A Son’s Gift

Dr. Yontz and Father Pic

It’s early in the morning on Tuesday April 12.  Dr. Brian Yontz is wheeled into an operating room at OSU’s medical center.  The surgeon enters the environment and begins the transplant, taking out Yontz’s kidney, placing it in a pan with solution and then taking it next door.  In the next operating room is Rick Yontz, the father of Brian Yontz.  He is about to receive a kidney from his son.

Rewind to the summer of 2015, when Yontz’s father was diagnosed with end stage kidney failure due to complications with diabetes.  There are two treatments: dialysis and transplant.  He began with dialysis.

“Every night he hooked himself up to a machine next to his bed at 9:00 pm and ran all night until about 6:30 am,” explained Yontz.  “He did not rest well, my mom had to sleep elsewhere and they could not travel at all.”

On the other hand, should a suitable donor be found, Rick Yontz would no longer need these treatments.  Thus Brian Yontz began the process of testing to find if he was a  suitable match.  The testing began in September.  Though Yontz and his father are not the same blood type, Yontz’s DNA sequencing made for a promising match.  In addition he underwent “physical testing, urine sampling, scans, 24 hours blood pressure monitoring and several blood test.”  These showed he was “very healthy with low risks of developing diabetes or kidney issues.”

“I never had one ounce of doubt of wanting to donate because I love him and to me–love is laying down one’s life for another,” shared Yontz.  “I never had the thought that my life was at risk (nor was it truly at risk), and therefore this act was nowhere near the ultimate act of love—but it was the best I could do to show love to my dad.  My mom and wife were a bit nervous—but I can honestly say, my desire to do this never wavered.”

Early in March, Yontz was confirmed as a donor, and the surgery was set for April 12.   After the operation, Yontz, though sore and tired, witnessed his father become a new man.

“My dad felt amazing immediately,” he exclaimed. “The kidney started working immediately, and he began making urine and got his energy back almost instantly.”

His father, a 66-year-old man now has a fresh new outlook on life thanks to his 39-year-old son and his new 39-year-old kidney.

“The transplant has made my dad like 15 years younger—his energy level, cognitive processing, and color has not been this way in 10-15 years,” Yontz continued.  “It’s working great, he’s off dialysis, and doing wonderful.”

Plus, this transplant has given Yontz and his father a new bond in life.

“It certainly will give us more years to make memories as a family, and I know he is appreciative of a 39-year-old kidney,” he said.  “It’s hard to quantify if this adds years to his life, since there are so many variables to life–but it certainly added to the quality of his life.”

In the end, this experience has meant a lot for Yontz.  If given an opportunity to donate again, if even to a stranger, he gladly would, explaining if someone ever has the chance to donate, they should do it.

“I believe in a God who loves me, loves life, hates sickness, who heals–and basically wants the pain-free living of heaven to be here on Earth,” he described.  “Likewise, I believe greatly in science and modern medicine. A lot of folks may think those are competing ideologies–but they absolutely are not and they are actually complementary. Finally, I have a great support system—led by my wife. With my faith in God, science, and my support system—that’s a squad I’d follow into battle anywhere and made this a super simple process.”

It’s pretty cool to see a Wittenberg professor acting so selflessly and passing the light by giving a kidney to his father, and The Hero Project salutes you, Dr. Brian Yontz, for being such an inspiring hero.

 

 

Celebrate. Remember. Fight Back.

“We must celebrate the survivors of cancer as well as everyone who has helped them in that journey. We must remember those we have lost to cancer. Lastly, we must fight back all together against cancer, because the more people that fight, the better our chances are of beating cancer as a global community.”

– Sabrina Davis, Relay for Life of Wittenberg Event Chair

Check out our newest newsletter to learn about Relay for Life, an inspirational event dedicated to fighting cancer.

Relay for Life article

Share the Love. Spread the Joy. Chase Life

On Wednesday February 17, students gathered together in Founders Pub to remember Chase Quincy Gage IV, the Wittenberg student who passed away last May, and whose death shook many.  The event, hosted by the Chase Life Organization, hoped to raise $10,000 for Chase’s Memorial Garden.  To learn more about Chase Life and its incredible purpose, read our latest newsletter: Chase Life.

If you would like to donate to Witt Life Chase Life, please click here.

“Heroes Fight Hunger”

Wittenberg Junior Riley McDonald spent some of her summer 2014 in Lesotho, Africa, and it changed her life.  So much so she worked with several students to create a campus-wide event where students came together to pack food for the Basotho people.  Read more about this incredible event in The Hero Project’s Newsletter:

The Hero Project Newsletter-Heroes Fight Hunger.png

The Stigma Slayer

Lorko.  Kelsey Lorko, a Junior at Wittenberg University, also known as The Stigma Slayer!  During an internship this summer, Lorko helped create programs to help people with mental health issues and raise awareness for them as well.  Learn more about Lorko’s efforts to fight stigmas in The Hero Project’s Newsletter:Hero Project Newsletter-Stigma Slayer.

Maggie Kramer and Habitat for Humanity

Maggie Kramer and Lauren Bass

Maggie Kramer and Lauren Bass

Selfless, caring, and passionate are three words that can be used to describe Maggie Kramer. Kramer was one of the leaders for one of the five trips for Habitat for Humanity this year.

