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You’d never know it by looking at her jumping up and down on the trampoline, but eight-year-old Gianna-Lynn Favilla had a life-changing liver transplant five months ago.
On the last day of summer, Gianna is popping over to see her best friend, Lily Budel, who lives around the corner in Russell, southeast of Ottawa.
When she arrives, Lily runs toward her. Gianna’s face lights up. They giggle. The two are inseparable.
After the trampoline, it’s on to the zip line installed between two trees in the backyard, a brief bike ride and a game of catch with Lily’s golden retriever, Penny.
Gianna’s energy is boundless. The two rarely leave each other’s sight, but when they do it’s because there are times when Lily is out of breath trying to keep up with Gianna.
The girls are in Grade 4. They ride to and from school together every day and take a jazz dance class together.
It’s clear they share a special bond, but their families were not always so close.
Gianna’s parents, Sue and Chris Favilla, say what brought them together is a story of hope and second chances.
Gianna-Lynn Favilla, right, and Lily Budel are close friends. In April, Lily’s father donated part of his liver to Gianna.
Sue recounted publicly for the first time what happened leading up to their daughter’s surgery on April 21.
In March, some six months after Gianna’s name was put on the organ transplant waiting list, Sue got the call any parent with a sick child would be thrilled to receive. There was a match for Gianna. An anonymous donor had been found.
Overwhelmed by emotion and with little time to prepare, Sue packed Gianna’s bag, and within a couple of days they flew to Toronto for the surgery.
“I couldn’t say anything … because the donor was anonymous and had asked us not to go public for a couple of weeks until things settled down. We wanted to respect that person’s wishes, obviously.”
“We were admitted to SickKids,” Sue says, her voice breaking.
What happened that day has marked her.
“It was just a bad day,” Sue says, pausing to wipe the tears from her eyes.
Her husband, Chris, jumps in: “It was a good day.”
“It was a good day but it was a bad day,” she replies.
On the eve of the surgery, Sue received another phone call. The kind any parent would dread.
“At 8:30 p.m. … the surgeons at the Toronto General Hospital made a decision to cancel the surgery. They decided it was too risky for different reasons.”
She went to bed devastated, all hope for a much-needed liver transplant having just evaporated.
That is until Lily’s parents — Stacy and Ken Budel — received a surprise phone call of their own back in Russell.
“It was March break and they woke me up out of bed,” Stacy joked. “As soon as I saw it was an unknown number, I knew I had to take it.”
Ken, Lily’s father, had applied to become an organ donor some months before.
In a surprising twist of fate, Ken learned that very morning that he was being scheduled for a battery of tests in Toronto to determine if he would be a suitable match for Gianna.
Unaware of what had just transpired in Toronto some 12 hours earlier, Stacy texted Sue on the morning of Gianna’s now-cancelled surgery.
Still in Toronto and reeling from the heartbreaking news the night before, Sue picked up the phone and called Stacy in Russell.
From left, Sue Favilla, Chris Favilla, Stacy Budel and Ken Budel, and up front Lily Budel and Gianna-Lynn Favilla.
“Ken is going to be the donor,” Sue remembers Stacy saying. “I’m telling you. He’s going to be the donor. I feel it in my heart. I know it … it’s going to be OK.”
But Stacy didn’t even know that Sue was in Toronto, or how close Gianna had come to receiving a new liver.
“She didn’t know what we had just lived through,” Sue said. “It was just the best day. It was just the best day, really.”
As luck would have it, Ken was a match for Gianna.
“I know there was a lot of criteria but I’m pretty sure that living around the corner from us was not one of them,” Sue said as Chris, Stacy and Ken burst out laughing.
While 90 per cent of Canadians say they support the idea of organ and tissue donation, less than 20 per cent have actually made plans to donate, according to the Canadian Transplant Society.
Five months after undergoing surgery, Ken is full of positives while discussing donating part of his liver.
“I went into the hospital in decent shape, I was well prepared and I pushed myself to recover.
“It was easy, and I’m not saying that to minimize it.”
Ken had approximately 20 per cent of his liver removed during surgery and today says it is “100-per-cent regrown.”
The experience has brought him and his wife closer to Gianna’s parents.
“I trust the family with Lily’s life,” Ken says. “You can tell they really love her. She’s in safe hands when she’s over there.”
Ken also feels like the act of donating has changed him, even though he is still figuring out how to put it into words.
“I’ll tell you, though, sometimes I look back and see her, and I’m like, ‘My liver is in that kid.’ “
Gianna is on anti-rejection drugs, which she’ll have to take for the rest of her life, and suffers from Crohn’s, a chronic inflammatory disease of the digestive system.
“She’ll have challenges, sure,” Ken says, “but you’d never know it by looking at her.
“She’s a million miles an hour.”
Sue says she is sharing their story, in part, because she wants to thank the person who had originally been scheduled to donate part of their liver to her daughter.
“It’s a weird feeling being so grateful to someone you don’t know. … But I would love to know or meet this person to thank them.”
Sue is also grateful to the doctors who had a very tough call to make.
“I have so much respect for them because they didn’t do what was easy, they did what was right. And they did it to protect both Gianna and the potential donor.”
Sue also hopes that Gianna and Ken’s story will inspire others to register as organ donors.
