Messages written in chapel’s big book: Heartbreaking and uplifting
CityLivingEditor@nwlink.com.

Manager of volunteer services Alison Garrison. Photo courtesy of Seattle Children’s Hospital

“The House of Miracles” in Laurelhurst. Photo courtesy of Seattle Children’s Hospital

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Garrison said a variety of motivations bring potential volunteers to the program: Some are former patients, and some are parents of former patients. Others have lost a child. There are those with no previous ties to the hospital. Almost 30 percent of the volunteers are University of Washington, mostly premed, students.

Volunteers have options: Some prefer no patient contact. The majority does, however, Garrison said. “Most volunteers we interview are usually suited for the position they apply for,” she added.

Three hours of training, with 12 hours of follow-up, are part of the regimen. Each week, for their three-hour sessions, volunteers are paired up with a different child.

The hospital’s game rooms — one for younger kids, and one for teens — are filled with age-appropriate toys and games, including computers.

Garrison said she hears all kinds of motivations from those who stay committed to the program: “I got to hold the cutest baby,” or, “I was too tired or not in a good mood, but when I came here….”

“It puts things in perspective when you get that one little, special smile from a child who’s had a difficult time,” Garrison said. “Or maybe you’ve allowed a parent to take an hour’s nap.”

Phil Smart Jr., 93, the former Mer-cedes-Benz dealer, is the well-known poster boy for the volunteer program. In 2001, the World War II veteran self-published “Angels Among Us,” a memoir of his four-plus decades of volunteer work at Children’s. A sequel, “The Real Angels Among Us” came out in 2004. Book sale profits were directed to the hospital’s uncompensated-medical-care fund.

The books are written in a style —

chin-up, discerning and a universe away from hip cynicism — that very quickly wins the reader over.

Here is Smart on one patient: “I believe her gift was the way she taught me how to listen. Young people are expected to listen to adults, but more importantly, we must change the way we listen to them. April taught me to surrender my need to know the answers and listen from the vulnerable place of not knowing.”

This, from one of Seattle’s legendary captains of business.

“It’s a privilege,” Garrison said of her own work. “Maybe some days I get frustrated if my computer isn’t fast enough. I can cross over the hall and see parents and patients or read the book in the chapel, and everything does a 360 in terms of what is important.”

A grandchild saved

Seattle Children’s mission is to provide health care to the children of the Pacific Northwest regardless of race, gender, creed, ethnicity, disability or

ability to pay. It’s also the primary teaching center and research site for the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

Its support network — the guilds, the fund-raisers, the boards of trustees — permeates almost every facet of the city’s culture. For all of the recognition and honors that have come Seattle Children’s way, however, it’s the individual stories that underpin the larger narrative.

Mary Jane Godejohn, 81, has volunteered for 25 years. Her grandson had spinal meningitis at 10 months; he’s 34 now. “We wouldn’t have him if it wasn’t for Children’s,” Godejohn said. “They absolutely saved his life — that’s why I am here.

“It has been the best experience I have ever had in my adult life,” the former employee of the U. S. Department of Agriculture and U. S. Census Bureau said of her volunteer activities. “It has taught me patience, how to be a better human being. You learn kindness, patience, tolerance.”

It has also changed her way of being in the outside world: “I always say, ‘Good morning. How are you?’ to people, to let them know they’re part of my world and that they’re OK.”

Godejohn’s volunteer work at the hospital has covered numerous areas: volunteer orientation, the front desk and the family resource center. She has also worked with babies.

“It was very tough,” she said of the latter task, recalling the time when she was asked by a family to take a bedside picture with them and their priest before life support was withdrawn from their baby boy.

On the other hand: “You can’t get through a month here without hearing a wonderful story about a child saved. This place is called ‘The House of Miracles,’” she said. “It is that.”

It’s the stories. And the random images.

Outside, in the December-afternoon gloaming of the hospital’s parking garage, the shadowed figures of a young man and woman walk slowly toward their minivan parked in a long row of cars. The mother suddenly stops as he hurries ahead to open the van’s doors.

Ten yards behind, she rocks the swathed bundle in her arms while he fiddles with the baby seat in back. Then she pulls the blanket back a little to reveal a tiny face in full. She begins kissing her baby, again and again.

For those interested in the volunteer program at Seattle Children’s Hospital, go to www.seattlechildrens.organd click on “Ways to Help” and then “Volunteer.”

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