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                        |  God Allows U-Turns for Teens
 256 pages Bethany House Publishers
 March 2006
 ISBN: 0764200909
 Do you feel like you’re headed down a road that shouldn't be traveled? You’re   not alone. Sometimes it’s too easy to find the wrong path. Sometimes you just   feel lost. But God is waiting to help you turn your life around; He wants to   show you the way.  This powerful collection of stories from real-life teens offers   encouragement and support as you overcome poor relationships with your parents,   physical or sexual abuse, drug addiction, or painful consequences. With God, all   things are possible. Are you ready for a U-turn?
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                    		|  |  |  SHARING LIFE Jonny's Gift of LifeBy Ann Jean Czerwinski
 CBN.com  ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA    For fifteen years, Jonny shared the gifts God gave him with everyone he knew.   He was outgoing and funny. He loved his family and was never afraid to show it.   He treated his friends like they were part of his family. He was a role model to   the younger kids in the neighborhood, and he loved teaching them about the   things he enjoyed.   
               Bike riding was one of Jonny's passions. Flying is actually what you would   have to call it. He loved the challenge of racing his bike over wooded paths and   city streets. He lived to take his bicycle airborne at any given opportunity.   Children in the neighborhood gathered around Jonny as he gladly showed them how   to do the tricks he had mastered. It was his gift, and he loved sharing it.   
               On September 22, 2000, Jonny Billingsley was riding his bike with his buddies   along the streets of his Erie, Pennsylvania, neighborhood. Without a care in the   world, he defied gravity over the pavement, with wings of freedom that only his   bike could offer.   
               But this was the last night Jonny would ride his beloved bicycle. He collided   with a truck on a busy city intersection, and not even the best medical   intervention could have saved him. The only consolation left for his family was   the fact that he died doing what he loved most, riding his bike.   
               It was during this terrible tragedy that Jonny's mother, Michelle   Billingsley, recalled a conversation she had with her son in April of that year.   He told her he wanted to be an organ donor, and that as soon as he received his   driver's license, he would make sure it would say organ donor right on   it. His mom was surprised with how the conversation came about and relayed it in   our interview.   
               "Jonny's sister, Katie, was sitting at the table talking to me about a school   assignment for her high school ethics class. Their assignment was to write a   living will. While we were talking about her being an organ donor, Jonny walked   into the room. He listened for a while, and I could tell he was giving it deep   thought. He finally said, ‘I think it's a good idea. I'm a strong kid. If   anything ever happened to me, I would want my organs to be donated.'   
               "I asked him if he knew exactly what that meant, and he answered with   certainty, ‘What if someone out there is having a problem with their heart or   kidney? Why would I need to keep mine if I were dead? If someone else can use   them, then that's what I want.' I just smiled and winked at him and told him I   would keep that in mind."   
               Mrs. Billingsley went on to say, "So that's how it all came about. When we   were thrust into that position, there was no decision to make. It was a request   we had to honor."   
               And that's exactly what happened. The night of the accident, when Jonny was   declared brain-dead, his parents met in the cool night air outside of the Hamot   Medical Center. They looked at one another and knew exactly what Jonny would   tell them to do. The words were difficult to find, but they called on their   faith and prayed for the Lord's strength to make this decision.   
               Once Jonny's request was made known to the doctors and the representatives of   the Center for Organ Recovery & Education, a series of tests were performed   to determine brain death, a routine procedure for organ recovery.   
               Because of Jonny's decision, a thirty-six-year-old mother of four in   Philadelphia received a healthy heart; a fifty-six-year-old man from West   Virginia received a liver; a retired psychologist in Washington, D.C. is the   recipient of the left kidney and pancreas; and ironically, a fifteen-year-old   boy in Virginia received a new right kidney. Jonny's bladder and prostate will   be used for testing that will aid thousands of people with bladder and prostate   problems.   
               Over eight hundred people attended the funeral mass for Jonny, and the   Billingsleys were amazed at how many lives their son had touched. In his young   life, he had made more friends of all ages than even he could have imagined.   
               Neighborhood friends and high school buddies brought gifts to the accident   scene, and it didn't take long to transform the telephone pole on the corner   into a small memorial. Teddy bears, flowers, candles, and angels were placed at   the site—an affirmation of friendship. This place also served as a place to   pray, cry, and heal.   
               Jonny's friends struggled with his death, and they gathered in his bedroom to   talk, cry, and try to make sense out of their incredible loss. One evening,   after the kids left, Jonny's parents found a folded-up piece of paper lying on   their son's bed. They sat down and read it together. It said, I know his name   will never pop up on my Buddy list again; however, it will remain there   forever.   
               Throughout his life, Jonathon Billingsley gave his family love and joy. Now,   through his death, he brings them pride in his decision to help others. Jonny   was unselfish in life, and a part of him now lives on in the recipients of his   organs. Maybe someday Jonny's family will meet these people, but for now, his   parents are content knowing their teenage son made a better life for others.  
 Excerpted from God Allows U-Turns for Teens compiled by Allison Bottke (with Cheryl   Hutchings), copyright © 2006; ISBN 0764201816. 
                Published by Bethany House   Publishers. 
                Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication   prohibited.    
 
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