![]() In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Council for Developmental Disability of Sandusky County or Wynn-Reeth c/o MAC Center. Phyllis was preceded in death by her parents, Dick and Lou Mayle her in-laws Herb and Felista “Smitty” Kiser her brothers-in-law Bill, John, and Jeff Kiser and her dear friend/cousin Ruthy Ackerman. Phyllis is survived by her husband Tom children Russ (Jessica) Kiser, Eddie (Elizabeth) Kiser, Michelle Kiser and Louie Kiser grandchildren Cody, Zach, Will, Lily, Tommy, Alex, Domonic, and Ty her siblings Mary Luc (Joe), Ron Mayle (Mary Ellen), Karen Hanson (Greg), Joe Mayle (Andrea), Pam Babione (Jay), and Tony Mayle her sisters and brothers in law Janet Kiser, Angie Kiser, Don Kiser (Judy), Karen Lowery (Mike), Joan Kiser, and Marcia Mapus (Leo). Phyllis loved her many nieces and nephews on both sides of the family, whether a Buckeye or Wolverine, and they loved her too. She was so popular among her siblings that they selected her as the Godmother to four nieces and nephews: Veronica Stemen, Andy Mayle (the communist), Angie Hanson, and Amanda Babione (an unofficial Mayle family record). Whether visiting with family at Mayleville, on the boat at Nugents Canal, or in the stands at a kid’s game, Phyllis Kiser was the one everyone wanted to laugh with. (The jury is still out on Phyllis having played amateur matchmaker for Shelly.) More so, these relationships gifted Phyl with the title of Nana! Alex, Dom, Ty, Will, Lily, Tommy, Cody, and Zach were privileged to be spoiled by her. Ed married Elizabeth and Russ married Jessica. Tom and Phyl were ecstatic when their family began to grow. After their kids all graduated high school, Phyllis encouraged Tom to continue coaching, and together they impacted many other kids lives. She also encouraged Tom to coach his children to help maintain his work-life balance. She supported Tom through the ups and downs of the business. With confidence, she supported Tom, the love of her life, to use her wedding ring as collateral in 1979 for a small business loan that helped Tom launch an engineering firm that succeeded beyond expectation. Phyllis was not only kind and beautiful, she was competitive with street smarts. She can rest easy knowing Air Jordan never caught up with her rampant trademark infringement after gifting many teenagers her homemade sweatshirts. She supervised countless sleepovers where untold quantities of Hawaiian Punch were consumed and was viewed by the Fremont community as a trusted second mom. She was the loudest cheerleader in the football stands or basketball bleachers or wherever her family competed. Phyllis was known for the range of pitch of her squeals while cheering on her kid’s teams. A testament to Phyllis’ refusal to offer her family anything but her best, this obituary will not read that she was preceded in death by Louie, whose pediatricians said he’d only live to be two-years old. After raising her children Russ, Ed, and Shelly, how did Phyllis’ beautiful blonde hair not turn gray many decades ago? We know the secret: her unconditional devotion to her son Louie kept her young and playful at heart. Celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary with their entire family on Thanksgiving Day was a blessing. Joseph Catholic High School and they married November 24, 1972. She met husband, Thomas, while attending St. She was born on November 2, 1951, to Richard and Luetta (Fisher) Mayle. Phyllis Kiser, 71, of Fremont, three-dimensional cake baker, football-coach whisperer, family super-fan, and nana extraordinaire, passed away gracefully January 28, 2023. ![]()
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