Polk County Relay For Life makes a difference in community, for research
by Andy Philpot
Published in the May 24, 2012 issue of The Mena Star
As
Relay For Life is now a well established tradition in Polk County, it
serves many more purposes that meets the eye. Co-chairs of the local
Relay For Life, Regina and Richie Lawry, can tell you that while the
event itself is one weekend of the year, the efforts are a year -round
effort. This year-round effort that the Lawrys have instilled into
making Relay For Life as successful as possible in our communities, the
same commitment is followed by a number of organizations, businesses,
and individuals, who seek to raise as much money as possible for Relay
For Life. This money in turn goes toward cancer research, which in turn
leads to more treatments of the many cancers our friends and family
encounter, which in turn leads to many more birthdays and reasons to
celebrate.
Last year Polk County Relay For Life raised
66,000, which combined with the rest of the Relay For life events that
took place in Arkansas, a total of $4.5 million was raised by Relay For
Life events across the state in 2011. This total gets combined with all
the other Relay For Life events that take place nation-wide, all of
which are raised for the American Cancer Society to use toward cancer
research. With the ultimate goal of one day eliminating the words "You
Have Cancer" being spoken by doctors, it takes a collective effort to
reach this goal.
Keisha Pittman
Helping
to emphasize the significance of every dollar that is raised in
community Relays, two different testimonies were shared at this year's
Polk County Relay For Life. Keisha Pittman, from Arkadelphia, shared
her cancer battle testimony during the opening ceremonies of this year's
Relay, and emphasized that every dollar amount is important toward the
shared goal of defeating cancer. She spoke how community Relay For Life
events in both big cities and smaller towns are all invaluable because
they all go toward the common goal. The funds of Relay For Life are
what helps make continued research and advancements in cancer treatments
possible.
Deidra Porter
Deidra
Porter, of Conway, shared her testimony just before the Luminaria
ceremony, and how her cancer experience has her that much more an
advocate for Relay For Life events throuought the devoted communities.
Porter was diagnosed with cancer, and moments before she was to begin
her first treatment, she learned she was pregnant. Like Pittman,
Porter's testimony was both emotional and inspirational. Porter not
only endured cancer and now can share her story with others, but she
also has a healthy son that has endured the treatments. Sharing the
exact sentiment of Pittman, Porter praised Relay For Life and how every
dollar raised in important to the overall goal of seeking an end to
cancer.
Pittman and Porter traveled to Mena to share
their testimonies with the Polk County Relay For Life participants, and
their stories are added to the always growing list of cancer survivors
that do hear the words "You Have Cancer", but endure the battle and can
proudly wear a purple shirt as they walk the Survivors Lap.
Relay
For Life is held for the purpose of celebrating the survivors,
remembering those we have lost, and giving hope that one day the world
may be cancer free. Through the celebrating and remembering, the
success gets passed along to the American Cancer society through the
fundraising that happens all year long. With each Relay For life that
takes place, it adds to the overall funding that can be used toward
cancer research and treatments.
Gordy Klatt
Relay
For Life has been raising money for the American Cancer Society since
1985, when Gordy Klatt came up with a way to raise funds for his local
American Cancer Society office in Tacoma, Washington, and show support
of all his patients who had battled cancer. He did this by spending 24
hours circling the track at Baker Stadium at the University of Puget
Sound. He ran more than 83 miles and his efforts raised $27,000 to
fight cancer. It has only gotten bigger and better from there.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Mena Star article May 24,2012
Lawry continues commitment to Relay For Life, receives recognition
By Scarlett Thompson
American Cancer Society
Published in a supplement to The Mena Star - May 24,2012
Regina Lawry of Arkansas started
volunteering for the American Cancer Society at an early age, when her mother
would go around their neighborhood collecting money for the organization. “She told me you just never know
who it might help,” says Lawry.
Turns out, the money collected
by Lawry and her mother may have helped their own family. Regina’s mother would eventually battle
leukemia and her father faced colon cancer.
Three of her sisters were diagnosed with breast cancer. Her brother fought skin cancer. Regina is the only one of her immediate
family to not get a diagnosis. “I feel like I live my life
waiting for the other shoe to drop,” says Lawry, who manages a credit union in
the town of Mena.
That’s why Lawry still
volunteers for the American Cancer Society.
She says she knows first-hand that research is critical, by again,
watching her mother. “During her treatments she
participated in a bone marrow study. At
that time they told her it was very painful and would not help her but the
research would help someone else down the line,” says Lawry. “Twenty years later a bone marrow transplant
saved my sister Lenora’s life.”
The American Cancer Society
helped fund the development of the bone marrow transplant. That procedure helped Lawry’s sister live 13
years more until the cancer returned.
Lawry cared for Lenora during that time, which included helping her get
to sessions of the American Cancer Society’s Look Good…Feel Better
program. It helps women who are
undergoing treatment deal with skin and hair changes, offering them free wigs
and tips on how to apply makeup. “Lenora put her face on
every morning before we left the house for her bone marrow treatments. She said she had to have a little dignity,”
says Lawry.
Meantime,
one of Lawry’s other sisters was battling breast cancer too. It was her sister Roberta who introduced
Lawry to the American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life, an event where
participants form teams to raise money for patient programs, research and much
more. Survivors are celebrated, those
lost to cancer are remembered and every one at the event gets a chance to fight
back against the disease through Relay. “When I
watched my four siblings walk around the track arm in arm during the Survivor’s
Lap and then saw my mother’s name and my father’s name on luminary bags, I knew
this was something I had to get involved in,” says Lawry.
