Saturday Star

Special tribute to the brave wife and mother

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organs?”

I remember our doctor putting her hand on Keri’s shoulder and saying, “Oh honey, that’s so brave of you to say.”

Like, how nice of you, but come on. Keri meant it. There I was, crestfalle­n and heartbroke­n, but I momentaril­y got lifted out of the moment and just stood in awe of her. I was a spectator to my own life, watching a superhero find her superpower­s. In literally the worst moment of her life, finding out her baby was going to die, it took her less than a minute to think of someone else and how her selflessne­ss could help. It’s one of the most powerful things I’ve ever experience­d.

In the eight years we’ve been married (and 15 years together) I’ve had a lot of moments stop me in my tracks where I thought, “holy crap, this woman I’m married to, lucky me”. But this one was different. It hit me that not only am I married to my very best friend, but to a truly remarkable, special human being.

This whole process has been rough, but I say that as someone watching from the bleachers like the rest of you. Keri has been in the trenches the entire time, feeling every little kick, every hiccup and every roll. She’s reminded every moment of every day that she’s carrying a baby who will die. Her back hurts. Her feet are sore. She’s got all the super fun pregnant stuff going on. But the light at the end of her nine-month tunnel will turn into a darkness she’s never felt before a couple hours or days after Eva is born. She’s the one who is going to deal with all that comes with having a baby – her milk coming in, the recovery process, etc, but with no snuggly, soft, beautiful newborn to look at to remind you that it was all worth it.

We made our choice to carry Eva to full term for a lot of reasons, but the first and foremost was to donate her organs. We don’t say that to try and sound like great people or anything. It was just a practical endgame that in our minds, before we came to the realisatio­n Eva is alive and our daughter deserves to meet her mama and daddy, gave us a purpose to continue on.

Donating was on Keri’s mind from darn near the second we found out and while the experience of holding and kissing our daughter will be something we cherish forever, the gift(s) she’s got inside that little body of hers is what really matters.

Keri saw that almost instantly. That kid Jarrius wears a shirt that says: “It takes lives to save lives.” I couldn’t stop thinking about that all day. There’s another family out there hurting and hoping for a miracle for their baby, knowing full well someone else’s baby will need to die first. Eva can be that miracle.

We’re getting closer to the finish line, and while it’s going to be amazing to run through that tape and meet Eva, it comes at a cost. We’ll go to the hospital for a birth, and go home without a baby.

A lot of people say things like “I wouldn’t change anything” after a trying circumstan­ce, but I’m not about to say that. I would definitely change this if I could. I want my daughter to be perfect. I want her to blow out her candles on her first birthday. I want to watch her bang her head on our coffee table trying to learn to walk. I want her to run up a cellphone bill texting boys. I want to walk her down an aisle. I want to change it all so, so badly. But I can’t. This is our reality. And there’s no stopping it.

Whenever Harrison gets hurt, or has to pull a Bandaid off or something, Keri will ask him, “Are you tough? Are you brave?” And that little boy will nod his head and say, “I tough! I brave!”

I’m looking at Keri right now and I don’t even have to ask. She’s tough. She’s brave. She’s incredible. She’s remarkable.

She’s cut from a different cloth, combining wit, beauty, courage, silliness, character and integrity into one spectacula­r woman. And somehow, she’s my wife. Not that I needed some awful situation like this to actually see all of that, but what it did was make me want to tell everyone else about it.

Royce is an NBA writer at ESPN. The family li ves in Oklahoma City. Follow him on Facebook at

Donating was on Keri’s mind from the darn near second we found out

www.facebook.com/ryoung

 ?? ?? The picture of Keri asleep on the couch, posted to Facebook by Royce Young, with a heart-rending tribute to his brave wife.
The picture of Keri asleep on the couch, posted to Facebook by Royce Young, with a heart-rending tribute to his brave wife.

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