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Writing to Your Donor's Family.

Transplants | Last Active: Apr 15 4:40pm | Replies (45)

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@contentandwell

@jodeej you may want to wait even longer than a few weeks. The grief is still so fresh now. I can’t even think how difficult this must be, particularly if the death was unexpected.
JK

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Replies to "@jodeej you may want to wait even longer than a few weeks. The grief is still..."

I had a liver transplant November 1, 1992. I was Mayo's 397th liver transplant! Back then we were encouraged to write also. We were told however that correspondence back from the donor family would not be forwarded to the recipient. Cross contact back then was against their protocol.
I can't believe how much it's changed, and for the better!
I wrote my donor family faithfully each year at or on the anniversary of their mother's passing. I learned my donor was a 48 year old woman from Waterloo Iowa. More information than usually given back then. She had died from an aneurysm and donated to 5 people.
In the late 90's I received a letter from the two daughters who were the last remaining members of the immediate family. It was slipped out of my file, into a nurses purse and sent to me privately... I cannot tell you how emotional it was to read a letter from the family who saved my life!
In 2000 Carolyn's (my donor) daughters requested an exchange of contact information. After receiving the letter from Lifesource addressed to me c/o Mayo, the equivalent of sending a letter to you via the nearest big city you live in, so it took a while to get to me. I called them immediately! I got a phone number to call, and called at least 6 different times before I actually waited for an answer!
We chatted for a number of times, and made plans to meet at their home in Iowa,
I live in Illinois, and spent my working life as a truck driver, so the 4 hour drive was nothing for me.
Labor Day Weekend 2000 we met for the first time!! There was such a sense of closure for my family knowing finally who the family was, spending time with them. We visited the family graves, broke bread at their mom's favorite restaurant, and created a life long bond of friendship and family. In November of 2023, my wife and I went back to Waterloo, and spent a few days with the one remaining daughter. The other had passed a few years ago. I love that woman like a sister, and she sees me as family. I am so glad I wrote that letter! All those letters!!
Being a gifted poet, I brought copies of what I had written to date, and when my book was published I made sure they both got copies!
So... if you're on the fence about writing your donor's family please do it! It's the least one can do for the greatest gift of a lifetime.
If you want or need help writing, I have many poems written that I can share and you can print and send along with a letter.
Many will not hear back from their donor families, but I know some will. None will if you don't write though!
Thank you!
Peace
Joe K.