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36 minute read

BAYOU ARTIST

fter spending more than three A decades away from Monroe, Monti Sharp is ready to reconnect with his hometown. Besides, he says, there’s no place like it. Leaving Monroe was never what Sharp wanted to do, he explains. But it was necessary, as remaining in Ouachita Parish meant not having access to the resources he needed to pursue his dreams. And what he dreamed of doing was acting — specifically in a production of Sam Shepard’s True West.

“I was just channel-surfing one night, and I saw it,” Sharp says, remembering his first encounter with the play. “It was starring Gary Sinise and John Malkovich. Of course, I didn’t know who they were, but I was just amazed by this world that I was watching on this PBS program. I was like, ‘I want to do that. I want to do that play; I want to act like those guys.’”

Thus began his search to do just that. He started writing letters to universities and training academies and sending away for informational catalogs about their facilities. One particular institution caught his eye: the University of North Carolina School for the Arts.

“That year or shortly thereafter, Tom Hulce won the Oscar for Amadeus, [and] he went to North Carolina School of the Arts,” Sharp recalls, “and I thought, ‘That’s it. If he won an Oscar and he went there, that’s where I want to go.’”

So, he did. However, UNC is not where Sharp’s interest in theater and performing was born. That ball was in motion long before, his engrossment beginning at around age eight or nine.

“When I was a little kid, we used to get dropped off at the library on the weekend,” he explains. “On one occasion, I ran across a book on stage makeup just randomly; it was fascinating. They showed the process shots and how they turned, I think it was Dustin Hoffman, into a 100-year-old man in a movie called Little Big Man. It showed how they turned Hal Holbrook into Mark Twain by doing this old age makeup.”

The book Sharp just so happened to pick up that day piqued his curiosity, and the questions began running through his mind: what did things like nose putty really feel like? What else could you do with special effects and makeup? His inquisitiveness, partnered with his habit of helping his brother memorize lines for speech tournaments, opened the door for Sharp to step into the world of theater.

He was poised to be involved with the technical side of performing until his first onstage experience. After that, Sharp says, he was hooked; he began seeking out any opportunity he could find to perform.

“The Monroe Little Theatre was always there; I used to audition for plays there, but I never got cast,” he says, recalling his eagerness to act. “But I thought that’s kind of how it is for actors. You have to keep after it. I considered rejection a badge of honor.”

Fortunately, The Little Theatre wasn’t the Monroe native’s only chance to perform. Between speech club, choir, student government, and area high schools’ art fairs, Sharp’s high school years provided him plenty of space to do the things he loved and hone his creative abilities.

Post-high school, Sharp headed to the University of Louisiana at Monroe, then known as Northeast Louisiana University, to major in advertising design, a field of study he chose because he enjoyed drawing. While there, he joined the radio, TV, and film department’s weekend news program, Campus Closeup, as an anchorman. That led to his first professional media gig, a job at KNOE doing weekend news and radio. Sharp wouldn’t stay at NLU very long, though. Partway through his undergraduate studies, he transferred to the UNC School of the Arts.

After graduating, he began his professional acting career doing off-Broadway productions in New York City before transitioning to the small-screen as David Grant in the popular daytime drama Guiding Light in 1992. This role, which he played until 1995, earned him a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series and a Soap Opera Digest Award for Best Newcomer in 1993. The actor’s big-screen debut came in 1995 when he appeared as Officer Brown in the Hughes Brothers’ Dead Presidents.

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Over the past 30 years, Sharp has racked up quite the list of credits, more recently appearing in programs including “How to Get Away with Murder,” “Killer in Suburbia,” and “9-1-1.” Despite building a successful acting career, it’s another profession that brings Sharp back to Monroe: art. At the time of this article’s writing, Sharp is preparing a collection of his paintings and drawings to be exhibited in his hometown in early December.

The exhibition will include portraiture, including depictions of some popular celebrities — “I have drawn some famous faces not necessarily because they’re famous, but because there’s something about their faces that impacts me and seems familiar,” Sharp explains — as well as pieces that speak to his faith and spirituality.

Besides the charcoal and graphite depictions of some of Hollywood’s best and brightest, patrons can also expect to see images of objects some may dismiss as mundane, he says, revealing that he tends to see deeper meanings in these items. “We’re certainly in a time now where it seems to be that the right way to go is very flashy,” he goes on. “You got to have a lot of money, you got to have the right products, you got to be rich, you got to associate with the right people. We overlook the ordinary.” He quotes a New Testament passage from Hebrews to reinforce his appreciation for everyday things and people, “The Bible says, ‘Be kind to strangers, for you know not when you entertain angels unawares.’ We go through life, I think, in a way that’s directly in opposition [of that]. If you’re ordinary — you’re not with the right people, wearing the right clothes, or you don’t have enough money — not only do we not pay attention to you, we might just do bad things to you.”

