If you could write your own obituary, what would it say? Would it just be a standard list of the names, facts and dates of your life? Or would you use it as a chance to admit the things you’d never confessed before?
For 59-year-old Val Patterson, his obit was a chance to confess and a chance to express who he really was. The Utah man died of throat cancer last week and his first-person obit is funny and charming, but it also confesses at least a couple of secrets. (You can read the entire text of the obituary at the end of this article.)
Patterson had to confess to the other electronics engineers that he worked with that he didn’t really earn the Ph.D. from the University of Utah that he had hanging on his wall.
“I really am not a Ph.D.,” said Patterson’s confession. “What happened was that the day I went to pay off my college student loan at the University of Utah, the girl working there put my receipt into the wrong stack, and two weeks later, a PhD diploma came in the mail. I didn’t even graduate, I only had about three years of college credit. In fact, I never did even learn what the letters ‘PhD’ even stood for.”
His other big confession was of a crime he committed when he was 18.

If ‘bigots’ can lose their rights, will your rights be next to go?
Now that his wife is gone for good, man is left with memories and love
Experience with God taught me that my theology was too small
Mental illness can be hidden in any family, changing lives forever
Warning, Good Samaritans: Offering teens a ride is ‘disturbing the peace’
NOTEBOOK: The forest is burning, so quit arguing about single trees
As sowing comes before reaping, culture comes before politics
My teen hijinks were silly fun, not alcohol-fueled drunken groping
If an election can destroy your life, your priorities are out of whack