Another prayer quilt arrived on Kate Rowe's porch. She’s lost count of how many she’s received by mail.
“This one's from Ohio,” she said. “That’s a long way away.”
The Buckeye State is a world away from Quitman. This small Georgia town has little more than a few thousand folks, some antebellum homes, and one hell of a football team.
The quilt is for Kate’s son, Gus. A one-year-old with a tranquil personality, red hair, happy face. When he was born, his calm disposition wasn't a concern. But over time, Kate thought he seemed too relaxed. She's a nurse—she has a sixth-sense.
She took him to a neurologist. It was bad. A brain tumor. Gus needed surgery. And fast.
“Two days later,” said Kate. “We were handing our baby to a group of strangers.”
Surgeons. A specialized surgical team that operated for thirteen hours—through a microscope. And that was only the beginning. For Kate and her husband, life didn't stop because Gus had a tumor. They had jobs.
Money doesn’t exactly grow in windowboxes.
“I called my manager,” she said “I needed
to take leave. My manager was like, ‘You don’t have any paid time off left, honey.’”
That's when it all started.
So, some of Kate’s coworkers had a plan. They surrendered their paid-time-off days to help Kate keep her job. Their charitable ideas caught on. Nearly every employee donated paid vacations.
Then:
Folks started giving money, clothes, shoes, toiletries, coffee. Daily packages began arriving. Baskets of snacks, handwritten letters. Friends in Valdosta sent baby supplies, toys, pillows. From Thomasville: enough gift-cards to fill a fifty-gallon drum.
Someone even donated a furnished apartment near the hospital.
“It was mind-blowing,” she said. “The love and support.”
In her hometown, people started a charity. “The Gus Bus,” they called it. Truckloads of bracelets were sold. You couldn’t throw a rock in Brooks County without hitting someone wearing a bracelet.
And prayer…