
Cammi Stohl
January 24, 2019
Los Altos, CA
Obituary of Cammi Stohl Cammi was born in St. Anthony, Idaho in 1971 to Dennis and Judy Stohl, but at the age of four, her family moved to sunny California, where she spent the remainder of her childhood with her older twin brothers, Kris and Kevin, and her younger brother, Kelly. She graduated from Redwood High School, located in Visalia, California, in 1989 and headed to BYU in Provo, Utah. She received a B.A. in English from BYU in 1993. Following college, she landed a job with WordPerfect and then later Novell when WordPerfect was acquired by Novell. In 1994, she met her future husband, Lance Brady, and they were married in San Diego in 1996. After living and working for an additional year in Utah, Lance and Cammi moved to Los Angeles, where Lance attended law school. In 2000, Lance and Cammi moved again, this time to the Bay Area, for Lance to take a job with a law firm there. The Bay Area was Cammi's home for 18+ years. Cammi had cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease that primarily affects the lungs. This disease caused her to need a double lung transplant, which she was fortunate to receive from a generous, anonymous donor in 2009. Cammi lived another 9+ years with her new lungs until health complications proved to be too much for her. She died peacefully surrounded by her parents, her children, and her husband on January 24, 2019. Cammi was kind, compassionate, and fun-loving. She loved to smile and had an infectious laugh. She lit up the room when she walked in. Cammi sincerely loved learning about other people and their lives. She befriended numerous people throughout her life and had a remarkable ability to connect with people of all ages, backgrounds, and walks of life. She was a wonderful wife to Lance and an amazing and loving mother to her boy and girl twins, Carter and Reilly. Her beautiful life was ended far too soon, and she is dearly missed by all who knew her. Funeral services will take place at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1300 Grant Road, Los Altos, California on Monday, February 4, 2019 at 11:00 a.m., with burial to follow at Alta Mesa Memorial Park, 695 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, California. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that contributions be made to Project to Cure OB at UPMC . OB is a form of chronic lung rejection, and the leading cause of death following lung transplant. The Project to Cure OB is an aggressive research project to diagnose OB early, and develop new treatments to prevent its inevitable progression. Cammi received her lung transplant at UPMC. Additional information regarding Project to Cure OB and making donations to this cause can be found at https://dom.pitt.edu/paccm/cureob/ .