Today was my last Q before I donate a kidney to a friend on Monday (1/25). The workout was designed to highlight some of the lessons I’ve learned throughout this process and I hope to impart on the 10 PAX that showed up because they could.
I started my journey to kidney donation back on September 5th when a friend of mine posted to FB “I’m dying. Some of you already know this. Both of my kidneys have failed due to my lifelong struggle with diabetes. There is no hope for them to ever resume function. I’m on dialysis now as of March. I’m normally a private person when it comes to my health, but things have changed in my life. I’m in pain every day and have had numerous hospitalizations in the past few months.”
Read that and tell me you don’t want to find a way to help. Now, let’s be honest, I had NEVER in my life considered donating a kidney until I knew someone who was in need. That night, I registered with Duke University to see if I could be a match.
Now, nothing happens fast. Nothing happens on the time table you have in your mind. We have to trust in God and lets his process and plan play out. It was several weeks before I heard back from Duke to talk about the process to see if it’ll work. There are numerous blood tests, scans, evals. Let’s just say, it’s not easy. And in hindsight, it shouldn’t be easy. This is not something to take lightly, but it could be easier.
So, how does all of this fold into the workout? We started with the mosey and warm-up and then I told everyone to run a lap around the parking lot and to remember the order that they finished in. Of course, Slapshot was the fastest. Trucker was the 6 today.
Now, the reason we did that was so that the person who was the 6 now became the leader/pacesetter for the rest of the workout. There are 25 parking spaces per row in the lot. We started with 1 burpee per spot AND THE CATCH is that you cannot pass the person in front of you. Then run a lap where you cannot pass the person in front of you. Next, 2 squats in that same can’t pass the person in front of you method. Then 3 merkins, 4 knee taps, and finally 5 plank shoulder taps.
So what’s the lesson in doing it this way? For those of us to might lead the pack most of the time, we had to wait. We had to be patient. We couldn’t go as fast as we wanted to.
What was your plan for this morning? Did you get the workout you expected? Did you make the most of the time you spent with your brothers? Were you encouraging? Are you helping those in front of you? Are you prepared both mentally and physically for when things don’t go as planned?
I know that I wanted the donation to happen sooner. It was going to be more convenient for me to do this in December from a work and family perspective. But God has a plan. God wants this to happen when he wants it to happen. Trust in his plan. Even if his plan is for this to not be successful for Petra (my recipient) then I have to trust that God is using me and this time to try to educate and inspire others.
We’ll be carrying on the good fight as we start a charity/non-profit to help generate awareness, community and to raise funds for kidney research. The Odd Kidneys Group will be a way for us to foster education and share the inspirational stories that are out there that go untold. You’d be surprised by the number of HIM’s in the area that are going through this journey or are considering it since I’ve been talking about it at COT’s.
Today is a day for us to take stock of the fortunes that God has bestowed upon us and look for his guidance to share it with others. I’m thankful that I was EH’d by @Polaroid 18 months ago and that I’m in the best shape of my adult life so that I can give the most precious gift anyone can to another person– more time. Thank you to all of you for your support, encouraging words, and prayers over the last 5 months. We are a group like no other and I am beyond grateful for each of you who do the hard things and understand that we GET TO DO THIS. Keep posting PAX!
Splinter!