarter midgets, open-wheel
kid-size race cars, since he was 4 years old. He had plenty of
admirers even at that tender age.
His 8-year-old granddaughter, Mica Jane, was the love of his life.
George was the perfect granddad. He took her to the movies. They
rode their bikes together. He attended all her school events. He even
had her started on golf.
George always enjoyed a game of golf. He was a regular at the
Costa Mesa Country Club.
“He taught his boys manners on the golf course that he learned
from his dad, Pat,” said his mother, Doreen Healey. “He’d say, ‘It’s
like life -- it’s not how far you hit it, it’s how straight.’”
But George lived for his family. Everything else was secondary.
He was extremely attached to his parents. He called them twice a
day -- once in the morning and once at night. He’d simply call to ask
them how they were doing.
George took care of his parents through their bad days and
sicknesses. He always had a smile for them. A quick joke or an
anecdote. He would tease them and give them a hard time if that’s
what it took to make them laugh.
George grew up in a different Costa Mesa, in a time when it had
more of a small-town feel to it. And he truly enjoyed that. It was
pure, unadulterated fun.
He was outgoing. He smiled and talked to everyone irrespective of
race, gender or status.
They all showed up at his funeral -- in their fine clothes, their
work clothes, their casual clothes. They shed their tears for George
and filled up the church with their presence.
And that bore testimony to the kind of person George was -- a man
who was loved and continues to be cherished by those who were lucky
enough to know him.
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