Birds Give Back 2023

Rachel Spangler • Feb 23, 2023

Help me pay it forward for queer students

HI All,


Today is Birds Give Back, which many of you know is my big annual fundraiser, as part of the larger campaign for my alma mater, Illinois State University.  I am a proud Redbird for so many reasons, not the least of which is that my big queer family started here, and so did my big queer career.  I wrote my first two books as a student there, surrounded by love and support, and it's important to me that our future rainbow Redbirds are given the same chances I was afforded.


So to that end, my wife Susan and I have been working to establish a scholarship in service of social justice, and we have become challenge donors for the LGBTQ+ Student Support Fund.  When the fund receives 100 donations of any size today, it will unlock a $6000 student affairs scholarship over the next four years.  This is a win-win for everyone here, because not only does a very deserving fund get money to help students, we also get to start a long-term scholarship for social justice, AND you can get some of the great prizes below.


All you have to do is click this direct link to choose the LGBTQ+ Student Support Fund.

https://birdsgiveback.illinoisstate.edu/pages/division-of-student-affairs-bgb?referral_id=63eeb3aaf96fe3205423bd75 


Anyone who donates at least $10 to the LGBTQ+ Student Support Endowment while using this link on Feb 24 will automatically be entered into a drawing to win a free e-book copy of any one of my novels.


Anyone who 
donates at least $100 dollars to the LGBTQ+ Student Support Endowment will be guaranteed to receive any one of my audiobooks or ebooks. 


Anyone who 
donates $250 to the LGBTQ+ Student Support Endowment will receive a free, autographed, print copy of Heartstrings, along with a handwritten thank-you note.


And finally, anyone who 
donates $500 to the LGBTQ+ Student Support Endowment or more to these students who mean so much to me will receive not only a free, autographed, print copy of any one of my books and a thank-you card from yours truly, but also the right to name a side character in one of my future books! 


Important:
 if you donate, you MUST shoot me an email at Rachel_Spangler@yahoo.com to let me know which book or e-book you’d like! The donation website will not give your contact information or tell me how much you donated.




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But we were not nothing to each other. I have prayed for her every day for almost a year, and now I pray for her family. I have wondered and worried over her. I have woken up in the middle of long nights and on Christmas morning thinking about her. Every time I notice the little scar on my chest where the line went into my body, I have felt her with me. Still, I did not know her. And I never will. When the transplant coordinator called, she broke the news quickly, then she said that she needed one more thing from me. She wondered if I might release my remaining stem cells to researchers. I was still a bit rocked back from the start of the conversation, and this request confused me. She explained that there were some cells left over after the transfusion, and they still belonged to me. Legally and ethically, those cells, even after they left my body, are a part of me, and no one can do anything to those extensions of my body without my releasing them. I thought about asking her if anyone had mentioned that to the Supreme Court, but I was too sad in the moment. The anger would come later, but as I’ve pondered that fact, it has helped me at least contextualize the level of grief I am feeling: A woman died with a part of me inside of her. I have tried to temper the dramatic impulse to surrender to the idea that if she died with a part of me inside her, a part of me has died as well, but I’ll admit I have gone there a time or two. What I have leaned on more frequently, though, is that despite not knowing anything other than her rough age and gender, we shared something more fundamental than names or letters. We shared stem cells, the very building blocks of what makes us who we are on a cellular level. With those cells I sent my hopes, my best impulses, my health, my love, the pieces of my blood and bones that allow me to live such a wonderful life in the hopes I could sustain her with those things. Turns out I could not. It has been two weeks of wondering if I could have done more. Fearing that my body, which I have always had a problematic relationship with, has failed me again, and this time betrayed someone else in the process. Worrying someone else paid the price of my insufficiency. Remembering loved ones I have lost to cancer, feeling that pain anew. Imagining the anguish of those who loved her as deeply as I loved the people I lost, and almost crippling empathy for the pain they are living in right now, pain I couldn’t save them from even though I tried. It’s been dark in my brain. My emotions have overwhelmed me often. Sadness ruled the first week. I burst into tears several times at inopportune moments, and cried until my face hurt. This past week anger took over. I will admit, other than a general sense of the injustice of it all, I didn’t understand where the anger came from. Then in session this week, my therapist explained that anger is a common outlet for a sense of helplessness. 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She smiled like she knew that, then gently pushed. “If one year ago someone had told you, there’s a woman in need and you will never know her. She needs the very base of your body’s building blocks, it will be a grueling process over several days that will take more out of you physically and emotionally than you had imagined, and all it will give her is 11 more months. 11 months to say what she needs to say, to hug loved ones, to try to make peace. One more Christmas, one more birthday, one more fall, and winter, and spring, but that’s all. She will be gone, and you will live on with the questions, and a connection most people will never comprehend. Would you sign up for that? The answer was yes. It is yes. If I got the same call tomorrow, the answer would be yes that day and every day after. It will always be yes. I suppose that is the through line. That’s the story. 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