You are chasing a heart warming touching story about a selfless act to help a little girl. I was going through facebook earlier this week. I read over the headline, the babysitter donates part of her liver to the baby girl she babysits. I immediately thought this was the most incredible story so i click on the link. I come to find this is my childhood friend who is donating her liver. I do remember. Speemacs it hasnt been that long that we havent seen each other. But its been a while. She told me it started not even a year ago when she wanted to get a job as a nanny for george and sarahs three kids kids. Its so easy to become attached to an infant. After caring for her i was with her the most out of the three siblings. You do everything, your like to everything with them. Your like her other mom. She was born with a rare condition which destroys the liver. It would most likely take her life before she turned to. The only way to save her was to get a liver transplant. And never crossed
Scribbled in marker on a postcard-size slip of paper in 1973, the anarchitect Gordon Matta-Clark wrote: Making the right cut somewhere between the supports and collapse. The tenor of this note is duly reflected in two recent New York building developments: the Whitney Independent Study Program space, now permanently housed at the newly renovated Roy and Dorothy Lichtenstein former studio and home, and the multidisciplinary fabrication facility, Powerhouse Arts, located in a converted early-twentieth-century power plant in Brooklyn.