Gianna and Lily will celebrate their ninth birthdays in October.
查看原文...
On the last day of summer, Gianna is popping over to see her best friend, Lily Budel, who lives around the corner in Russell, southeast of Ottawa.
When she arrives, Lily runs toward her. Gianna’s face lights up. They giggle. The two are inseparable.
After the trampoline, it’s on to the zip line installed between two trees in the backyard, a brief bike ride and a game of catch with Lily’s golden retriever, Penny.
Gianna’s energy is boundless. The two rarely leave each other’s sight, but when they do it’s because there are times when Lily is out of breath trying to keep up with Gianna.
The girls are in Grade 4. They ride to and from school together every day and take a jazz dance class together.
It’s clear they share a special bond, but their families were not always so close.
Gianna’s parents, Sue and Chris Favilla, say what brought them together is a story of hope and second chances.
Gianna-Lynn Favilla, right, and Lily Budel are close friends. In April, Lily’s father donated part of his liver to Gianna.
Sue recounted publicly for the first time what happened leading up to their daughter’s surgery on April 21.
In March, some six months after Gianna’s name was put on the organ transplant waiting list, Sue got the call any parent with a sick child would be thrilled to receive. There was a match for Gianna. An anonymous donor had been found.
Overwhelmed by emotion and with little time to prepare, Sue packed Gianna’s bag, and within a couple of days they flew to Toronto for the surgery.
“I couldn’t say anything … because the donor was anonymous and had asked us not to go public for a couple of weeks until things settled down. We wanted to respect that person’s wishes, obviously.”
“We were admitted to SickKids,” Sue says, her voice breaking.
What happened that day has marked her.
“It was just a bad day,” Sue says, pausing to wipe the tears from her eyes.
Her husband, Chris, jumps in: “It was a good day.”
“It was a good day but it was a bad day,” she replies.
On the eve of the surgery, Sue received another phone call. The kind any parent would dread.
“At 8:30 p.m. … the surgeons at the Toronto General Hospital made a decision to cancel the surgery. They decided it was too risky for different reasons.”
She went to bed devastated, all hope for a much-needed liver transplant having just evaporated.
That is until Lily’s parents — Stacy and Ken Budel — received a surprise phone call of their own back in Russell.
“It was March break and they woke me up out of bed,” Stacy joked. “As soon as I saw it was an unknown number, I knew I had to take it.”
Ken, Lily’s father, had applied to become an organ donor some months before.
In a surprising twist of fate, Ken learned that very morning that he was being scheduled for a battery of tests in Toronto to determine if he would be a suitable match for Gianna.
Unaware of what had just transpired in Toronto some 12 hours earlier, Stacy texted Sue on the morning of Gianna’s now-cancelled surgery.
Still in Toronto and reeling from the heartbreaking news the night before, Sue picked up the phone and called Stacy in Russell.
From left, Sue Favilla, Chris Favilla, Stacy Budel and Ken Budel, and up front Lily Budel and Gianna-Lynn Favilla.
“Ken is going to be the donor,” Sue remembers Stacy saying. “I’m telling you. He’s going to be the donor. I feel it in my heart. I know it … it’s going to be OK.”
But Stacy didn’t even know that Sue was in Toronto, or how close Gianna had come to receiving a new liver.
“She didn’t know what we had just lived through,” Sue said. “It was just the best day. It was just the best day, really.”
As luck would have it, Ken was a match for Gianna.
“I know there was a lot of criteria but I’m pretty sure that living around the corner from us was not one of them,” Sue said as Chris, Stacy and Ken burst out laughing.
While 90 per cent of Canadians say they support the idea of organ and tissue donation, less than 20 per cent have actually made plans to donate, according to the Canadian Transplant Society.
Five months after undergoing surgery, Ken is full of positives while discussing donating part of his liver.
“I went into the hospital in decent shape, I was well prepared and I pushed myself to recover.
“It was easy, and I’m not saying that to minimize it.”
Ken had approximately 20 per cent of his liver removed during surgery and today says it is “100-per-cent regrown.”
The experience has brought him and his wife closer to Gianna’s parents.
“I trust the family with Lily’s life,” Ken says. “You can tell they really love her. She’s in safe hands when she’s over there.”
Ken also feels like the act of donating has changed him, even though he is still figuring out how to put it into words.
“I’ll tell you, though, sometimes I look back and see her, and I’m like, ‘My liver is in that kid.’ “
Gianna is on anti-rejection drugs, which she’ll have to take for the rest of her life, and suffers from Crohn’s, a chronic inflammatory disease of the digestive system.
“She’ll have challenges, sure,” Ken says, “but you’d never know it by looking at her.
“She’s a million miles an hour.”
Sue says she is sharing their story, in part, because she wants to thank the person who had originally been scheduled to donate part of their liver to her daughter.
“It’s a weird feeling being so grateful to someone you don’t know. … But I would love to know or meet this person to thank them.”
Sue is also grateful to the doctors who had a very tough call to make.
“I have so much respect for them because they didn’t do what was easy, they did what was right. And they did it to protect both Gianna and the potential donor.”
Sue also hopes that Gianna and Ken’s story will inspire others to register as organ donors.
Gianna and Lily will celebrate their ninth birthdays in October.
查看原文...