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Jacob Taylor

Jacob Taylor

I don’t know Jacob Taylor. You probably don’t know Jacob Taylor. But we should.

He is a young man, who, in less than 17 years of life, has survived unimaginable hardship.

And now, as he fights for his life, again, he needs the thoughts, prayers and help of all of us, whether we are key people in his life or mere passerby.

His story was brought to me by Jake Davis, a baseball and football player at Coupeville High School. Jake is Jacob’s cousin and he asked for help in getting word out about Taylor.

Nine days ago, Jacob, a high school student in North Carolina, was diagnosed with Stage 4 testicular cancer.  There are only four stages of cancer, and stage four is the worst.

If that was his entire story, it would be hard enough to talk about.

No one wants to see a young man brought down by a terrible disease as he enters the prime of his life.

But, in talking to his mom, Christine Taylor, you find out that her son has spent most of his life battling, never giving up, surviving against great odds, and, always, remaining a bright, shining light of joy and hope to his family.

In her own words:

When Jacob was 22 months old he quietly followed his dad out the door without anyone realizing … his dad didn’t see him and backed out of the driveway and ran over his entire body.

People that witnessed this are amazed he survived. It was horrendous.

We lived in a tiny town with a small hospital. They did a CT scan and found fluid on the brain and needed to transfer him to a larger children’s hospital to have surgery and release pressure off his brain because they were not equipped to do this.

We lived a good three hours from the children’s hospital and he had to be air flown there. We could not fly with him due to the helicopter having no room.

Later, the EMT told us she had to revive him three times.

The hospital did another CT scan and found no fluid on his brain and no need to do surgery. Doctor said he was so lucky because he was under two years old barely and his skull was still pliable and able to move and not be crushed.

If he was just two months older he would not have survived.

Jacob was in the hospital for little over a week and had to learn how to walk again.

He has had some learning challenges in school but overall has made a beautiful recovery from that tragedy 15 years ago.

Jacob has lived in Arizona for 12 years and went to school there and has many friends in Arizona.

Just two years ago we moved to North Carolina due to his dad’s job.

It was a difficult move for Jake. But he is a trooper and a non-complainer.

He is the youngest of five children and when we moved most of the family stayed in Arizona. Jake is very close to his siblings, so this made the move even harder.

He enrolled as a sophomore at Clayton High School in our little town here.

He has made some friends and gets along with everyone. No one ever has a bad thing to say about Jake.

He has successfully completed his junior year as well and will be a senior this coming year.

Jake loves to surf, hang out with friends, drive his Bronco, play basketball, and enjoys working at Buffalo Wild Wings as a cook.

And in the last year his siblings have moved out to North Carolina, which makes him very happy.

They do a lot together. Working out and being active is so important to Jake. He and his older brothers would go to the gym every day together.

This cancer has been a shock and is overwhelming for us all.

Jake is strong and will make it through this, because, as his brother Reed said the other day “Jake, you’re a miracle child in our family … and you’re going to pull another miracle off with this cancer.”

Two days ago I had never heard of Jacob Taylor.

Today, I have a personal stake in seeing him punch out cancer and live a long life. His survival matters.

I had an aunt who had Stage 4 cancer and got back out of that bed and hung around for another 40 years. It can be done.

Whether we know Jacob personally or not, we can help. We can send him hope, both in our thoughts and in our messages.

Go to the site family friends have set up for him.

Read his story. Send him a message. Pray for him, if that is something you do. Donate to help with his family’s medical expenses, if that works for you.

Let him know that he is not alone. Not before, and certainly not now.

Jacob Taylor may never have stepped foot in Coupeville, but he is part of Wolf Nation from this moment on. And we do not forget our own.

https://www.giveforward.com/fundraiser/j745/jacob-taylor-cancer-fund?utm_source=facebook

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Gabe Kennedy

Gabe Kennedy (Photos from Solea Kennedy’s GoFundMe page)

His family was able to take Gabe outside to the nearby Seattle Yacht Club to see fireworks on the 4th.

His family was able to take Gabe outside to the nearby Seattle Yacht Club to see fireworks on the 4th.

One positive after another.

As he makes the difficult battle back after a horrifying hit and run, Gabe Kennedy continues to improve and reach new positives.

The older brother of former Wolf football star Ben Haight and son of Coupeville Food Bank volunteer Solea Kennedy, Gabe was struck while skateboarding in Reno in early May.

He was in a coma and lost a leg, and the woman who slammed into him fled the scene, only to finally turn herself in to police several weeks later.

Now at the University of Washington Rehab Center, Kennedy has shown enough progress that doctors have set August 1 as a possible date for him being discharged.

In recent updates on her GoFundMe page, Solea talked about the steps Gabe has hit:

Yesterday, they removed Gabe’s trache, so now he is tube free!

He is doing well, feeling much better. The hole in his throat will close up on its own, probably in a few days!

The physicians agreed to start Gabe working with a prosthetic leg.

It is a long process and he will have to take it “one step at a time” since his left leg is still not able to bear weight due to the reduction surgeries that are still in the healing stage.

