Los Angeles Times

Stranger gives the ultimate gift of healing

When Graciela Elliott meets David Ponder, she listens to her son’s heartbeat in his chest.

- By Peter Rowe Rowe writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

A Poway musician’s heart transplant stitches two families together in sorrow and joy.

SAN DIEGO — A singer, songwriter and guitarist, David Ponder knows the importance of a strong, steady beat. But this was ridiculous.

“My heart now, it’s so strong,” said Ponder, 60, a Poway, Calif., resident who in August 2016 underwent a successful heart transplant. “The first night home, it was beating so hard it woke me up.”

This Christmas, David Ponder is dazzled by the gifts he’s received from strangers: a life-sustaining organ and a life-enhancing relationsh­ip.

He’s alive because a car wreck killed a man he’d never met, Juan Carlos Lopez, 26, of Coronado, Calif. When surgeons removed Lopez’s heart and transplant­ed it in Ponder’s chest, two families were stitched together in sorrow and joy.

Months after the surgery, Ponder visited Lopez’s mother. The bond was instant.

“Both of us were crying and crying and crying, hugging each other,” said Graciela Elliott, Lopez’s mother. “After that, I listened to his heartbeat.”

In life, Lopez was a doting father and co-owner of a landscapin­g company. As Elliott reminded Ponder between his sets at House of Blues last weekend, Lopez was a vibrant personalit­y with numerous passions.

“When I listen to David’s music, I can’t help but be happy,” she said. “My son loved music when he was alive.”

Ponder was 5 when he first strummed a bass guitar, 12 when he first performed profession­ally. A North Carolina native, he settled in Nashville and carved out a career as a session musician, a headliner, a songwriter and sound engineer. While he worked with the greats — Dolly Parton, Alabama, the Oak Ridge Boys — his longest associatio­n has been with his own trio, Ponder, Sykes & Wright.

For more than 45 years, that group has specialize­d in country-tinged Christian music. Part of their repertoire is “Holding Things Close,” a ballad that begins with a loved one driving away, perhaps forever, before focusing on a prodigal’s return to the fold. “His death brought me here,” the song continues, focusing on the redemptive nature of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice on the cross.

That, at least, was the songwriter’s original intent.

When the trio reunited last year to record several songs, Ponder found “Close” too close for comfort.

“When I got to the lyrics,” Ponder said, “it meant something different. I’m bawling in the studio.”

A fateful day

On Sunday, July 31, 2016, Graciela Elliott was in church when her phone rang. Her husband, James Elliott, was calling to say that her son was in a hospital, near death.

Lopez had been driving home from his cousins’ house early that Sunday morning when he fell asleep and crashed into a tree. He died Aug. 1, a month short of his 27th birthday, leaving behind a 4-year-old daughter, Vida Mía, and the landscapin­g business he had just opened.

“He had two jobs already scheduled,” his mother said. “He was so proud.”

While renewing his driver’s license, Lopez had agreed to be an organ donor. The accident destroyed his pancreas, but doctors were able to harvest the man’s heart, liver, kidney, tissue and other organs.

Graciela Elliott, herself an organ donor, took comfort in the fact that her son’s death may have saved several lives. In her sorrow, this mother kept coming back to a nagging question.

“I wanted to know who had his heart,” she said.

On borrowed time

Ponder had his first heart attack at 39. Heart disease has killed generation­s of Ponders, so the resulting quadruple bypass surgery seemed more of a delaying action than a cure.

He resumed performing — an Eagles tribute band here, playing behind Ricky

Skaggs there — but he was living on borrowed time. Six years ago, his doctor ordered him to stop working and go on disability.

In 2014, when he and his wife moved to San Diego County, Ponder hoped to revive his career. First, though, he needed an aortic valve replacemen­t. In April 2016, he wheeled into an operating room and was sedated.

“When I woke up, I felt the same,” he said.

He needed more than a new valve. He needed a new heart.

The transplant came on Aug. 5, 2016. Ponder seemed to recover quickly, leaving the hospital only two weeks after surgery, but medication­s and anxiety wore him down. In the first month, post-transplant, he lost 50 pounds. His bank account also was becoming dangerousl­y thin, as he was too weak to perform for months, and he fretted that his career might never recover.

“People forget you if you are not around,” he said. “When you keep saying no, it’s not too long before they stop calling you.”

Another worry nagged at him. He had filled out the paperwork, asking to meet with his donor’s family, but there had been no response.

Most families decline this offer — “It’s too hard,” Ponder said — but he had hopes. When months passed in silence, he called Lifesharin­g, the nonprofit that supervises transplant­s. They had lost his letter; it had never gone to the donor’s family.

A new letter reached its destinatio­n. In July 2017, David and Jadie Ponder pulled up outside Graciela Elliott’s home in Coronado. There was a banner outside: “Welcome, David!”

“It was so emotional,” said Jadie Ponder, David’s wife. “It was a beautiful moment, mixed with many different emotions. Sometimes I can’t look at them without crying — I’m crying right now.”

“We embraced for about 15 minutes,” Ponder said, “both bawling like babies.”

And it wasn’t just Graciela Elliott who immediatel­y adopted the Ponders. The dead man’s little daughter, now 7, wrapped these strangers in bear hugs. Lopez’s sister came forward with a little surprise.

“I want you to meet my son,” Amy Lopez said, holding out a month-old infant. “David Juan Carlos.”

Graciela and James Elliott left town this Christmas, so the Ponders won’t spend the holiday with them. They were together the previous two Christmase­s and celebrate birthdays, Thanksgivi­ngs and other special occasions as one surgically constructe­d family. Graciela, 48, always puts her ear to Ponder’s chest, listening to a younger man’s strong, steady beat.

Because the families are apart this Christmas, on Saturday they attended the House of Blues. For the last few months, Ponder and Sam Hosking perform in the Country Brunch Live. His schedule is pretty full, with gigs around the county and in Las Vegas, and he’s also recording again. The title of a recent Ponder-penned Christian song: “He Was the First Donor.”

“It just took off,” he said of his post-transplant career. “I’m working five, six times more than ever in San

Diego.”

The powerful ticking of his new ticker no longer awakens Ponder, but there are still nights when he lies in bed, marveling at life. “Man,” he tells himself, “I’ve got somebody else’s heart in my body, keeping me alive. It’s a trip.”

And while beating in a new body, that heart is still attached to the original owner’s family.

“He’s a wonderful man,” Graciela Elliott said of Ponder. “I am very happy my son lives in his body.”

 ?? Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune ?? MUSICIAN David Ponder meets with Graciela Elliott, the mother of Ponder’s donor. “When I listen to David’s music, I can’t help but be happy,” she says.
Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune MUSICIAN David Ponder meets with Graciela Elliott, the mother of Ponder’s donor. “When I listen to David’s music, I can’t help but be happy,” she says.

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