AARP Hearing Center

Editor’s note: This essay won first place in the 2025 Big Brick Review essay contest.
I’m driving 300 miles upstate, wearing a gauze bandage and bringing home a bag of my sister’s hair.
Meadowbrook, Huntington, Cuomo Bridge. The New York exits fall behind me before I stop in Monticello, where the March snow is still piled high, the edges melting. At last I feel the pull of home, a place of broad lakes and unplanted fields, three weeks behind New York City in warmth and tulips.
My 67-year-old sister, Ginny, needs a bone marrow transplant, her one chance for a cure. And I am her perfect match. At 64, I don’t understand the science, but didn’t hesitate to say yes. Just two days prior, I was hooked up to a device that took my blood, spun out precious stem cells and — click-click-click — returned the rest to my veins. I read a book, ate oatmeal cookies and chatted with the nurses the whole time.
I don’t need these cells, at least not in the numbers induced by the drug I’ve been taking for five days. At the end of the procedure, the nurse shows me a bag of filtered blood and tells me it contains nearly 8 million of my stem cells.
“Your platelets are low, so don’t do anything strenuous for a day or two,” she says. “They grow back quickly.”
“I guess it’s not time to get that tattoo,” I say, and we both laugh.
Ginny needs these cells to save her life. After killing her bone marrow, doctors will infuse her with my cells, wait a couple of months, then a year, and see how well they take. There are no guarantees, but a sibling match is her best chance.
“A perfect 10,” they call me. I’ve never been perfect in my life.
Finding common ground
Ginny and I are mismatched in so many other areas of life. Our political views have driven us into corners, fighting like wolverines. I read online about how to survive Christmas if the reds and blues of the family do battle. It has only gotten worse.
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