Features & Human Interest Archive

Teen parent: When a child is raising a child

June 15, 2011

OSHKOSH — Two years ago, Faith Lohry, then a 16-year-old sophomore at Oshkosh North High School, told her mother she was pregnant.

Lohry’s mom had an announcement of her own: I’m moving.

“That was really hard to not have my mom and dad there to support me,” said Lohry, now 18 and raising her daughter, Mallorie, while she attends Fox Valley Technical College and works at Dairy Queen. “My dad was never really there … and my mom just kinda left when she found out I was pregnant.”

Lacking a support system, Lohry built her own from scratch by piecing together a patchwork of family friends, school counselors and community resources to overcome the bitter frustrations and complexities of raising a child when you’re still a child yourself.

“It was hard, I’m not going to say it wasn’t,” said Lohry, who receives limited support from Mallorie’s father. “But (Mallorie) really pushed me to work harder. Obviously it makes you grow up a lot faster and be way more mature. You miss out on a lot, but then you gain a lot in return.”

On the fast track to adulthood, Lohry moved in with her boyfriend’s parents for five months while she received homebound instruction from teachers at Oshkosh North and assistance from community organizations, such as Parent Connection, a division of Family Services, which is a nonprofit agency serving northeastern Wisconsin.

When tensions arose between Lohry and Mallorie’s grandparents, Lohry moved to the Rosendale area, where family friends watched Mallorie during the day while Lohry attended Laconia High School.

Her tenacity eventually paid off: Lohry graduated early with honors.

“She has worked really hard to get where she is today,” said Kalyn Mlinar, a teen parent coordinator at Parent Connection who coaches Lohry on child development and nutrition. “She’s really had to do all of this by herself. She’s a really good example of how teen moms can succeed and how hard it is. She’s really making a better life for (herself) and her daughter.”

Mlinar and her colleague Katie Krauter, family support specialist at Parent Connection, said Lohry and other successful young mothers are eager to share their stories of hard work to prevent future unplanned teenage pregnancies.

“The teen moms that we work with are so outspoken,” Krauter explained. “They’ll tell you, ‘This is hard. This is not how I would want to do it if I could start all over again.’ They’re not afraid to talk about it and they’re very verbal about having to work two jobs and still not having any money because you’re paying for daycare.”

In planning a future for daughter, Lohry is building on her past by studying criminal justice at Fox Valley Tech with the goal of becoming a child protective services worker.

“I want to go and take kids out of bad homes, because I know what that feels like,” Lohry explained. “I would never put Mallorie through that and I don’t want other kids to have to go through it either.”

Pregnant and scared: Teens often unaware help is available

June 12, 2011

APPLETON — In January 2010, Neenah High School junior Jessie Gillespie — then 17 and dizzied by a stomach-fouling set of nerves — summoned the courage to speak an unmentionable, unthinkable, unavoidable truth.

“I’m pregnant,” she told her guidance counselor, softly.

Though Gillespie didn’t know it at the time, that admission and tacit plea for help won her immediate access to a largely obscure but extensive network of resources and services available to pregnant teens and teen parents in the Fox Valley.

In the weeks after two Kimberly High School students were accused of abandoning their newborn daughter behind a church last month — a pregnancy the fearful 17-year-old mother hid from family, teachers and classmates — The Post-Crescent consulted Fox Valley high school principals, counselors and nurses about local resources for pregnant teens and school-age parents.

The P-C found that schools essentially outsource many services that help expectant and parenting students stay in school. In addition to modifying class schedules and offering courses on childhood development, schools lean on a web of nonprofit, faith-based and governmental organizations that blankets the Valley.

But to access that community-based help, students must often seek it out — a nerve-wracking, humbling gesture that requires the very self-awareness and maturity that may have been lacking when the unborn or newborn child was conceived.

“We do not have a formal program for pregnant teens or teen parents,” said Sharral Jensen, a nurse at Neenah High School. “(But) I usually receive a referral from a school counselor when a girl becomes pregnant and meet with her regularly during her pregnancy to offer education, support and community referrals.”

Seeking help

Now 18 and a recent Neenah High School graduate, Gillespie turned to the Internet before seeking help at school.

“Google can only get you so far,” she quickly discovered.

Confused and scared as she tried to learn more about adoption — which she ultimately chose for her son, Tyler — Gillespie reluctantly decided to consult her school guidance counselor after talking it over with her parents.