Even in the thick of his acting career, Sharp was creating art, though not at the same level he does now. He currently sells his pieces through his website, wwwsharpartstudio.com, but previously, art was a means of coping with what he was AS I SEEK TO COMMUNICATE, WHAT I GET IN RETUREN IS A DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF MYSELF, WHAT I’M DOING, AND WHY I’M DOING IT.

MONTI SHARP

experiencing. Sharp didn’t even consider his creations worth displaying until a close family member changed his mind.

“I was on a soap opera in New York, and my mom came up to visit,” he tells BayouLife. “I went to work one day, and she stayed at my apartment. When I came home, she had cleaned the place, and some of my drawings and paintings were hung on the wall. That was kind of a shock for me because I didn’t really view them as something you’d want to look at. But she said differently.”

At the urging of his late mother, Sharp began saving the pieces he made. She even taught him to strip the paint off of thrifted picture frames and revamp them to display his originals.

“Over time,” he says, “I built up a collection and started thinking more about certain techniques and processes I had become aware of and never tried. It all became a life of experimentation and curiosity.”

Art, as it turned out, gave Sharp’s investigative spirit the freedom to explore just as acting did. But that’s not the only commonality the two share, he declares, explaining, “Ultimately, it all sort of fits in the same mold — theater, painting, communications — it’s all about sharing and wanting to express some aspect of my experience that may not be served best by words.”

These experiences he shares through the pieces he creates and the characters he portrays, Sharp explains, aren’t always things he’s aware of. Sometimes, the message conveyed comes from his subconscious. Regardless of whether he planned for his art to spread a certain message or not, his pieces are a means of communicating, and that, Sharp says, is part of what keeps him engaged with creating.

“As I seek to communicate, what I get in return is a deeper understanding of myself, what I’m doing, and why I’m doing it,” he says. “It’s that journey that’s like the carrot in front of the horse. It keeps [me] going because [I’m] constantly learning not only about those [I] share the work with, but about myself as I evolve and change.” Communicating so openly through both acting and making art leaves you exposed. And while that kind of openness and honesty can be nervewracking, Sharp says it’s worth pursuing. He says, “It’s important to stay vulnerable in life; [it] ensures that we remain sensitive to others, and that’s a very important part of our responsibility to other human beings.”

Another part of our responsibility to one another, he says, is to love each other, and do it with intention. Spreading love is Sharp’s greatest desire, and he aims to do so whenever possible, whether on set waiting for a director to call “action” or in his studio with a paintbrush in hand. “I just feel like no matter what I’m doing or where I’m doing it, [there] is a choice,” Sharp muses. “We can be loving, we can be kind, we can embody the fruits of the Spirit or not. And even if it’s just a handshake, a smile, eye contact, a warm word, or a few minutes of talking about a painting with someone you may never see again, those moments are important. They make a difference, and ultimately, that’s what I’ve always wanted to do in some way: make a difference.”

Monti Sharp’s art will be on display in Downtown Monroe on December 1st and 2nd. In the meantime, you can see what he’s creating by following him on Instagram @sharpartstudio or visiting his website www.sharpartstudio.com.

ULM School of Pharmacy Reunion

On Friday, October 7th, at The ULM School of Pharmacy those celebrating milestone reunion years were treated to a Class Reunion ReWINEd event — a private wine tasting and food pairing led by Russell Kicey of Tonore’s Wine Cellar. Alumni and their guests enjoyed tasting various wines and dancing the night away to the sounds of DJ Kyle.

On the BayouScene

1 Mike and Ruthie Cooper 2 Taylor Pollard, Laura and Lance Nickelson 3 Jamey and Mary Rhea 4 Morris and Mart Rabb 5 Nancy Farrar and Cindy Wallace 6 Michelle White and Katie Scogin 7 Xavier and Alison Williams 8 Katie and Jonathan Scogin 9 Mike Cooper, Errol Moran, Mark Mouton, Brian Bond and Leroy Frederick

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ULM’s Trio Programs

Child Care Access Means Parents in School Grant

Pictured left-right: Craig Pooler (Division Director Higher Education Programs), Tammy Anderson (ULM TRIO CCAMPIS Assistant Director), Catherine Estis, (ULM TRIO Executive Director), Marques Thomas (Management and Program Analyst Higher Education Programs), Gabby Watts (Office of Postsecondary Education Senior Advisor to Deputy Assistant for Higher Education Programs)

THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA MONROE’S TRIO Programs have been awarded $1,472,088 over the next four years as part of the CCAMPIS (Child Care Access Means Parents in School) grant by the U.S. Department of Education. The funding is designated to alleviate the financial burden on parents with young children who are pursuing a college degree, improving the likelihood of academic success. The CCAMPIS 2022-2026 was the only award received throughout the state.

