The Biker With A Big Heart

Her son’s organ donation saved his life. So he rode 2,300 kilometres to meet her

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Her son’s organ donation saved his life. So he rode 2,300 kilometres to meet her

It took several drafts to get the letters right. To dis-till her boy’s life into the two dimensionality of words on paper. To paint a picture of someone full of energy and love, so that the beneficiaries of his death—the recipients of his organs— would know just how lucky they were.

Three weeks earlier, the thread that held Christine Cheers’s world together had been ripped away. On 21 February 2018, someone on the other end of the phone had said the words that bring parents to their knees: “There’s been an accident.”

Her son, James Mazzuchelli, 32, a flight surgeon with the United States Navy, had been injured in a helicopter training mission at a military base in California. If she wanted to see him while he was still alive, she needed to get on the next flight from Florida—and she needed to pray.

James was still breathing when Christine and James’s stepfather,David Cheers, arrived at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, California, the next morning. Machines were keeping him alive, and the doctors told Christine that what she was seeing was likely his future—that her scuba-diving, very worst day a stranger’s best one.

Christine instructed the hospital to begin the organ donation process.These few words, as hard as they were to say, would soon ripple outwards, allowing a man to return to work, a military veteran to regain his health and an ailing cyclist to get back on his bike.

Mike Cohen was just 18 when he’d been diagnosed with an aggressive form of leukaemia in 2004. Doctors warned him that the treatment protocol could cause lasting damage to his heart. At the time, surviving cancer seemed like the more pressing concern. He took his treatment seriously, doing the radiation and chemotherapy and even moving from New York to San Diego,California, for his last year of chemo because his oncologist felt that mild weather would be easier on hi...

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