Gjertrud Anderson has spent her life helping people, and the former nurse isn't about to let the fact that she's 103 -- or "a hundred plus three," as she puts it -- stop her now.
She's part of a volunteer crew from Pilgrim Lutheran Church in St. Paul that serves lunch to the homeless at the Branch III drop-in center in downtown Minneapolis. And when she isn't dishing out food, she's serving up comments that keep both the diners and her co-workers on their toes.
"She's hard to keep up with," said Ray Carlson, a fellow church member who, along with his wife, Gertrude, volunteers with Anderson. "Always has been. Still is."
Anderson isn't about to let anyone get away with anything. When asked, "How long have you been doing this?" she answered, deadpan, "Since I started."
We're not sure whether that referred to the hour she'd just spent preparing buns for Sloppy Joes or the years since 1985 that she's helped serve food to the needy, but it didn't matter. The people around her laughed knowingly. The response was just, well, so Gjertrud.
"When I was a nurse, I would do my job and keep my mouth shut -- although you certainly wouldn't know it now," she confessed.
She has to stand on her tiptoes to reach 5 feet, but she has a spirit the size of Texas. And in the summer she walks 2 miles a day at a brisk pace, said her daughter, Elizabeth Ozmon, 75.
"Unless I'm with her," Ozmon added, "then it's not so fast. She walks so fast that no one can keep up with her."