“We are proud and excited to receive the CCAMPIS grant to support eligible ULM student parents and their children,” said Tammy Anderson, TRIO CCAMPIS Assistant Director.

“It’s transformative,” said Dr. John Sutherlin, ULM’s Chief Innovation and Research Officer, “CCAMPIS is not just a childcare grant. It is a retention program.”

The grant will be administered through the ULM TRIO Programs under the auspices of Catherine Estis, Ph.D., TRIO’s Executive Director. Students receiving financial assistance will receive vouchers to use at area childcare centers. ULM’s TRIO CCAMPIS Program will support the recipients with its full complement of student support services, including college and career success coaches, assistance navigating the financial aid process, and referrals to additional community and government resources. Dr. Estis states “Childcare can be a barrier for student-parents, so having safe, high-quality, affordable early-childcare and education can help students succeed and create brighter futures for their families.”

“The financial resources and community partnerships will provide opportunities for parents to further their careers, improve their earning potential, and experience the pride associated with earning a degree while showing their children the value of higher education,” said Estis.

The university was notified of the award while the ULM TRIO Team by the Office of Post-Secondary Education while attending the 2022 Council on Opportunity in Education hosted in San Diego, CA.

There is still availability for this program for the current academic year. For those students who may feel they would be eligible or know any student-parent who they think may be eligible, more information and an application can be found by contacting ULM’s TRIO Programs at 318.342.1097 or Tammy Anderson, ULM TRIO CCAMPIS Assistant Director at taanaderson@ulm.edu.

Ivy & Stone Grand Opening

Tuesday, October 4th, Ivy & Stone hosted their Grand Opening with the proud new owner, Drake Robertson. The night was filled with great food from Crumbs Catering, friends, customers,family and lots of shopping!

On the BayouScene

1 Drake Robertson and Polly Ball 2 Robyn Jennings, Brandy Brinson, Emery Beckham and Lucy Douglas 3 Lauren Brownlee and Gacie Demoss 4 Mary Elizabeth Halbrook and Patricia Willis 5 Tia Culpepper and Ashley Butler 6 Kinsley Thomas and Micheal Landry 7 Ethan and Erin Hunt 8 Drake Robertson and Sarah Katz 3 4 5

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Louisiana Tech’s Division of University Advancement

Tech Realigns Leadership Resources Focused on Philanthropy and Engagement

TODAY, LOUISIANA TECH UNIVERSITY’S DIVISION OF University Advancement announced its realignment of leadership resources focused on philanthropy and engagement with Tech alumni.

“With this realignment, we are strengthening our commitment to embracing the reality that engagement is evolving yet continues to be the leading indicator of philanthropic support for the University,” said Brooks Hull, Vice President for University Advancement and CEO for the University Foundation. “This restructuring shows our confidence in cultivating relationships with our Tech Family members and showing the impact of their loyalty.”

Devin FergusonDevin Ferguson, who is Executive Director of Development for the College of Engineering and Science, will now serve as Assistant Vice President for Philanthropy and Engagement. He will lead a team focused on strengthening relationships, engaging alumni, and managing portfolios by using the most advanced channels for communication and technology designed to engage more of Tech’s graduates.

Ferguson will also lead the unit in establishing metrics to determine the success of initiatives in accordance with the University’s strategic goals.

“It has been a privilege to be a part of the Louisiana Tech University family in an area of work that I am passionate about,” Ferguson said. “I am especially grateful for the confidence and mentorship Brooks Hull has shown by trusting me with this new career challenge.

“I believe higher education can have an enormously positive influence on an individual’s life, just as it did my own, with effects that continue to be felt long after a degree is conferred. I am excited for the opportunity to work alongside our team in new ways to create connections with the life and future of our University where relationships are forged and transformative education and research happen daily.”

Ferguson earned his Master of Nonprofit Administration from North Park University in Chicago and has nearly 15 years of experience in higher education. He began his career in philanthropy at his alma mater, serving as Director of Alumni Relations for more than 9 years, before joining Louisiana Tech in 2018.

