Seat 1A

Personal weblog of Alan L. Nelson
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About This Site

  • I'm Alan Nelson. By trade I'm a Partner at CRA; for an avocational bio go here, for a vocational one go here. This site is my personal weblog, is a hobby, and is not affiliated with CRA or its clients.

    It's updated frequently, travel permitting. The most recent entries are at the top of the page, and older content is organized by category and date in the archives.

    If you'd like to contact me I'd welcome the note; you may do so at alan.l.nelson [at] gmail [dot] com. Finally, my Facebook page is here.

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A Model Of Greatness

THIS IS JUST ONE OF THE most beautiful things I've seen in a very long time. Start at the top and just keep scrolling. I know I've posted about Becky before, but as today is surgery day, I just had to note it again.

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* Scheduled post, written earlier.
 

Becky's Day In The Sun

Gno_005YOU MIGHT REMEMBER my friend, everyday hero, and Model of Greatness Becky Waller, who's blogging her attempt to donate half her liver to her brother. Two updates to note: First, they've set a date for the surgery; second, her blog attracted the attention of the Baltimore Sun. With organ donation awareness is itself a gift; go to her site to learn more.

Imagine

It was 25 years ago today.

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Chopped Liver

HI, and welcome to the first post-Thanksgiving post of the year. Hope those from the States had a great holiday; we certainly did.

Gno_005 Today in my inbox was a note from colleague and friend Becky Waller, announcing she's launched a blog to chronicle her effort to donate half her liver to her brother, Joe. It's not only a compelling journal, the blog's well done, too (Becky's a former magazine somethingorother). The blog is named Chopped Liver. Check it out, and file Becky under Models of Greatness.

In moderately-related news, I bring you Idle Type, a blog which I found via Becky's. It has to have one of the best author profile descriptions I've read in some time. A sample passage:

Before he forgets, the author would like to point out that he is, on average, 20 pounds lighter than he was at this time last year and has slightly bigger muscles, and if you were to comment on his newfound state of fitness, he would feign modesty but feel a secret, almost perverse sense of joy that through his steady relationship with his local gym, he has beaten back — if only temporarily — the biological entropy that begins to make itself known at around his age.

Fifty bonus points for "biological entropy."

Susan Tom Gets What She Deserves

Susanandalan LET ME TELL YOU ABOUT A WONDERFUL FRIEND who's finally getting what she deserves. Susan Tom[1] is a remarkable woman, who over the past decade or so has made it her mission to adopt and care for 11 special needs children. Some have had physical disabilities, some have had learning disabilities, some have had terrible illnesses. Three have died from their afflictions.

I first heard of Susan May 11th, 2004. As I wrote then:

Tonight, I finished watching the HBO documentary My Flesh And Blood, which tells the story of Susan Tom, a 53-year-old single mother in Fairfield, California. Susan is the mother of 13 children, 11 of whom she has adopted, many of whom suffer from handicaps and diseases. Teenagers Hannah and Xenia were born without legs. Anthony has a degenerative and usually fatal skin disease. Eight-year-old Faith has disfiguring scars and no hair from being badly burned as an infant. Joe, 15, recently passed away from cystic fibrosis. Margaret, 18, helps Susan raise the family. (You can learn more about her story here, here,   here and here, you can read about the documentary here and here.)

Hers is a powerful and wonderfully inspiring story. It left me moved by the grace, love, and caring Susan Tom exhibits to these children … her children … children whom, without her, may very well have gone throughout life without love, without tenderness, without a chance … without having really lived at all.

I turn from that documentary to The Command Post, where I see posted the photographs of Nick Berg’s beheading, and I’m struck bluntly by the complete antithesis of Susan Tom: murder, brutality, and disgusting inhumanity. In moments, I went from having tears in my eyes to having bile in my throat. And I’m left wondering, as I’m sure are most of us are, what exactly to make of it all.

Well, I’ve decided what to make of it all, and what I’m going to make is some good. Susan Tom is a hero … one of millions … waking each day with a commitment to make the lives of others better through love. Hers is an example to which humanity should aspire. So my response to the murder of Nick Berg and the inhumanity it represents is to use it as motivation to give to Susan Tom and the humanity she represents.

All of Susan Tom’s children save Katie plan to attend college. Susan will have education bills to pay, and toward that end she’s established the non-profit Tom Family Education Trust to assist the Tom children with college tuition and book expenses (according to the stipulation of the trust, the monies can not be used for any other purpose).

For the next three days, between the time stamp of this post and Midnight EDT Friday night, Michele and I will contribute all donations made to The Command Post PayPal account (the button’s below this post and also over in the right-hand column) to the Tom Family Education Trust.

That post did three things. First, it rallied the blogosphere, and we ultimately raised $15,000 in three days for the education trust. Second, it was the germ of an idea that ultimately led me to create Strengthen The Good, a non-profit network of bloggers committed to raising awareness for small charities around the world. Third, it introduced me to Susan, whom I've since come to consider a friend, and her kids, who are as much an inspiration as is she.

Well, Susan finally got what she deserved. ABC's Extreme Makeover Home Edition built her a house. The episode airs tomorrow night at 7:00 EST (it's a two-hour special), and I strongly encourage everyone to watch the show. It's a program that often brings people (including me) to tears; Susan's story will inspire you to change the world, in whatever small or grand way you can. It did for me, and I'm a better man for it.

Thank you, Susan, for being a hero, and congratulations on getting what you've so long deserved.

  1. You may visit Susan's web site here.