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While I sit here thinking about how I am going to start this article, I
don’t know if I know what I’m doing but maybe that’s a good thing.
The
one word that keeps popping into my head, when I think about this
article is: Life. We never really see what life means to us until
something drastic happens.
In one boy’s life this change came
when he was very young, and I think that to see the miracle of life all
you have to do is watch him.
Andrew Wright, son of Mike and
Jaci Wright and brother to Ryan and Natalie of Wyoming is that boy.
Andrew, who is now 12, was diagnosed with Biliary Atresia (Bil-e-air-e
A-tree-zah) when he was only six weeks old.
Biliary Atresia is a blockage in the tubes that carry a liquid called bile from the liver to the gallbladder.
This
only occurs when the bile ducts inside or outside the liver do not
develop normally. The bile ducts are very important to the body, it
helps remove waste from the liver and it carries salts that helps the
small intestines break down and digest fat.
Biliary Atresia
affects only newborns, the bile flows from the liver to the gallbladder
where it is blocked. This can lead to liver damage and is deadly if it
isn’t treated, it is not hereditary, contagious or preventable.
After
approximately three months of age the only cure is a liver transplant.
After three years of waiting, hoping and praying, Jaci received a phone
call from a member of a prayer chain from Faith Lutheran Church.
The
prayer chain is a group of people who come together to find the needs
of members of their congregation and pray for them. Before hanging up
the woman said, “Wouldn’t it be nice to have a new liver before
Christmas?” to which Jaci replied, “That would be great.”
Only moments after hanging up, the phone rang once again.
“We have a match!”
The
four most wonderful words this family had been waiting for. Andrew,
Jaci, and Mike packed up that night and flew to Omaha, NE where
Andrew’s “new liver” was waiting at the Nebraska Medical Center.
Within
12 hours of the phone call he was on the operating table. The operation
lasted 12 hours, and then they had to wait to see if his body would
reject the liver or not.
The next day Andrew was eating his favorite food, pizza and only six days later was released from the hospital.
Ryan
and Natalie were able to come and see their brother. The Wrights had to
stay at the Ronald McDonald House for four weeks. On the first day of
1998 Andrew got to go home.
While in the Ronald McDonald House,
they had some guests at the end of their stay. The guests were some of
their closest family friends, who really helped them through that hard
time.
They helped in many ways including starting a local
fundraiser called Pennies For Andrew. Pennies For Andrew jars were
placed all over the community including Wyoming Elementary School.
The gift of an organ donor can make the difference in more than just the receiver’s life; it makes a difference in many lives.
Every 12 minutes another name is added on to the national organ transplant waiting list.
Almost
100,000 people are in need of a life-saving organ transplant and an
average of 18 people die every day from the lack of available organs.
How do you donate?
Well
many people think that if you sign to be a donor on your driver’s
license or donor card your organs will be given to those in need, this
is not entirely true.
Hospitals seek the consent of your family
before removing your organs, so really the best way to ensure your
organs being donated is to let your family know how you feel.
Andrew now is a sixth grader at Wyoming Elementary, where he is a happy, laughing, and active boy.
Andrew
plays multiple sports basketball, baseball, and even participated in
the Chisago Lakes Triathlon where he placed first in his age group. “He
truly is an amazing kid!” a family friend was heard to say.
He
is the same as any boy, except the scar that runs across his stomach
and the liver inside him. See what the gift of organ donation can do,
give someone a son or a brother and give a lot of people a really cool
friend.
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