He was recognized as one of EverTrue’s 40 Under 40 in 2020 and has presented at several conferences including the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) – District IV, the Southeastern Annual Giving Conference, and Engineering Development Forum, where he also currently serves as a member of the board. Ferguson has also previously consulted for nonprofit organizations in the areas of startup, communication, and fundraising.

PEOPLE WHO INSPIRE

stories by MEREDITH MCKINNIE photography by KELLY MOORE CLARK

CRYSTAL FOX

For Crystal Fox, childhood trauma manifested in an eating disorder when she was 15. Her mother left her when she was 3 years old. Though her great-grandmother cared for her, Crystal longed for the nuclear family environment that she witnessed in other homes. This absence led her to seek perfection, striving for good grades and excelling in sports, in hopes that her efforts would be enough for her mom to return. To add to the heartache, her great-grandmother passed away weeks before her 13th birthday. A desire for safety and control in her life resulted in an extreme focus on food and body. The perfect storm of childhood trauma, sexual abuse, abandonment, loss, and a perfectionistic personality led Crystal to start restricting her food intake and to eventually develop Anorexia Nervosa, severe caloric restriction and fear of foods that results in one’s loss of 15% or more of body weight. Due to the trauma in her childhood, anorexia sold her the illusion that if she were thinner, she would be safer.

Crystal continued to struggle with the eating disorder as she started college at ULM. There she played softball and her eating disorder gradually developed into bulimia, consuming larger amounts of food and purging via multiple compensatory methods. With the physical demands of the illness and the sport, she couldn’t keep up and ended her softball career. Still struggling, she transferred to Louisiana Tech after her freshman year to major in Nutrition and Dietetics. During her senior year, Crystal had a medical complication landing her in the emergency room where the doctor explained the serious medical consequences of eating disorders. After several medical scares, Crystal chose to seek professional help for her eating disorder. Crystal felt ashamed of revealing her college major to doctors and therapists. She had yet to realize the power of her future recovery and lived personal experience in her eventual profession.

While pursuing a master’s degree, Crystal fell back into anorexia. She went through multiple treatment centers for her eating disorder including one in New Orleans - tragically, the only one in Louisiana. There she focused on nutrition stabilization and healing from trauma. After she was nutritionally stable, her anxiety and mood also improved. While in treatment, she learned

about the prevalence of co-occurring disorders - hers being anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Crystal learned healthy and adaptive coping skills and realized that she had to deal with the roots of her eating disorder to fully heal. Crystal buried so much emotional pain that her body subconsciously expressed those emotions through self-destructive eating disorder behaviors. Every eating disorder has multiple roots - the key is identifying and facing them.

At 26, she married her husband Jeremy, and they started a family. Due to her physical history, Crystal experienced fertility issues, resulting in multiple miscarriages, most recently losing her son Mason this past December. What kept her grounded in the hard times was a focus on the values and skills-based therapy presented in treatment. She valued education, career, family and desired a daughter to give the love she did not receive from her own mother. She now has two daughters, Macie and Maelen. Crystal is now in long-term recovery and is a registered dietitian and licensed nutrition therapist helping others who struggle with various types of eating disorders. Crystal owns and practices at Healing Nutrition Therapy of Louisiana in Monroe, in partnership with Dr. Candi Hill of Hill Psychological Services. The outpatient clinic allows Crystal to help those whose stories she deeply understands. Patients suffering from eating disorders require a multidisciplinary approach to treatment including: a licensed therapist, registered dietitian, medical doctor, and a psychologist. Crystal and Dr. Hill are currently working on expanding and building an intensive outpatient clinic to better serve these patients in our area. Crystal also wants to focus on clinical education by training medical professionals to identify and adequately respond to this patient population.

Research shows that the earlier the intervention, the better. A few warning signs for a loved one suffering from an eating disorder can be: preoccupation with food, weight, and body image, constantly going to the restroom after meals, restrictions in food quantity and type, and weight fluctuations. If one obsessively checks their body weight, exercises excessively, becomes isolated and secretive, has major mood or personality changes; these all could be a sign of an eating disorder. Finding an eating disorder specialist to help is key. When approaching a loved one with concerns, avoid statements laced with judgment or shame, and educate yourself before initiating the conversation. The National Alliance for Eating Disorders, along with the National Eating Disorder Association (NEDA) are good places to start.