“I was pretty embarrassed about it,” Gillespie said. “I didn’t want to tell (my teachers I was pregnant), but I knew someone needed to know because I had to go to the bathroom a lot more … It’s an odd thing to have to tell someone.”

Once the words escaped her lips, Gillespie discovered far more resources and options than she ever knew existed.

“I really didn’t know there was anything, I didn’t know that the school did anything at all,” she said. “They don’t really talk about it … I was shocked to find out they did so much. They give you all the resources to make an educated decision.”

Gillespie’s experience is typical: Students often bear the responsibility to seek help, but once they do, schools shepherd them to a network of assistance that is deep, broad and long lasting.

School-based help

Wisconsin state law requires that school districts accommodate pregnant teens and school-age parents by modifying programs and making resources available to help them stay in school and graduate.

A few local school districts — particularly Appleton, Green Bay and Menasha — have comprehensive programs in place for pregnant and parenting teens. But most districts meet state requirements through fairly simple programs, such as the effort under way at Kimberly High School.

“We don’t have anything formalized, but we do offer a variety of services,” said Mike Rietveld, principal at Kimberly. “First, our school nurse always meets with the individuals, both the males and the females, but especially the young ladies to make sure that they’re getting medical care. If they aren’t, (the nurse) contacts parents and tries to connect them to medical services.”

From time to time, school officials even help students break the life-altering news to their parents.

“Sometimes the student is very terrified to tell mom and dad,” Rietveld said. “Occasionally it’s a situation where we have the parent come in to school and the counselor will sit down with the student and the parent to have that first conversation.”

Once the pregnancy is confirmed and the student receives adequate medical attention, Rietveld said, the school works around the student’s new schedule requirements, which often includes six weeks of homebound instruction for teen moms.

“Basically, we’re trying to make sure we can create a schedule for them that works so that if they need a block of time off from school because of daycare issues and other things, we try to work that in,” he said. “Our goal is to get them to graduate on time.”

Similarly, students at Little Chute High School use the district’s school-within-a-school framework for greater flexibility with scheduling.

“That setting is generally the setting that our young ladies who either have children or are going to have children choose,” said Cindy Heath, a school guidance counselor. “They can go out to work in the afternoon or do volunteer work. They can do their coursework in a more flexible pace.”

Above and beyond

Some districts take it a step further by hiring staff members who work exclusively with pregnant and parenting students.

“We have a very structured program where we offer a parenting class in some schools,” said Dorie Railling, who runs the School-Age Parent Program in Appleton. The Green Bay Area School District has a similar program.

In addition to coordinating support groups and one-on-one counseling, Railling organizes “Baby Day” twice a year.

“Teens from years past come back and bring their babies,” Railling said. “(Teen moms) can help each other and let (expecting moms) know what’s in their future.”

Similarly, Menasha High School invites teen parents to address students in health class, where the young parents are peppered with frank questions: Do you feel that getting pregnant was a mistake or do you regret it? What was going through your mind when you found out you were going to have a baby? Are you still with the other parent of the baby?

“We call it the ‘teen parent panel,’” said Julie Holly, counselor at Menasha. “Students tend to remember that — it makes a big impression on freshmen.”

Outsourcing help

For help beyond the schoolhouse, local districts connect students with a wide range of community and governmental organizations that offer everything from medical attention and daycare assistance to food stamps and relationship counseling.

“(School social workers) explore all the different options that the students have, whether it’s carrying the child to term and keeping the child or carrying the child to term and putting it up for adoption,” said Rob Kerl, a counselor at Oshkosh West High School. “I don’t know that we’ve ever really talked about abortion with them unless they bring it up. Typically, because it’s such a hot-button issue, we encourage them to pursue putting children up for adoption. But the bottom line is if they ask questions about things, we will give them straight information.”

When schools direct students to local resources, one local nonprofit stands first among equals: Family Services of Northeast Wisconsin.

“They do a number of really incredible programs for teen moms and dads,” said Little Chute’s Cindy Heath.

“We have a lot of free resources available for pregnant teens,” said Katie Krauter, family support specialist at Parent Connection, a division of Family Services that works with teen parents of both sexes. “We have an in-home visitation program. Our teen parent coordinator (goes) into their home and (meets) with them twice a month for about an hour, and (brings) information about child development in that prenatal stage: how to take care of yourself, what to expect, how to sign up for the (federal Women, Infant and Children’s nutrition) program to help pay for formula, etc.”

The program also offers a “baby basics” course for fathers and teen parent support groups.

“Parent Connection is fabulous, just fabulous. They have so many classes, they provide so many services for teen parents,” said Menasha’s Julie Holly.

