The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech QB an inspiratio­n for diabetic children

Matthew Jordan shared his experience­s living with Type 1 diabetes with about 150 kids at Camp Kudzu last week.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

On a warm July evening in a sunlit gymnasium on a woodsy campground, Matthew Jordan gave encouragem­ent, signed dozens of autographs and shook his booty. All three acts delighted Camp Kudzu, which serves children and teens with whom Jordan shares a disease that has no known cure.

The Georgia Tech quarterbac­k was diagnosed with Type 1 dia- betes almost 10 years ago and he credits the discipline required to manage the disease for his successes. They include his business-administra­tion degree, earned in 31/2 years, and his likely status as the Yellow Jackets’ next starting quarterbac­k.

That pride wove through a message he gave last Wednesday at the camp, held at Camp Twin Lakes, a nonprofit that provides camping experience­s to children with serious illnesses, disabiliti­es and other life challenges.

“One more thing I’d like to say,” Jordan told the assembly of roughly 150, including campers,

counselors and medical staff. “I’ve heard this from a couple people: They’re kind of scared to say they’re diabetic, they’re kind of embarrasse­d of it, things like that. I’m not one of those kinds of people. If anything, I’m proud of it.”

The visit clearly impacted Jordan, too. Diagnosed at 11, Jordan said he didn’t meet another Type 1 diabetic until he got to college.

“It makes me feel good to know that I’m making them feel better, because I didn’t have that,” Jordan told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on at the end of his visit. “Like I said, I didn’t have anybody to lookup to. I just want to give them somebody to say, ‘Hey, he’s done it. I can do it, too.’”

Type 1 diabetes, once known as juvenile diabetes, is a condition in which the body produces little or no insulin, a hormone necessary to process blood sugar. It requires continual monitoring of blood-sugar levels and injections of insulin. It affects about 1.25 million Americans, according to the American Diabetes Associa- tion. It can raise the risk of blindness, major-organ damage and amputation.

During his visit, which included dinner with staff and then his message to the campers in the gym, Jordan didn’t have to explain any of that, speaking the language of diabetes with no need for translatio­n. That alone seemed to elicit a thrill from campers as he fielded questions about his disease management. What is his bloodsugar level? Did he use an insulin pump or take shots? What does he do when he feels his blood-sugar level dropping? How does he manage it while he plays games?

“I wear a Dexcom CGM,” said Jordan, referring to a subcutaneo­us (implanted) monitor that he wears. The response was as though he’d announced lights out had been pushed back one hour. “I know — it’s one of the best things since sliced bread.”

He posed for pictures and signed more autographs than he had ever signed at Tech’s fan day, he told camp director Alex Allen. He signed camper ID badges, shirts and even a forehead.

“Actually, a lot of insulin pumps,” he said. “That was a first.”

A cabin of teen girls was particular­ly taken with Jordan, possessed of a muscleboun­d frame and a broad smile. The girls (one of whom privately described him as “man candy”) implored him to “shake your booty,” a request he granted with a modest wiggle. They asked if he could return next year as a counselor, prompting the entire gym to erupt in a chant of “COUNSELOR! COUNSELOR!”

“Tell you what,” Jordan said. “If you can get Coach (Paul) Johnson to let me miss a week of workouts, I’ll come be a counselor.”

A ponytailed eight-year-old girl, dressed in a pink leotard for the camp talent show following Jordan’s appearance, asked if she could take his blood-sugar count. With a buddy, she came out of the crowd with her measuremen­t device.

“It’s really cool,” said the girl, Charlotte Sessions, of her connection with Jordan. “I have something that most people don’t have. It’s really cool to have someone famous have what I have.”

The impact of the visit was clear to Jackson Haas, a counselor and Auburn undergrad from Smyrna (and the son of Tech grads). He has been a camper since the age of 8.

“Being able to see a figure like that, who you see on the TV and you see thriving and being successful and showing that, whatever diabetes may mean to you, it’s not the end of the world, you can thrive with it and you can be everything you want to be — people like Matt are superheroe­s to these kids,” Haas said.

Jordan was to return to Camp Kudzu this week to talk to another session. Meeting children with diabetes is nothing new for Jordan. Going back to his high school days, he has reached out to children who have been diagnosed with the disease to encourage and educate. In the future, he said, he would like to get involved in fundraisin­g and maybe even coordinate a camp like Camp Kudzu.

Perhaps he’ll be fortunate to have a guest speaker as impactful as one at Camp Kudzu last Wednesday.

“He inspired them because he’s cool and that falls well within our mission,” said Allen, the camp director who founded the camp in 1999. “The kids get a lot out of that. When they go home, they may remember his name, they may not. But they’ll remember the message.”

 ?? MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Matthew Jordan (right, with team chaplain Derrick Moore after a win over Virginia Tech last fall) has battled Type 1 diabetes since being diagnosed at age 11.
MICHAEL SHROYER / GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Matthew Jordan (right, with team chaplain Derrick Moore after a win over Virginia Tech last fall) has battled Type 1 diabetes since being diagnosed at age 11.
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