KERRIGAN MAY

After graduating from Louisiana Tech University, Kerrigan May was anxious to start a new career in a new town. A few weeks before making the move from Ruston to Dallas, Kerrigan and her father visited Six Flags. Between rides, Kerrigan would chug an entire bottle of water, trying to relieve the severe dry mouth she’d been experiencing. In addition to cotton mouth, Kerrigan had noticed significant hair and weight loss, despite eating regularly every two hours in considerable quantities. She and her family assumed the symptoms were stress-related with graduation and major life changes on the horizon. The following week, Kerrigan attended an LSU game with her mother and stepfather. After a year of symptoms, Kerrigan was down to only 80 pounds, despite the noticeable appetite. Her family became concerned.

The next week, Kerrigan showed up to work and barely made it through the day. Ghostly pale, her coworkers insisted she go home. Kerrigan’s mother assured her they were all recovering from a stomach bug, and she probably suffered the same. When Kerrigan went home, she slept through her work alarm the next day. She called her mom’s friend, who lived in Dallas, and asked for a ride to the hospital. When the car pulled up, Kerrigan limped out of her 5th floor apartment. She collapsed in front of a neighbor who carried her downstairs to the car. In and out of consciousness, Kerrigan vaguely remembers being turned away from a clinic and eventually wheeled into a hospital. The staff knew she was diabetic on sight, but Kerrigan had no idea.

The staff encountered Kerrigan barely conscious, taking over 100 breaths per minute. Her blood sugar was in the 600s - a normal reading is 85-130. They gave Kerrigan an A1C of 15.4, which measures a patient’s sugars over a 3-month span - a normal reading is 4-6. Kerrigan was three times higher than average. She remembers the hospital seeming impatient with her, assuming she was a diabetic who wasn’t managing her disease. When she explained that she didn’t know she was diabetic, that her family had no history of the autoimmune disease, the staff became concerned. Type 1 Diabetes is typically a juvenile diagnosis. Kerrigan was 23 years old.

Two years prior, Kerrigan had experienced a severe case of strep throat that lasted over a month. Doctors posit that the virus attacked her pancreas, the part that produces insulin. Kerrigan’s pancreas no longer produces insulin to regulate her sugar. Type 1 Diabetes means a patient is insulin dependent, and Kerrigan would have to rely on supplemental injections for the rest of her life. When Kerrigan prepared to leave the hospital, four days after learning of her disease, she was petrified. She didn’t know how to prick her own finger or give herself a shot. During her stay, the nurses pricked her fingers every hour and inserted IVs and central lines. Her body was bruised, and Kerrigan was exhausted.

Two months later in December, Kerrigan returned to the hospital with a hyperthyroid issue. Her blood pressure was 190 over 160, her resting heart rate over 100 beats per minute. The diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) that she had experienced two months prior had shocked her system, and she would need continuous thyroid medicine. Distraught, Kerrigan knew she had to quit her job and move back home. She needed care and to adjust to a new reality. She would be a diabetic for the rest of her life. Kerrigan remembers feeling embarrassed, as if she didn’t take care of herself. As someone who always strived for perfection, she felt exposed, visibly imperfect.

After returning home, Kerrigan was scared to eat and disrupt her blood sugar. She avoided social situations and let the disease control her life for 9 months. The following September, Kerrigan was offered a job with Republic National Distributing Company, handling wine distribution in the Monroe/West Monroe market. She took classes at the Diabetes Care Center and learned to manage her illness. She decided to take back control of her life.

Despite the traumatic ordeal and the diagnosis, Kerrigan is thankful for her family and friends who helped her get through this difficult time in her life. She is also grateful for the medical technology and all the advances it has made within the 5 years she has been a diabetic. She wears an Omnipod Insulin Pump which regulates her blood sugar throughout the day and after every meal, and it connects to a Dexcom which is a Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM). What could have once been a death sentence is now a manageable condition. Because of these people in her life, the family who stood by her side through the health scares and doctors who showed her how to care for herself, she got her life back, and she’s living it fully. Diabetes didn’t beat her.

She got her life back, and she’s living it fully, Diabetes didn’t beat her.

BRAYLON STREETMAN

Braylon was one of the lucky ones on that floor. That little fighter is now 11 years old.

Brittany and Justin had waited 2 1/2 years to find out they were having their first child. When Brittany gave birth to son Braylon 5 1/2 weeks premature, she knew she had a fighter on her hands. Though only 4 pounds, Braylon bypassed a NICU stay. Brittany felt herself lucky and looked forward to parenting this little “red-headed peanut,” as the nursing staff dubbed him. At 8 months, during a routine pediatric visit, the doctor suggested therapy, as Braylon was not hitting development milestones like rolling over and sitting up. The therapist became concerned after two months of therapy produced little to no progress.