In addition to funneling pregnant and parenting students to programs at Family Services, school districts make sure their students are also connected to the host of services available from municipal, county, state and federal governments.

“We try to discourage teen pregnancy, but ultimately we’re going to provide the resources (needed) to have them be successful,” said Tracy Hackert, a psychologist at Menasha High School.

Kaukauna hosts church trial over same-sex marriage

June 11, 2011

KAUKAUNA — A Kaukauna congregation will play host to a Wisconsin United Methodist Church trial that could result in the defrocking of an openly gay minister accused of performing a same-sex wedding in violation of church laws.

The Rev. Amy DeLong of Polk County in northwestern Wisconsin broke church rules when she officiated a marriage ceremony for a lesbian couple in Menomonie in September 2009, according to the charges against her.

Additionally, DeLong will stand trial June 21 through June 23 at Peace United Methodist Church in Kaukauna for “being a self-avowed practicing homosexual,” the charges say.

DeLong doesn’t dispute the facts of the case. In fact, she informed church officials about the same-sex wedding in an annual report and is open about her sexual orientation. She registered for domestic partnership protection with Valerie Ann Zellmer in 2009, which was announced in a local newspaper soon thereafter.

In a statement to an investigation committee, DeLong rebuked what she called a “duplicitous system” similar to a military-style “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.

“I could be ordained; I could be appointed if I just promised, with a wink and a nod, to stay securely in the closet,” she wrote. “Part of the bargain was that I would have the decency to be silent and ashamed. And I’m neither silent, nor am I ashamed.”

Retired Bishop Clay Lee from Jackson, Miss., will preside over jury selection and the trial, which is expected to ignite a church-wide conversation about the denomination’s strictures on gay clergy and same-sex relationships.

“It’s kind of a hard thing for people when they realize that their church doesn’t want them,” said Sue Laurie, who is among congregants from the Midwest who will travel to Kaukauna to support DeLong.

Even the committee that issued the charges against DeLong expressed skepticism about the church’s disciplinary rules, calling them “inconsistent” with church principles that value equal rights regardless of sexual orientation.

“These charges present a fundamentally unjust circumstance,” the committee wrote. “The committee fears that the United Methodist Church, and specifically the Wisconsin Annual Conference, is at grave risk of forever losing the infinite talents, gifts and grace that gay and lesbian clergy bring to make the United Methodist Church a better, stronger, more vibrant place for United Methodists to worship and continue their own faith journeys.”

Some Fox Cities community leaders also expressed concern that media coverage of the trial could have a negative impact on local teens who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender, commonly styled LGBT.

Since 2009, LGBT youth have comprised more than half of Outagamie County’s teen suicides.

“As a member of the LGBT Suicide Prevention Committee, I’m concerned about the message that this sends to LGBT individuals about the values placed on them by this church,” said Carla Hales.

There are nearly 500 United Methodist Church congregations in Wisconsin, including about 50 in northeastern Wisconsin.

Vivid police report illustrates denial, despair and fear that led to baby’s abandonment

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

May 20, 2011

LITTLE CHUTE — She denied it.

For months, there were whispers she was pregnant. Classmates spotted her boyfriend buying a pregnancy test at Walmart in the fall, plus she had gained weight.

But she denied it, flatly.

The 17-year-old Kimberly High School junior who police say abandoned her newborn daughter on a chilly Monday evening told Fox Valley Metro Police last Friday that she had never been pregnant, according to a police report that vividly recounts how she and her 18-year-old boyfriend responded to a flesh and blood dilemma.

The couple had been sexually active for some time, she told Officer Jeremy Slotke, but she was never pregnant. Her boyfriend had gone to Walmart — that much was true. But the test was negative.

Slotke, whose report The Post-Crescent obtained Thursday from Fox Valley Metro Police, asked the teen if she would offer a DNA sample to prove she wasn’t the mother.

She fell silent, staring at the floor.

“This is your baby, isn’t it?” Slotke asked.

She nodded her head.

Pregnancy

The 17-year-old first realized she might be pregnant around October, and the store-bought test confirmed her fears.

Dreading how her aunt and uncle would react, she denied to herself she was pregnant, and later told her boyfriend she had suffered a miscarriage. The Post-Crescent is not naming the girl or her boyfriend because the district attorney was still weighing Thursday whether to charge them. Police have recommended a charge of child abandonment.

Even after the girl’s period stopped — even after she could feel the baby kicking — she couldn’t bring herself to accept the truth.

