Boston Herald

Silverstei­n celebrates ‘Glory’ of friendship

- By LINCEE RAY

Amy Silverstei­n received a new heart when was 25 years old, and for the next 26 years she beat the odds, surpassing all expectatio­ns for a transplant recipient. Then a single jolt of dizziness warned her that something was terribly wrong; her heart was rapidly giving out.

Amy must decide to either hope that she will be lucky enough to receive another donor heart or carry on one breathless step at a time, thankful she outlasted the years she had been promised when she had the transplant. With either decision, months of agonizing pain, nausea, sleepless nights and hospitaliz­ation would be in her immediate future.

What Amy didn’t expect was a tribe of close friends who spanned all walks of her life to step in and take control. It only took a simple spreadshee­t, a few phone calls and a group of determined women who adore Amy to organize a schedule that made sure she would not be alone during her hospital stay.

“My Glory Was I Had Such Friends” is, at its core, a book about friendship. Silverstei­n spares no words honestly describing the endless emotions she felt when friends from work, childhood and her community walked alongside her as she waited for a heart. She acknowledg­es that she felt anger, guilt and frustratio­n at times, knowing that no one around her understood the personal trauma she was facing. Yet at the end of the day, Silverstei­n remarks how each woman brought a different perspectiv­e and gift to the hospital room.

As different as these friends were, they all had common goals that brought them together: a love for Amy and a desperate desire for her to get a new heart. As a result, friendship­s deepened in courage and perseveran­ce, and a new understand­ing was born for what it means to say, “I’m there” — and truly mean it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States