They took Braylon to a local neurologist and then for a second opinion in New Orleans because he showed signs of cerebral palsy. The doctors cautioned that Braylon may never be a star athlete and would not make predictions on when or if he would walk or talk. They remember sitting with the news, adjusting to the idea of parenting a child with significant delays. When Braylon reached 2 ½ years, he developed a severe sickness over the summer that presented as a severe sinus infection. Brittany and Justin carried their son to the pediatrician weekly, assured it was only a viral infection, for which only the symptoms could be treated. Assuming their son had cerebral palsy, they remained on watch for fever spikes that could lead to seizures. Over the summer, Braylon lost his appetite completely, and Brittany returned to the doctor. Her Mama heart knew she needed more answers.

Braylon was admitted to St. Francis and endured numerous tests, labs, and MRIs. His small frame had diminished by 2-3 pounds, a significant visual change. Everyone was concerned about his weight loss; the pictures now still make them frustrated that something was missed. Braylon was then transferred to New Orleans Children’s Hospital for a full gastrointestinal workup - yet still, no definitive answers. Now with Braylon on a feeding tube, and with no pediatric GI doctors in Monroe, they worried about bringing their son home and experiencing complications. Though Braylon needed the nutrients to combat the weight loss, the feeding tube made matters worse. Braylon vomited constantly. When Brittany and Justin took Braylon to Arkansas Children’s Hospital for an unrelated issue, the doctor immediately admitted him. The doctors found a viral infection called Cytomegalovirus had made its way into Braylon’s GI tract, causing his severe sickness.

The doctor hesitated to pursue the invasive treatment, as most viral infections resolve on their own. The family made trips back and forth to the Arkansas hospital for several months, rarely home for more than 3-4 days. A few days before Christmas, they decided to pursue treatment. Braylon’s family brought Santa presents to Arkansas before the 7-week treatment. He was finally free from this terrible virus in January.

But in early February, things took a turn. Braylon presented with 105 fever, wouldn’t wake up, and was sicker than ever before. Braylon was airlifted from Monroe to Arkansas for septic shock. Brittany recalls holding him as his vital signs continued to worsen, the scariest night of their journey thus far. After a few weeks of recovery, his immune system was too weak and the terrible cytomegalovirus returned.

The virus’ return alerted doctors to another problem. Braylon needed a higher level of care and was again airlifted to a specialist in Cincinnati. For 13 months, Braylon remained on the Blood & Cancer floor of the hospital and was finally diagnosed with Dyskeratosis Congenita, which explained the previous delays and viruses. Everything he had been through now made sense. Braylon was in bone marrow failure and needed a transplant that required chemotherapy. They found a donor quickly, but it would be months before his transplant. Brittany and Justin watched their son suffer in pain. A bone marrow transplant harvests all the cells from the donor and injects those cells into the patient. No one knows how the body will react - sometimes it attacks other organs. For the weeks following, Braylon didn’t move, refused to be touched, and cried constantly. They made friends with other sets of parents having children treated in the same unit - 10 of those children lost their fight. They still keep in touch with the families from all over the country.

Braylon was one of the lucky ones on that floor. That little fighter is now 11 years old. He exudes joy and draws people in, as he never meets a stranger. He still experiences delays. He didn’t walk until he was six years old and he struggles to articulate full sentences. He will always have challenges in life and as they don’t know what the future holds, they take one day at a time and celebrate every small victory!

JULIE EMORY

Julie Emory and her husband Daniel had only been married for a year when they decided to try and have a baby. For the first five months, Julie felt the disappointment each time the over-the-counter tests read negative, but in the sixth month, the infamous plus sign popped up. Over the moon about finally carrying a child, Julie kept the news to herself for the first trimester, nervous that sharing might compromise this new reality. When her belly started to protrude at 12 weeks, Julie finally confided in her friends and family, overjoyed to share the excitement and anticipation with loved ones. At 15 weeks, Julie noticed spotting, and out of supreme caution, called her doctor. Though spotting during the early stages of pregnancy is quite common, the doctor scheduled an ultrasound. Everything looked normal - the familiar heartbeat reverberated through the room. In an abundance of caution, the doctor had Julie see the ultrasonographer for a more in-depth scan.