Habitat for Humanity is an international organization that works to improve the lives of poverty stricken people. Specifically, Habitat for Humanity works to address poverty housing issues.

This was her fourth trip that she has taken for Habitat for Humanity. Since she is a junior you may wonder how she just completed her fourth trip. Proving her dedication and love for service, Kramer actually started taking Habitat trips while she was still in high school. Knowing how important service was to her is what encouraged Kramer to come to Wittenberg.

This year, Kramer co-led a trip with Lauren Bass to Monroe, North Carolina. The group was made up of nine other students including Kramer and Bass. Kramer said this trip was one unlike any of the others that she’s gone on because this time, they destroyed stuff.

“We did demolition and got to completely destroy an awning down to its beams, and it was awesome,” Kramer said.

Kramer said the best part of these trips is the new relationships that she has created with people along the way. Kramer met a man almost four years ago, on her very first Habitat for Humanity trip, who remembered her when she returned this year.

“You learn so much about people, and you learn their stories as they share their life with you,” Kramer said. “It’s also cool because the people that are working beside you are the people that you are doing the work to help.”

Community service is something that Kramer holds in high value. Since she has been in college, she has made the realization just how important it is to give back.

“It’s the feeling you get knowing that you are making a difference,” Kramer said. “It’s an amazing feeling.”

Even with the main purpose of her most recent trip being demolition, she knows that it’s going to do good for someone someday. When I asked Kramer what few words she would use to describe everything after it was over, she had two words. “Exhaustion,” she said. “Definitely after a full weeks work, you’re tired, but in all, just straight up happiness.” The formation of new relationships with other students on campus was something that contributed to this happiness but also the feeling she gets every time she knows what she is doing is making someone else’s life better.

“It is an incredible experience and everyone that can go, should do one,” Kramer said. Her passion is evident and that is what makes her a hero. Her dedication to service is inspiring and changes the lives of so many. So thank you Maggie, for everything that you have done and everything that you will continue to do.

– Kristina Fultz

NAMI on Campus

NAMI Group Photo

Katherine Barlow, Cheyanna Snyder, Lindsey Swihart, and Troy Weathers

Some things are easy to talk about. Some things aren’t. And sometimes it takes a group of students willing to create an organization that is working to make room for discussions about the hard topics to make these easier to talk about. National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) is doing just this. NAMI is a new organization on Wittenberg’s campus that is working to make it easier to talk about Mental Illness and to raise awareness for it.

It all started with NAMI’s president Troy Weathers and its Vice President Cheyanna Snyder. Troy had contacted NAMI International over the summer to start a chapter on Wittenberg’s campus, and NAMI International replied later saying that there was another student on campus working to get a NAMI chapter here, Cheyanna. The two were able to connect and work together to create a constitution and to gather officers to make NAMI on campus a reality. It was important to them that this became an organization.

“I think that we know on campus we don’t have that many mental health resources so we wanted to kind of create a student led movement for that,” Weathers explained. “We really want to raise awareness so people know it [anxiety and depression] might not be normal college stress,” Snyder added.

We all get stressed out as college students, but NAMI wants us to understand the difference between stress and mental illness. “Mental health is obviously really important to our age group because most mental illnesses start between the years of 18-24. So that’s like college exactly,” Weathers said. “One in four college students typically have a mental illness or at least have symptoms of one. So if you think of our campus of 2000 students that could potentially be affecting 500 students on our campus right now.”

However, NAMI is alert to these facts and wants us all to be as well. They are working to provide some programing and raise awareness. Movie showings about mental illness and a poster campaign that highlights facts about mental illness are just two of the ideas they have that will create a space for discussion.

“It’s a complicated discussion, but I think that’s why it needs to be talked about because it is so complicated, and if we don’t talk about it, people will have these misconceptions about it. It’s in the shadows, but not in the open,” Snyder explained.

In addition to movie showings and the poster campaign, NAMI is working to create a peer-to-peer safe space where students can talk about mental health issues in a non-biased, stigma free environment.

“The peer-to-peer aspect is a lot less threatening I think to a lot of students. Even the name of our safe space is going to be called SPHERES [Students Providing Help, Education, Resources, and Encouragement to Students], which is a really long acronym but the first and last letters are both s’s, which stand for student, so it’s really student to student, and we wanted to emphasize that,” Weathers said.

Student to student. NAMI is focused on how we can better our Wittenberg community. They care about our Witt family to the point that they are working hard to open the heavy doors of mental illness discussion and awareness. They want us to be knowledgeable about this very real issue that is greatly impacting not only our university, but also universities around the world.

Weathers and Snyder would like everyone to know that it is okay to talk about mental illness, and it is okay to get help. “People think they’re alone and that’s not the truth. If you’re struggling with mental health issues, it’s okay to ask for help,” Snyder shared. “It doesn’t mean that you’re weak or you aren’t a good student. It just might mean that you need a little bit more help,” Weathers added.

NAMI, we are proud to make you a Hero of the Month. Thank you for all you have done, are doing, and will do for Wittenberg University.

– Camila Quiñones