Helen O’Hara Erdman

I knew Sameer at Satellite High School we graduated in the same class.

What you remember and appreciated most about Sameer
I was never as smart as he, as popular or as politically active but I knew him as a friend of some mutual friends. He was kind and genuinely friendly to everyone. I have a very clear picture in my head of his smile, so clear that I even went back through old photo albums to find it…..I guess that’s just how much of an impression he made on me that I can see him that clearly almost 30 years later. My heartfelt and deepest condolences to his family and friends.

Lee Lacy, Satellite High

I met his dad a technical conference. When I reconnected with Sameer on Facebook last year, I told him: “I told your dad that in high school but you were my academic “hero”. You inspired me to try harder. I was jealous of your brains.” This incident reminds me of how important it is to convey to people how they positively influenced your life.

Brad Goodchild, Boy Scouts, High School

Sameer is part of one of my favorite families in the whole world, the Shah Family. Sameer will be greatly missed as he was greatly loved.

Those of us from Satellite Beach are well aware of how open the Shah home has always been to us. Not just the legendary high school parties, but open every day to Sameer’s and Shalin’s friends. Sameer was the older brother to my best friend Shalin. He was the older, wiser(sorry Shalin), and more mature big brother. Of course he made fun of us younger “scouts” and kids, with that classic Sameer sense of humor, which comes from Mr. Shah.

I miss, as an adult, my times in their kitchen with Mrs. Shah trying to get me to eat Indian (read spicey hot) snacks and meals. Sameer always in the back ground pouncing on our rhetoric with his wit. To that point in my life I had not known anyone that dressed as well as Sameer. Whenever I see someone wearing Kaki pressed pants, striped shirt and a sweater hung over his shoulders, I think of Sameer. I remember a few years after the “Members Only” era, of him poking fun my way as I was severely tardy for that trend.

And how smart and clever was Sameer. On a trip to India and Nepal in 1985, Sameer argued with a Casino/travel department over the value of “one time play” chips. So here is Sameer, 20 years old logically winning a dispute against 3 suits twice his age. While they didn’t give us additional chips, they certainly lost their moral highground.

I will miss his laugh and wit the most as it reminds me of good times with him and his family. I am thankful for his friendship and am a better person for his playfully sarcastic but effective input on my life.

Shilpa Shah, Family

Alas I didn’t know Sameer too well,
So a long drawn tale I cannot tell,
But there may a be a few anecdotes rather swell,
I’ll say to thee as I bid him farewell.

I met him about 10 years ago,
My husband’s handsome cousin bro,
Quirky man never on the go,
Enjoying life at a pace rather slow.

He ate his meals so slowly I thought,
He talked so softly but not a lot,
His apparel was pristine, so carefully wrought,
His mind was sharp with many a plot.

His freshness I thought was like the breeze,
That ruffles leaves of sturdy trees,
His naughty smile did many hearts please,
May his blessed soul get eternal peace