As she grew from 130 pounds to 160 pounds, she blanketed her belly beneath oversized sweats, and starved herself to stay as thin as possible for as long as possible.

During a routine physical exam about seven or eight months into the pregnancy, her doctor never detected the child. So, when asked, the teen lied and told the physician that her menstrual cycle was normal.

Birth

Sunday, May 8, she awoke at 3 a.m. with severe cramps, which she deluded herself into believing was her period’s long-awaited return. When the pain subsided, she went to work at a Fox Cities supper club, alongside her boyfriend.

But the cramps came back at 2:30 a.m. the next day with such strength that she asked her aunt and uncle if she could skip school, citing her period. They agreed.

Her boyfriend came to visit during lunch hour, and she asked him to bring her a heating pad to help soothe the cramps. He did and returned to school.

By 3 p.m., she was in labor.

Home alone, she crawled into a first-floor bathtub and began to push.

Some 40 minutes later, she held her daughter for a moment, and then walked to her room to grab a pair of scissors. After cutting the umbilical cord, she pinched it to stanch the bleeding.

She called her boyfriend, who could hear the baby screaming in the background.

By the time he arrived at her front door 10 minutes later, she had cleaned and wrapped the dark-haired girl in a green towel.

Fearful his girlfriend’s uncle would soon come home, he took his newborn daughter, lay her on the passenger seat of his car and left.

Abandonment

As he drove, he called his girlfriend, who directed him to St. Elizabeth Hospital in Appleton. But once there, fear crippled him.

Wouldn’t doctors ask questions? His girlfriend was 17 and he was 18 — could he face criminal charges for having sex with her?

He left, traveling northeast up Newberry Street toward Kimberly. He drove past a church, deciding not to stop when he saw a car in the parking lot.

He continued on Newberry until he reached Fox Valley Christian Fellowship at 1200 W. Kimberly Ave. about 4:30 p.m. The lights were on and cars were parked outside, so he drove to the Fulcer Avenue side of the building, where he figured no one would see him.

He placed his daughter on the ground near a dumpster, hoping someone would eventually find her. He honked his car horn, expecting it would summon someone from inside, and drove away.

About 7:30 p.m., after rugby practice, he drove back to the dumpster to see if the baby was still there. She wasn’t.

Discovery

As he waited for his children to finish a piano lesson, Daren Hansen of Darboy took his dog for a walk on Fulcer Avenue about 6:30 p.m.

The dog saw the green towel first and led Hansen to the baby.

Without touching the child, Hansen raced to a nearby house and told the residents to call the authorities, who took the baby to St. Elizabeth Hospital.

Doctors said she appeared healthy, though her body temperature had fallen below 90 degrees. The crisp night air had caused the blood in her umbilical cord to clot, possibly saving the baby’s life. If it had been warmer, doctors said she likely would have bled through the opening.

Pursuit

When the 17-year-old junior returned to school Tuesday visibly thinner, the whispers morphed into anonymous tips.

After investigating other leads, police arrived at Kimberly High School that Friday to ask her about the pregnancy rumors.

And at first she denied it.

Al-Qaida leader’s death a proud moment for Fox Valley veterans

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

May  3, 2011

GRAND CHUTE — Red-faced and plaintive as the words pulsed from his body with a heavy staccato, John Bourassa, commander of the American Legion Post 38, said what everyone in the hall was likely thinking.

“This was a momentous weekend for America,” Boursassa told his post members Monday evening. “With what took place last night, I just want everyone to think about what happened.”

As he reminded the three dozen veterans of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden’s death, the opening chords of Lee Greenwood’s pseudo-anthem, “God Bless the U.S.A.,” gradually enveloped the room.

Once the melody snapped into focus, several veterans began to hum along, as if by instinct, while others dropped their heads in silence.

During the song, members passed around wicker baskets, collecting $162 for the family of Matthew Hermanson, 22, of Appleton, who was killed Thursday in Afghanistan.

Commander-elect Laurel Weyenberg mouthed the lyrics as she sit at the front of the hall, squinting her eyes and pumping her fists when the chorus swelled.

“I’m proud to be an American, and I’m proud that I was an American soldier,” Bourassa said when the music ended, his voice trembling. “In the last 24 hours, hopefully there might be a beginning to the end. I can’t guarantee it, but I’m proud to be an American and proud (of) what America did.”

The post’s chaplain Bob Johnson, 65, of the Town of Center, picked up that theme in a prayer for the troops who stormed bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan on Sunday.

