Assemble your superhero teams and meet us in Greenville for the FIRST Hero Run East April 12!

"Because of What You Do, People Like Me Get Second Chances"

 

At the age of 12, I lost my mother after she received a kidney transplant. Unfortunately, the genetic disease (Polycystic Kidney Disease) was passed to me. I knew that I had it for nearly 20 years before my kidneys began to fail severely. Up until I was close to kidney failure, the possibility that I might someday need a transplant was always something that loomed far out there in the future.

I lived those two decades like most people, fell in love, got married, and started a family. My own daughter was 7 when my transplant became a reality. Because of my own childhood experience with my mother’s transplant, the thought that my daughter might face the same loss I had was never far from my mind. I am grateful for the advances in medicine that make transplant today a much different experience than it was for my mother, just one generation ago, and those advances are continuing.

Because someone said “yes” to being an organ donor, I can be my daughter’s mother. A teenage girl needs her mother, and probably no one knows that more than I do. I am finishing my last two semesters of nursing school, after which I want to work in the transplant field. I remember so clearly the morning that my transplant coordinator called me to come to the hospital right away, how my life was changed that day. I would like to be that voice on the line, that person who is an advocate for the patient who is facing such a life-changing event.

 

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