Sitka Gear
A Gift of Life..........................
Michigan
Contributors to this thread:
The Mutt 01-Apr-19
Jon Stewart 02-Apr-19
BIG BEAR 03-Apr-19
happygolucky 05-Apr-19
From: The Mutt
01-Apr-19

The Mutt's embedded Photo
The Mutt's embedded Photo
Sometimes it seems like a hundred years ago and sometimes it seems like it was just yesterday.

23 Years ago on April 17th 1996 Amy Sue Daisy Pray was rushed to Children’s hospital in critical condition. The next few days are sometimes just a blur in my mind, yet at other times their memory is as sharp as a knife. 23 years ago on April 21st after 4 days on life support my wife and I had to make the decision to turn off the machines that were keeping Amy here with us. It has proven to be the hardest decision of our lives.

When Amy died we also made a decision that was one of the easiest we ever made. That decision was to donate Amy’s organs so that some other parent might not have to go through what we were going through at the time. Although some people might think this was a hard thing to do it was made just a little easier by Amy herself.

When Amy was only 9 years old she had overheard a conversation April and I were having about organ donation and she came into the room and told us “when she died she wanted to do that so she could help somebody else”. She held fast to that belief into her teen years and spoke of it whenever the subject came up. Little did we know how soon it would come to be.

A few months after Amy’s death I received a phone call from a fellow at U of M’s organ donation team and he wanted to know how we were doing. He had a list of the recipients from Amy’s gift. He told me about the mother of three little kids who could walk to the park with them again because of Amy’s gift. He told me of several burn victims who were healing better because of skin grafts they had received as their gift.

All together there were 47 people on Amy’s Gift of Life list, however one sticks in my mind more than most. There was a 3-year-old little boy who without the gift that came from Amy’s heart would not have lived to see Christmas that year.

Amy loved the outdoors and I often think of that little boy now a young man and wonder if he has shared a tree stand with his dad or his own son. I wonder if they go for rides together to look for deer. I wonder if by chance he was not from a hunting family if he had an unexplained desire to spend time outdoors stalking the woods with a bow and arrow, shotgun or rifle. I wonder if he’s killed his first deer yet? I know I’ll never know the answer to these things but if I know Amy I’ll bet he’s been in the woods with bow in hand.

In 2008 President Bush designated April as National Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness Month. Each year thousands of people die waiting for a transplant. I know all to well the pain their loved ones face. If you haven’t given any thought to organ donation yet, please do so now. Talk about it with your loved ones so you know their wishes and they know yours. Let others know about organ transplants and what they can mean to another family.

We never know what cards life will deal us and it may well be our own deck we stack when we make others aware of this great gift, The Gift of Life.

I love you Amy Sue. Dad misses Ya.

From: Jon Stewart
02-Apr-19
Can't imagine Steve. I stayed at the Gift of Life House in Rochester Minn which is for transplant only from Thanksgiving till March 22. I watched many people come and go during that time with liver and kidney transplants during that time frame. My wife had a bone marrow transplant from a German donor that worked but she died on March 24th from complications of the side effects which was a rash that lined the inside of her stomach. I was told it happens to about 25% of the bone morrow transplant recipients. My Chris was in the hospital from Jan 12 until I flew her home to see the grand kids one more time. No one knows what goes on until you experience it.

From: BIG BEAR
03-Apr-19
God bless both of you guys.....

From: happygolucky
05-Apr-19
The Amy Sue story touches me every year. I can't begin to imagine how difficult that was.

Jon, I did not know you lost your wife. I knew what you both were going through but did not hear any updates. I am very very sorry for your loss.

May God Bless both of you as well as others going through tough times like this.

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