Johnson said he decided to include the special prayer after he heard the news.

“I was elated,” Johnson said. “With all the flashback to 9/11 and all the things that bin Laden had done to us (including) the USS Cole bombing (in 2000), which he was the mastermind behind — I was very grateful to people in uniform that we have serving our country today that they accomplished this mission and got the job done.”

Shoulder back and a grin on his face, Navy veteran Garrick Eppinger, 59, of Neenah, was almost giddy with pride.

“It just proves that if you’re relentless and you just stay at it, sooner or later (the enemies) slip up and make mistakes,” Eppinger said. “We have the most awesome armed forces. We may not be doing anything right now, but it doesn’t mean we’ve forgotten about you.”

Almost homebound, Darboy’s Charlie Knuth looks ‘incredibly better’

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

March 26, 2011

Nearly 100 days removed from a potentially life-saving stem cell transplant designed to strengthen his delicate skin, it’s almost time for Charlie Knuth, 5, to come home from Minneapolis.

“(April 8) is the last day that they’ll be taking samples of his skin to check and see how it’s different now than (when) we came in,” said Trisha Knuth, his mother. “After that, I believe we’ll get to go home.”

The Darboy resident has the rare genetic skin disease epidermolysis bullosa, better known as EB.

Since birth, his body has blistered incessantly, inside and out. Typically, the blistering leads to an aggressive form of skin cancer.

But a Dec. 30 bone marrow stem cell transplant has dramatically reduced Charlie’s blistering, which could ultimately reduce his cancer risk.

“His skin looks incredibly better,” said Dr. Jakub Tolar, Charlie’s physician at University of Minnesota Amplatz Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis. “Basically 90 to 95 percent of his body area was covered in sores. It’s less than 5 percent now.”

Charlie also has rebounded from a series of life-threatening complications he endured after the transplant, including infections, kidney failure and bleeding in his lungs.

“He pulled through all this very well,” Tolar said.

Charlie left the hospital in mid-February and moved into the Ronald McDonald House in Minneapolis, where his mother said he has thrived.

“He’s excellent,” she gushed. “For a while there he was really tired. Even though he was looking good and he was doing well, he still was very exhausted from the transplant.”

Charlie’s spirits were buoyed by unexpected birthday surprise from the Build-A-Bear Workshop at the Mall of America.

Store officials opened the sterilized workshop early on March 13, so the Knuths could celebrate Charlie’s fifth birthday in private.

“Somebody called anonymously to set it up and told them his story,” Trisha Knuth said. “Build-A-Bear took it from there.”

Charlie designed a camouflage-clad rabbit to match the macho-themed gifts he has already received from well-wishers back home.

“People are still sending stuff,” Trisha Knuth said. “People are doing things that are thoughtful, not necessarily just going out and spending money. They’re doing things that require imagination.”

One Fox Valley resident cobbled a collage from photos Trisha Knuth posted on her blog about Charlie’s experience in Minnesota.

And Cindy Riess, 52, of Green Bay, made 1,000 origami paper cranes for Charlie that she hopes to personally deliver soon.

“I’m a complete stranger, (but) I felt bad for him and wanted to do something,” Riess said. “I hope it helps. When I was doing them, I was always thinking about Charlie.”

The outpouring of support for Charlie hasn’t been limited to Wisconsinites.

“We get things from all over the world,” Trisha Knuth said. “People from overseas who have children with EB are following Charlie. He’s been an inspiration to other EB kids. It gives them hope.”

As remarkable as Charlie’s progress has been, Tolar stressed that Charlie still has hurdles to overcome because the December transplant wiped out his immune system, rendering Charlie “much more fragile than a newborn.”

It will take a full year for his system to redevelop, which means he will need to wear a mask in public and avoid children who have live vaccines, such as those for measles, mumps and chicken pox.

“From a practical standpoint, it’s a bad idea for him to go to a crowded mall,” Tolar said. “It’s absolutely fine for him to go outside, especially if it’s nice and there’s no high wind, and play without a mask. It would be a bad idea for him to go to preschool.”

While the process will get easier with time, Tolar said Charlie’s situation isn’t “worry-free” yet.

“Trisha knows this,” Tolar said. “His father (Kevin) knows this. And I think on one level Charlie knows this, too.”

To read Trisha Knuth’s blog, visit http://bit.ly/CharlieKnuthBlog.

Why Green Bay Packers fever matters so much to fans

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

February 5, 2011

When the Packers are down, Nathan Gehring is down, too.At the first sign of trouble, nerves set in. And when the game seems to hang by the skin of his teeth, Gehring’s heart pounds against his chest as numbness seeps from his fingers down to the pit of his stomach.

