Tonks, a mother killed in Las Vegas shooting, could ‘light up a room’
October 8, 2017 - 7:06 pm
Updated October 9, 2017 - 10:02 am
Those who knew Neysa Tonks remember her as being the life of the party. In many ways, Tonks and Las Vegas seemed like a perfect match. She loved going to concerts, laughing and trying new things.
“She was a fireball from the minute she got up in the morning to the time she went to bed,” said her father, Chris Davis. “Everyone loved Neysa. She was very adventurous and spontaneous. She was just so full of life.”
He said she had many hobbies, including water skiing, zip lining and traveling. She once competed in the endurance event series Tough Mudder with very little training, and she enjoyed hiking and jumping off waterfalls.
The 46-year-old Summerlin resident and mother of three was one of the 58 people killed Oct. 1 in the mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest festival.
Memories of Tonks echo on her Instagram feed.
It is filled with videos of bands playing — from Anthrax to Sting — and photos from trips with her children. The last video shows Sam Hunt playing onstage at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival on the Strip.
Her mother, Debbie Davis, said she will always remember how Tonks would just “light up a room and emulate happiness.”
It’s something she says her daughter passed down to her children, Kaden, 24, Braxton, 17, and Greysen, 14.
“She taught them independence, but she also wanted them to be positive,” Debbie Davis said. “She didn’t like negativity. That’s one thing we all remember. She would always say, ‘Don’t be a hater.’ Whether it came to food, people or animals, she instilled in them to remain positive.”
Chris Davis recalled Tonks’ winter tradition of stuffing hundreds of backpacks with supplies that were delivered to the less fortunate by her and her sons.
Her compassion resonated with others.
“Neysa was more than just a professional associate,” Mark Swaffer wrote on Tonks’ GoFundMe page.
“Her personality and character were infectious to everyone around her. She was filled with compassion and was one of the first of my colleagues to offer condolences when my wife passed six months ago,” he continued. “I will never comprehend how so much innocence was stolen on this day, nor how I was so blessed that my daughter made it out of there without serious injury. All my prayers to the boys and the rest of Neysa’s family.”
Despite a roller coaster of emotions, family members said they’ve managed to laugh a bit as they remember all of the things Tonks used to say. They are sure she lived life to the fullest.
“She lived more in 10 years than most of us will live in 30,” Debbie Davis said. “She had a beautiful life. She had plans to retire early and spend the rest of her life with her boys. She didn’t get cheated out of that, but her dream was cut short.”
A celebration of her life will be held for family and friends at 5:30 p.m. Monday at Red Rock Resort, 11011 W. Charleston Blvd. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations in support of her children be made to her GoFundMe page at gofundme.com/NeysaTonks.
As of Sunday afternoon, more than $217,940 had been raised by 1,749 people.
Tonks was raised in Utah and moved to Las Vegas in 2004. She worked at Technologent, an Irvine-based computer software company with Las Vegas offices.
Her parents said the last photo they received showed Tonks smiling with a cowboy hat on at the Route 91 festival.
“She looked so amazing that night,” Chris Davis said. “She was the kindest, most generous and enlightened person we know.”
“She was the best daughter we could have,” her mother added. “It’s truly not fair that she’s gone.”
In addition to her parents and children, Tonks is survived by her sister and brother-in-law, Mynda and Fred Smith, brother and sister-in-law, Cody and Jennifer Davis and grandmother Gayle Albright.
Contact Sandy Lopez at slopez@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4686. Follow @JournalismSandy on Twitter.