Gabe is making good progress, though.

He has taken advantage of every exercise opportunity to work on regaining use and strength in his hands and arms.

The left one still gives him a lot of trouble, but he is determined to push past it…

As he continues his fight, you can write to him at:

UW Rehab Medicine
Gabe Kennedy
Room 806
1959 NE Pacific St.
Box 356071
Seattle, WA 98195-6071

Or, consider helping the family out with the ever-spiraling medical expenses by jumping over to:

http://www.gofundme.com/955tg8

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Lauren Rose and assistant coach Ron Wright celebrate. (Photos courtesy Justine McGranahan)

 Lauren Rose and Venom assistant coach Ron Wright celebrate. (Photos courtesy Justine McGranahan)

The happiest bench in the world includes

The happiest bench in the world includes (l to r) Robin Cedillo, Tamika Nastali, Rose and Sarah Wright.

Coupeville’s softball future is bright.

In the same spring that the CHS sluggers went to the state tournament for the first time in 12 years, two of Central Whidbey’s little league squads have duplicated the feat.

The Sizzlin’ Sisters, Central’s 9/10 squad (which has a couple South Whidbey girls), is off to Asotin, on the Idaho border, for their state tourney this weekend.

At the same time, the Venom, the 17-0 Juniors squad (13/14) is off to Shoreline to lay down a beatin’ on opposing pitchers.

If you live in Cow Town, or have any loyalty to it, no matter where you reside, perhaps consider kicking in a sawbuck or two to help keep the dream alive.

Both teams could use a helping hand and have fundraisers launched on GoFundMe.

To take a look (and possibly loosen your wallet) skip over to:

Sizzlin’ Sisters — http://www.gofundme.com/b0kpvo

Venom — http://www.gofundme.com/b9p38s

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Mollie Bailey (left) has always wanted to be a catcher, all the way since her younger days. Which, admittedly, weren't THAT long ago...

Mollie Bailey (left) has always wanted to be a catcher, ever since her younger days. Which, admittedly, weren’t that long ago…

The most explosive offensive team in all the land.

Bailey (standing in front of coach Lark Gustafson’s upraised right arm) and her teammates celebrate.

Can you say no to Mollie Bailey?

The irrepressible third child in a family of irrepressible, athletic, camera-lovin’ superstars (following big sisters McKayla and McKenzie), Bailey and her teammates need your help.

Their softball squad, the Sizzlin’ Sisters — a 9/10 team that combines Central and South Whidbey players — romped to a district title and punched their ticket to the state tourney.

Of course, state, which starts July 12, is about as far away as you can possibly get, with the host — Asotin — sitting right on the border with Idaho.

It’s a six-and-a-half-hour drive from Whidbey (if traffic is good).

While few non-family members will be likely to make the jaunt to Eastern Washington to cheer on the Sisters, you can help them just the same.

Toss them a buck or two (or more) and help offset the travel costs for the girls, who represent the future of Wolf sports.

Well, and Falcon sports … but hopefully they’ll all move to Coupeville before high school and we won’t have to think about that.

Regardless, this is a chance to do something for young ladies who have risen above and played their hearts out.

Help fuel their dream (and their parents car’s)!!

To help, jump over to:

http://www.gofundme.com/b0kpvo

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Leaving Nevada. (Photo from Solea Kennedy's GoFundMe page)

Gabe Kennedy leaves Nevada, bound for Seattle. (Photos from Solea Kennedy’s GoFundMe page)

Gabe Kennedy and mom Solea.

Gabe and mom Solea.

As an arrest is made in the case, hit and run victim Gabe Kennedy continues to improve.

The 25-year old Kennedy, older brother of former CHS football star Ben Haight and son of noted Coupeville Food Bank volunteer Solea Kennedy, lost a leg and was in a coma after being struck while skateboarding in Reno May 8.

While he has considerable obstacles to overcome, Kennedy, who emerged from the coma and has begun to regain his speech, has improved enough that he was transferred from Reno to a rehab unit at the University of Washington Friday.

On the family’s GoFundMe page, Solea wrote:

“We are packed up and ready for our plane ride out in the morning! Gabe is happy to be leaving the hospital and hopeful about rehab.

He’s been told that it will be hard work, but that is what it takes to get the arms to work again and begin to learn to walk!

Thank you for your continued prayers and support. We are so glad that all of you care and are part of Gabe’s story!”

In a story running parallel to Kennedy’s improvement, an arrest was finally made in the case.

Myree Townsend, 40, was booked on charges of Hit and Run causing Substantial Bodily Injury, which is a felony crime.

Townsend turned herself in two weeks after she left the scene of the accident, but was not arrested until Tuesday as the investigation was ongoing.

In an interview with a Nevada TV station, Gabe was asked how he felt about being left behind when Townsend fled the scene.

He declined to give the reporter the angry sound bite she was fishing for, opting instead to respond with a great calmness.

“It is what it is.”

To help the family with their medical expenses, jump over to:

http://www.gofundme.com/955tg8

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