Recipient of diseased liver needs new organ
Ocala.com | John Patton
Photo: Barry Greenwalt poses for a photo with his wife, Andrea, and daughters, Sofia, 4, and Laurel, 10, at their home in Ocala on Oct. 31.Bruce Ackerman/Star-Banner
Man works two jobs while waiting, caring for family
The pain is most unbearable in the early morning.
The alarm clock rings at 3:30 a.m. and Barry Greenwalt rubs his eyes before he gets out of bed slowly and quietly so he doesn't wake his sleeping wife, Andrea.The pain is most unbearable in the early morning.
The alarm clock rings at 3:30 a.m. and Barry Greenwalt rubs his eyes before he gets out of bed slowly and quietly so he doesn't wake his sleeping wife, Andrea.
With his bones sore, muscles aching, stomach churning and a confounding itching in his feet, his arms, everywhere, Greenwalt reaches the kitchen, where a cocktail of medications and vitamins await.
By 4:15 a.m. he is off to a two-job workday that often lasts until close to midnight, with only a break for dinner (and more pills) before he lies down for a few hours of rest and the cycle begins again.
He tries not to ask "Why me," choosing instead to peek in on his daughters, 10-year-old Laurel and 4-year-old Sophia. There, he sees the reasons to fight on.
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Photo: Barry Greenwalt poses for a photo with his wife, Andrea, and daughters, Sofia, 4, and Laurel, 10, at their home in Ocala on Oct. 31.Bruce Ackerman/Star-Banner
The pain is most unbearable in the early morning.
The alarm clock rings at 3:30 a.m. and Barry Greenwalt rubs his eyes before he gets out of bed slowly and quietly so he doesn't wake his sleeping wife, Andrea.The pain is most unbearable in the early morning.
The alarm clock rings at 3:30 a.m. and Barry Greenwalt rubs his eyes before he gets out of bed slowly and quietly so he doesn't wake his sleeping wife, Andrea.
With his bones sore, muscles aching, stomach churning and a confounding itching in his feet, his arms, everywhere, Greenwalt reaches the kitchen, where a cocktail of medications and vitamins await.
By 4:15 a.m. he is off to a two-job workday that often lasts until close to midnight, with only a break for dinner (and more pills) before he lies down for a few hours of rest and the cycle begins again.
He tries not to ask "Why me," choosing instead to peek in on his daughters, 10-year-old Laurel and 4-year-old Sophia. There, he sees the reasons to fight on.
Read more
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