Nedra K. Ross had already given the world the most important words first — the announcement posted on social media that her mother had passed at 8:30 in the morning, safe in her own bed, family close, knowing she was loved. But that was the beginning of what she needed to say, not the end of it, and the daughter of the last surviving Ronette has found that the silence following the announcement of a loss this significant carries its own unbearable weight — the weight of a lifetime of memories that the world only partially knows, of a woman whose public legacy as a founding member of one of the most influential groups in the history of American music tells only part of the story of who Nedra Talley Ross actually was when the music stopped and the cameras went away and she was simply a mother, a woman of deep and unshakeable faith, and a keeper of everything the three Ronettes built and lived and survived together.
What Nedra K. Ross has revealed about her mother’s final days — about the peace that settled over a woman who had lived completely and loved deeply and made her peace with everything that needed making peace with, about the faith that had defined her life since she met her husband Scott Ross and became a born-again Christian , and about the final hours in that home surrounded by the people she loved most — is the kind of testimony that a daughter gives not for the public but for her mother, because some stories deserve to be told whole, and Nedra Talley Ross deserved nothing less than that.