A Packers defeat “could ruin a day, it could ruin several days,” said Gehring, a 32-year-old financial planning adviser.

When the troops in green and gold take the field Sunday, they won’t be the only ones with something on the line.

“This is a much more personal event than a mere sports event,” said Robert Cialdini, a psychologist at Arizona State University. “It’s not a diversion; it’s not something to keep us entertained or intrigued. It’s something much more fundamental. (It) accounts for why we see people living and dying emotionally with the success of these teams, and — in some cases — physically.”

Cialdini’s research shows that sports fans identify so strongly with the teams they love that fans actually have the same physiological responses to the game that the athletes experience.

In victory, testosterone levels spike. In defeat, they plummet.

“Their successes and failures are our successes and failures,” explained Cialdini, a Milwaukee native and Packers fan. “They reflect directly on us as individuals, even though we have not scored a point or made a tackle or touched the field of play.”

Cialdini theorizes that human evolution is responsible for this strong relationship between fan and team.

“When we were evolving many eons ago, we existed in small groups of 25 to 50 individuals in bands or clans or tribes,” he said. “If our warriors beat the warriors of the neighboring bands, clans or tribes, because they were genetically identical to us, it meant that we were inherently better than our neighbors. That atavistic, primitive tendency remains.”

And Cialdini said this inclination to build deep emotional and psychological ties to sports teams as a way of asserting superiority and self-worth is heightened in smaller communities, such as Green Bay and Pittsburgh.

“The most ferocious fans come from the cities that have inferiority complexes,” said Cialdini. “I don’t mean that they are inferior. I mean that they think that they’re underestimated in the grand scheme of things, and the only way available to them to disprove those underestimations is through the ascendency of their sports teams.”

It may have negative undertones, but being passionate about the hometown team is good for your health, said Daniel Wann, co-author of “Sport Fans: The Psychology and Social Impact of Spectators.”

“The research shows that individuals that strongly identify with a local sport team tend to have a better social-psychological makeup,” Wann said. “They tend to have lower levels of loneliness and alienation. They’re more likely to have a positive evaluation of the satisfaction of their social life. If you’re a Packers fan, you’d have a hard time being lonely in Green Bay right now.”

Cialdini doesn’t quite buy that rosier reading of the research.

“There’s clearly something unhealthy about it,” Cialdini continued. “If they depend on affiliated sports teams for their successes, then their happiness is out of their own hands. There’s nothing wrong with being tied to a team and feeling good about their successes, but when you live and die with it, that’s a prison sentence.”

Alarmed by the effect a football game could have on his behavior and state of mind, Gehring recently started monitoring his emotions to keep them in check.

“I tried it during one Packer game,” he said. “It was a game they lost, but I felt much, much better the whole game. That allowed me to disconnect from the impact the emotions were having on my thinking and just go back to appreciating what the guys on the field were doing.”

Pittsburgh, Green Bay have much in common

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

February 1, 2011

The Pirates may also wear black and yellow in the outfield, as do the Penguins on the ice, but nothing colors Pittsburgh’s rough-and-tumble, industrial identity quite as fully as the Steelers. Like Green Bay and her Packers, the hometown professional football team in Pittsburgh is synonymous with the city itself.

“It is what people talk about, it’s what brings them together, it’s what they love,” said Anne Madarasz, director of the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum at the Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh. “Our heroes here, like your heroes in Green Bay, are everyman heroes. (It’s a) get down and work, grind it out, do it the right, old-fashioned way, real football town.”

And as with the green-and-gold, devotion to the Steelers runs deep.

“I’ve never seen anything where the culture of fandom is so cross-demographic and ubiquitous,” said Jon Rubin, curator of “Whatever it Takes,” an exhibit on Steelers fanaticism at Pittsburgh’s Miller Gallery.

“Game day is quiet — it’s like a ghost town (because) everyone’s inside watching the game,” Rubin explained. “But you’ll (also) have people who are out shopping and they’re wearing Troy Polamalu jerseys. They’re not even really fans, but it has just become part of the larger aesthetic culture of the city.”

In the mill town that produced Andy Warhol, pop culture is Steelers culture.

It has been since the 1970s, when the team captured the Vince Lombardi Trophy four times amid a grim economic climate that stripped the city of the Steelers’ namesake mills.

“You’ve got a working-class city that’s losing its industry, that’s losing all of its jobs and it needs something to hope for,” Rubin explained.