Since then, Lawry has been
involved in her local Relay For Life event, and representing her community as a
Hero of Hope. It’s an opportunity
for her to travel and share with others the impact of the American Cancer
Society. “I know
the American Cancer Society makes a difference.
I’ve seen it in my own family,” says Lawry. “The American Cancer Society funded research
that helped develop treatments for leukemia, Tamoxifen and many other drugs.”
Lawry
says she’ll keep taking part in Relay, not only for the future but for someone
in her past. “I show
my mother’s luminary to my granddaughters and think how proud she would have
been of us all and if only those ground breaking treatments for leukemia would
have come just a few years earlier. I
relay for my granddaughters so that if they ever get cancer there is a
treatment to save their life,” says Lawry.
Sunday, May 27, 2012
For Want of a Nail
I enjoy reading history books. Recently I have been reading about The War of
the Roses in England. The final battle
of the War of the Roses was on August 22, 1485.
King Richard III met the outnumbered forces of Henry Tudor at the Battle
of Bosworth Field. William Shakespeare
wrote a historical play on the life of King Richard III around 1590.
In the play the pivotal moment of the battle is shown. The
morning of the battle, Richard hurriedly sent a servant to make sure his favorite
horse was ready. “Shoe him quickly,” the
man told the blacksmith. “You’ll have to
wait,” the blacksmith answered. “I’ve
shoed the king’s whole army the last few days, and now I’ve got to get more
iron.” “I can’t wait,” the groom shouted
impatiently. “The king’s enemies are
advancing right now, and we must meet them on the field. Make do with what you have.”
So the blacksmith bent to his task. From a single bar of iron he made four
horseshoes. He hammered and shaped and
fitted them to the horses’ feet. Then he
began to nail them on. But after he had
fastened three shoes, he found he didn’t have enough nails for the fourth. “I need one or two more nails,” he said, “and
it will take some time to hammer them out.”
“I told you I can’t wait,” the king’s servant said impatiently. “I hear the trumpets now. Can’t you just use what you’ve got?” “I can put the shoe on, but it won’t be as
secure as the others.” “Will it hold?”
asked the groom. “It should, but I can’t
be certain.” “Well, then, just nail it
on.
When the armies clashed, Richard was in the thick of the
battle, riding up and down the field, cheering his men and fighting his foes. In the thick of battle as he valiantly rode
into the enemy lines, one of the horse’s shoes flew off. The horse stumbled and fell, and Richard was
thrown to the ground. Before the king
could grab at the reins, the frightened animal rose and galloped away, leaving
Richard all by himself. Richard looked
around him. He saw that his soldiers
were turning and running, and Henry’s troops were closing around him. He waved his sword in the air. “A horse!” he shouted. “My kingdom for a horse!” But there was no horse for him. A moment later Henry’s soldiers were upon Richard,
and the battle was over.
Not long after the battle the following rhyme appeared in
print. For want of a nail, a
shoe was lost, For want of a shoe, a horse was lost, For want of a horse, a
battle was lost, For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost, And all for the want
of a horseshoe nail.
As Christians we are in a battle; the battle between good
and evil. On the battlefield small
things have big consequences. In reality
there are no small things on the battlefield.
The Apostle Paul gave us a list of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians
chapter 12 verses 7-10. “To one person
the Spirit gives the ability to give wise advice; to another he gives the gift
of special knowledge. The Spirit gives special faith to another, and to someone
else he gives the power to heal the sick. He gives one person the power to
perform miracles, and to another the ability to prophesy. He gives someone else
the ability to know whether it is really the Spirit of God or another spirit
that is speaking. Still another person is given the ability to speak in
different languages, and another is given the ability to interpret”.
Whether they are big or small, all spiritual gifts are
important. Spiritual gifts are given
only to help others. They are not for
our own selfish benefit. Spiritual gifts
are service oriented, and those who use them, those who exercise them, will grow.
I call it the River Principle. If your life flows like a
river, always passing along life and energy to those around you, then you will
be pure and clean.
But if you’re like a pond, face it; you can only hold so
much stuff. And then, no growth takes
place. The water becomes stagnant and
stinky and bad stuff grows there and mosquitoes breed.
That’s why I believe Paul wrote what he did after giving us
the lists of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians 12. What's the next chapter after 12?
I Corinthians 13 is often called the love chapter. In verses
1-3 Paul writes, "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of
angels." (That's a spiritual gift) "But have not love, I have become
sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. And
though I have the gift of prophecy."
(That's a spiritual gift)
"And understand all mysteries and all knowledge." (There's another spiritual gift) "And though I have all faith." (That is a spiritual gift). "So that I could remove mountains, but
have not love, I am nothing. And though
I bestow all my goods to feed the poor."
(There is yet another spiritual gift)
"And though I give my body to be burned." "But have not love, it profits me
nothing."
Love is the underlying principle of every spiritual
gift. No matter what we are doing, if
love isn’t the underlying principle it is meaningless.
For want of a nail, a
shoe was lost, For want of a shoe, a horse was lost, For want of a horse, a
battle was lost, For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost, And all for the want
of a horseshoe nail.
Love is the nail that holds our lives together. It is what gives us purpose. Whatever else we think we are accomplishing,
whatever gifts we have, everything will fall apart and the battle will be lost
if we don’t have love.