Calmed by the doctor’s optimism, Julie entered the room and endured a quiet ten-minute period with the stenographer showing little emotion. As Julie and Daniel left, they realized the stenographer had not provided any pictures of their baby - odd. Before they made it out of the parking lot, the doctor called the couple to come back to her office. Daniel stayed behind, assured by Julie that everything was okay. The doctor’s face no longer appeared optimistic. “I wish your husband was still with you,” she uttered. And Julie’s heart sank. They were informed that the baby appeared to have Anencephaly, a neural tube defect that inhibits the skull and brain from forming, a condition that was terminal. The condition was caused when Julie’s body didn’t break down the folic acid she routinely ingested via prenatal vitamins. She did what she was supposed to do. Unfortunately, the issue cannot be detected until the unthinkable happens. Julie and Daniel had to sit with the grief of a terminal child still in Julie’s womb, a child they had hoped and prayed for earnestly.

Ironically, without the spotting, Julie wouldn’t have found out about the condition until 24 weeks when the advanced ultrasound takes place. Julie feels God wanted her to know sooner. For a week, Julie carried a visible pregnancy with a tragic secret. After a specialist confirmed the diagnosis, Julie prepared to deliver their son at 16 weeks, 3 days shy of her 30th birthday. Julie was induced on a Friday at midnight; only she and Daniel were in the room. She requested her family not be present. She didn’t know how she would react during the gut wrenching ordeal and preferred to grieve and labor in private. The nursing staff puttered in and out nervously, unaccustomed to a situation so dire opposite from the anticipation of a traditional delivery. One nurse stumbled over her words, insisting “it” would be very small. Julie recoiled at the term, at the

Julie is grateful for lack of personalization. This was still her baby. 48 hours later, Julie gave birth the son not meant for to their son at 12:05 AM, September 11, this earth, for the two 2009, three days after her 30th birthday. Paralyzed after the ordeal, Julie and children she later Daniel returned home - no baby, no joy, just immense loss. carried to term. Weeks later, Julie still bled daily, often lots of blood. No one could remember how long bleeding was normal; everyone else had been busy caring for a newborn. When Julie developed a fever and started throwing up, Daniel insisted she see call the doctor. The next month was torture, consisting of multiple blood transfusions, surgeries, and a DNC. And yet, the bleeding continued. As Julie was grieving her son, her body continued to expel blood, often suddenly and in large quantities - once filling a bathtub. When the doctor suggested another exploratory surgery, she cautioned that there was a 50/50 chance Julie would lose her uterus, and with it any chance of carrying a child. Julie prayed harder than ever before, for the first time releasing her expectations and submitting to God’s plan. The surgery determined that Julie suffered from placenta accreta. During delivery, the placenta attached too firmly to the uterus. Julie’s body still thought it was pregnant and had been supplying blood to a now-empty womb. Julie is grateful for the son not meant for this earth, for the two children she later carried to term. Daughter Landon is now 11 and son Ruddick is 9 - both active and rambunctious and full of life. Julie is grateful for her faith, for seeing the beauty in God’s plan, and for the opportunity to share her story.

NATHAN STANLEY

He remembers speaking to God saying, “If you’re real, show me.”

Nathan Stanley knows the struggles of addiction and the power of prayer. Nathan’s parents divorced when he was four years old. When his mother returned to the house to pick up some belongings, he rushed toward her. She lengthened her arm, met her palm to his forehead, and said, “You smell like a squirrel. Don’t touch me.” For two months after, Nathan didn’t utter a word. His father carried him up and down a gravel road near the house, trying to get Nathan to talk. Nathan knows the sting of rejection, of feeling unworthy, unclean, and unwanted. Though his father tried to be enough for him, Nathan would spend the next three decades looking for encouragement, searching for validation.

Throughout adolescence, Nathan primarily stayed with his father. Girlfriends and their offspring rotated in and out of the house. Nathan didn’t see a healthy, consistent relationship during a pivotal period. He stayed with his mother for a few months, but she, too, cycled in violent, aggressive, alpha males. One man beat Nathan so severely with a willow limb that he had open gashes from his head to his knees. Another almost broke his arm. Domestic violence was normalized from the beginning. At 9 years old, Nathan was sexually abused by a teenager from church - the memory still haunts him to this day.

At 13, Nathan ran away from home, seeking solace and refuge on anyone’s couch, anywhere away from where he’d been. He turned to cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana - a habit that would continue for 23 years. In high school, Nathan consistently carried a bag of weed, a pipe, and a lighter - his prize possessions. During one sojourn, Nathan met some men who practiced Wicca, a modern pagan religion. Nathan became a solitary practitioner, delving into pain pills and soft drugs. The men used the alternative religion to excuse sexual violence on a 13-year-old boy. Nathan’s grades suffered, though he retained a cool kid persona and fell deeper into addiction. On a trip to California, he tried meth for the first time. The sense of euphoria engulfed him. Adapting to the life of a wanderer, Nathan picked up a hitchhiker, traveled to Salt Lake City, slept out of his truck in Colorado for several months. He was lost, searching for something, but unsure what.