“You see the identity of this region as the ‘steel city’ and manufacturing center of America in decline at the same time the ‘City of Champions’ ascends,” Madarasz said. “It’s more than just the colors on people’s backs. It really comes to be a central unifier and source of pride for people in the region at a time that emotionally, economically, socially and culturally was hugely difficult.”

And even as the city has lost nearly half its population and shifted to an information-based economy in the intervening decades, the Steelers’ grip on popular imagination hasn’t waned.

“Everyone in Pittsburgh is born a Steelers fan,” said Jim Shearer, host of VH1′s “Top 20 Countdown” and a Pittsburgh native who produces the YouTube show “YinzLuvDaStillers” in his New York apartment.

“I’ve never been to Green Bay, but Pittsburgh is the only city I’ve been to where everyone across the board is into their football team,” Shearer said. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a math geek or a jock or a musician or an accountant or a baker or a banker — everyone is a fan.”

“I think that’s one of the things that makes it such a great matchup,” Madarasz said. “You’ve got these two great teams with two great traditions, with solid fan bases that — through thick and thin — have followed and supported their team. It makes for a great matchup.”

Packers Players brings faith to the football field

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

Jan. 30, 2011

Jubilant in victory, C.J. Wilson, a defensive end for the Green Bay Packers, took to his Twitter account after the NFC Championship game against the Chicago Bears.

 

“Give all the glory and honor to God!!” he wrote. “Headed to Dallas! Let’s go Pack! (Philippians) 4:13.”

 

The tableau of a professional football player summoning his Christian faith — naming chapter and verse, no less — to commemorate a career-defining moment is curious in its dual suggestion of specificity and ambiguity.

 

From prayerful huddles before kickoff to solitary kneels in the end zone, players seem evermore willing to wrap pursuits on the field in the cloth of the pulpit, which surely signifies something — though it’s rarely clear what.

 

Such public displays of private beliefs are at times vacant thanksgivings for points scored, but they are equally alleluias to ancient values rooted in redemption, discipline and service.

 

“Frankly, the things that we honor in sport aren’t even a blip on God’s radar screen,” said Mark Hull, state director of Fellowship of Christian Athletes. “He does not care who wins or loses. It is immaterial. What he cares about is what we become in the process. It’s not the end zone that matters — it’s the process to God.”

 

Beleaguered by a culture that worships the ability to claw a ball as it knifes through the air, professional athletes often turn to faith to imbue their lives with meaning — to turn their million-dollar jobs into God-given vocations, Hull said.

 

“Athletes don’t need another ‘yes-person’ that asks them for an autograph or a picture,” Hull said. “They need somebody to ask them if they’re being faithful to their spouse. That’s the stuff that matters for eternity. Chaplains and others are trying to remind (athletes) that in the pressure to win there’s something bigger than the game.”

 

That’s precisely the role the Packers’ chaplains — including the current Catholic chaplain, the Rev. Jim Baraniak — have filled for more than 40 years.

 

“I would be doing for the Green Bay Packers essentially what any parish priest would do for his congregation,” said Baraniak, who has been with the team for 14 years. “(If) they feel like they need to come back to ground zero and come back to their home base and get their compass pointing north, then they come to see me.”

 

In addition to presiding over funerals and weddings for members of the organization, Baraniak holds weekly Mass, typically 41/2 hours before kickoff on game day.

 

“Keep in mind, for Roman Catholics, Mass is obligated on weekends,” he said. “These guys are out of their parish churches for the overwhelming majority of the year.”

 

A Protestant chaplain holds an ecumenical service for non-Catholics the evening before game day as well.

 

“That tends to be nondenominational,” Baraniak said. “Within that group you’ve got Protestants of a variety of backgrounds. It’s kept pretty ecumenical; therefore it includes all of the above.”

 

Coach Mike McCarthy attends both services.

 

“McCarthy is Roman Catholic, but he wanted to be at both so he knew what was being said to the team and perhaps so he could incorporate that into his own prayer life or incorporate that into his team address,” said Baraniak, who also serves as pastor of St. Norbert College in De Pere. “(As McCarthy said), it is your physicality that gets you in the door and gets one of our uniforms on your back. But once you put that uniform on, it is now a matter of the head and the heart. Therein is our religion as well.”

 

McCarthy’s strong Catholic faith at times echoes that of legendary Packers coach Vince Lombardi, namesake of the Super Bowl trophy.