At 18, he followed his family tradition and joined the army. He cleaned up, traveled to Fort Benning in Georgia and then Fort Campbell in Kentucky. He attended Air Assault school, elite rappel training for helicopters. But after a year, Nathan went AWOL - twice. He served 8 months in jail for a felony charge. He was labeled a military deserter and received an Other than Honorable discharge. He landed a well-paying job doing industrial construction, but his meth habit skyrocketed. In 2010, he took some safety classes and eventually returned home and opened his own business. He thought he had his addiction under control. His cousin introduced Nathan to the motorcycle culture, and his addiction resurfaced. He lost his business and spiraled. Over the course of one year, Nathan went from 265 to 130 pounds. He realized he was an addict, though he didn’t want to accept it. He remembers speaking to God saying, “If you’re real, show me.” Suddenly men from other motorcycle ministries started witnessing to Nathan, showing him alternative ways to be a part of a group and live right. Wherever Nathan went, someone from Bikers for Christ or other affiliated motorcycle ministries would show him love and counsel him. Nathan knows God put people in his life to help him.

Nathan started attending church sporadically, searching for the truth. He took his last hit of speed in August of 2017, his last drink shortly after, and his last bit of marijuana shortly after that. He whittled away his destructive crutches and put his faith in God. When he asked his pastor at Pentecost Tabernacle in Delhi why he hadn’t been filled with the Holy Spirit, the pastor asked what he had yet to relinquish. He gave up the remainder of his vices that night. Two days later, he was filled with the Spirit, professing in tongues in front of 25 people. Now, Nathan regularly shares his testimony with Celebrate Recovery. Unlike some of his friends, Nathan doesn’t struggle to stay sober. He feels if he were to fall off the wagon, that God may not rescue him again. He won’t risk his testimony. He married April in 2019. They met in school, but reconnected in the church. Nathan is now the state coordinator and chapter president for the Azusa Streetriders, an apostolic motorcycle ministry. He is grateful for God’s timing and his testimony.

United Way NELA

United Way Kicks Off Annual Campaign at ULM Home Opener

UNITED WAY OF NORTHEAST LOUISIANA KICKED OFF its annual campaign at ULM’s home opener on Saturday, September 10th. The purpose of United Way of Northeast Louisiana’s annual Campaign Kickoff is to honor and recognize Pacesetter companies, debut the new campaign video, and inspire volunteers, donors, and the greater community to LIVE UNITED.

United Way Pacesetter companies are select workplace campaigns that are asked to lead the way and run in advance of the annual workplace campaign.

“Pacesetters stand out as community leaders – they know that an investment in United Way of Northeast Louisiana helps people and strengthens our community,” said Rick Guillot, Campaign Chair for United Way of Northeast Louisiana.

The following companies were honored and their dollar amounts announced during Saturday’s game:

Glenwood Regional Medical Center | raised $32,571 Lexicon, DBA Steel Fabricators of Monroe | raised $21,454 Origin Bank | raised $176,625 Jim Taylor Buick GMC | raised $10,144 Jim Taylor Chevrolet | raised $17,529

Overall, Pacesetter campaigns across the region totaled a 21% increase for the United Way of Northeast Louisiana campaign.

Thanks to the generosity of the event sponsors, Origin Bank and Raising Canes, United Way NELA was able to provide t-shirts, giveaways, chicken fingers, sides, and drinks at their tailgate tent during the pre-game festivities. Additionally, the partnership with ULM allowed United Way to hold its 2022 Campaign Kickoff event during the first home game and provided a discounted ticket price for all United Way volunteers.

“Saturday’s event was an exciting time to gather together as a community, honor our volunteers and Pacesetter companies, and share the mission and vision United Way has for this community,” said Janet Durden, President of United Way NELA. “Now is the time to get involved and help us make a difference.”

A United Way of Northeast Louisiana Workplace Campaign unites and inspires employees, giving them a unique opportunity to donate to and volunteer for causes that matter most to them. If your workplace is interested in running a United Way NELA Workplace Campaign, visit http://unitedwaynela.org/workplacecampaigns.

United Way of Northeast Louisiana works with volunteers, donors, and other organizations locally to create lasting community change in the areas of Education, Income, and Health. For more information about United Way of Northeast Louisiana, visit unitedwaynela.org, dial 211 on any landline or mobile phone, a free call 24/7, or text your zip code to 898-211 (MondayFriday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.).