 

“Lombardi went to Mass every morning at St. Willebrord (in Green Bay) and prayed for patience and control of his anger,” said David Maraniss, author of “When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi.” “But he did not try to impose his personal religion on his players.”

 

Instead, Maraniss said, Lombardi grounded his coaching philosophy in the values of the Jesuit principles of freedom through discipline.

 

“That was the magic of the Packer sweep: practice it so thoroughly, know it so intimately, make it such a natural part of your movements that you have freedom to react in dozens of different ways as the play unfolds,” Maraniss said.

 

Playwright Eric Simonson, author of the Broadway hit “Lombardi,” said that St. Vince, who had a supple understanding of faith, was unlikely to pray over the mechanics of the game.

 

“I don’t think that he went to Mass saying, ‘Almighty Lord, please give the Packers a win this Sunday,’” Simonson said. “He was more likely to say, ‘Please keep my players in good health.’ It wasn’t quid pro quo to him.”

Tough As Nails

APPLETON POST-CRESCENT

October 6, 2010

It takes about five hours.

First, she disinfects every surface in his bedroom and the bathroom. She cuts and peels dozens of bandages before buttering them with ointment. She runs the bathwater, adding bleach to kill staph infection.

Then Charlie, swaddled in gauze, sits in the elevated tub.

“Once he’s in there, we start taking things off,” Trisha Knuth said.

Caring for her 4-year-old son is a full-time job for Knuth. Charlie has the genetic skin disease epidermolysis bullosa, better known as EB. The state Medicaid office recently refused to pay for a stem cell transplant that could save Charlie’s life, sparking community outrage and drawing the ire of some Fox Valley lawmakers.

Charlie was born missing the gene that binds skin together. Charlie’s skin is as fragile as a ripe peach, gingerly falling away. Internal and external blistering could one day claim his life.

To protect Charlie, his mother layers him in bandages. It is, quite literally, his second skin.

Every other day, she removes his dressings, baths him and applies a fresh coat of gauze.

“It’s extremely painful and it takes a long time,” she said. “When you put those two things together with a 4-year-old, it is a nightmare. As bandages come off and he’s no longer protected, he’ll start ripping his skin off as we’re trying to get him clean.”

There is no cure for EB, but doctors hope a bone marrow stem cell transplant will make Charlie’s skin stronger, potentially saving his life.

The state Department of Health Services initially denied Trisha and Kevin Knuths’ request for Medicaid coverage of the treatment, which could cost $1 million.

But after Trisha Knuth turned to Fox Valley officials for help, health services decided to review the denial. The review could take weeks.

Trisha Knuth called the treatment “medically necessary.”

“If Charlie doesn’t have something done, he will die,” she said.

Fewer than 1,000 people in the U.S. have EB. It is difficult to determine an exact number, because people with mild forms of EB sometimes mistake it for other skin disorders, which delays proper diagnosis for years.

“If it’s very mild, you’ll have flaking of the skin or blisters, but not as severe as some patients whose skin completely sheers off,” said Maxine Silent, development manager for the Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa Research Association of America.

Silent said that while many people with EB don’t live to see adulthood, the oldest known EB patient is in her 70s.

The Knuths hope the stem cell treatment will help Charlie overcome difficult odds as well.

“Everyone says he’s going to beat this because he’s such a fighter,” Trisha Knuth said. “Charlie’s skin may be fragile, but he’s tough as nails.”

Abandoned at birth, Charlie came home with the Knuths from a Milwaukee hospital when he was 2 weeks old. His adoption was finalized a year later.

Charlie’s twin 15-year-old brothers, Alex and Hunter, and his 7-year-old sister, Chloe, help look after him.

“Sometimes Chloe can handle him better than I can,” Trisha Knuth said.

Charlie recently started 4-year-old kindergarten at Sunrise Elementary School, which Chloe also attends. A personal aide makes sure Charlie doesn’t hurt himself.

“If he were to fall down and catch himself with his hands, he would take all the skin off his palms,” Trisha Knuth said.

Charlie’s classmates have embraced him. Often, Knuth said, it is adults who don’t know how to handle him.

EB research association representative Silent said attitudes and curiosities will change once awareness grows.

“A lot of people don’t know how to treat people who have EB or don’t know what EB is,” Silent said. She hopes EB Awareness Week, which occurs the last week in October, will bring EB out of the shadows.

“We need people to learn about the disease and spread awareness,” she said.

Michael Louis Vinson: 920-993-1000, ext. 368, or mvinson@postcrescent.com; on Twitter @MichaelVinson