My heart is lifted by how many people want to help!
Transcription
My heart is lifted by how many people want to help!
Baking Up Hope “My heart is lifted by how many people want to help!” When Gretchen Holt-Witt’s son—and favorite baking assistant—found himself facing cancer, she wondered: What if there was a way we could bake up a cure? S tanding at the kitchen counter as she reached for a mixing bowl, a handful of flour and eggs, Gretchen Holt-Witt smiled to see her three-year-old son bound around the corner. With his apron on, Liam shimmied his stepstool up to the counter so he could reach. “What are we making, Mommy?” he asked. “Chocolate chip cookies,” Gretchen answered, and without missing a beat, passed him the bowl. Watching a smile spread across Liam’s face, her little “baker in training,” the Califon, New Jersey, mom’s heart felt both happy and heavy at once. Since Liam had been diagnosed with cancer, every day—every moment—was precious. And as the sweet smell of homemade cookies filled the air, Gretchen sent up a prayer that someday, she’d find a way to help not only her own little boy, but to eradicate pediatric cancer forever . . . Mommy’s little baker W dose chemotherapy and radiation treatment. In between treatments, though, Liam was allowed to go home. And he’d quickly bounce back to his happy-go-lucky self. “I’m going to look for a four-leaf clover!” he’d say, combing the yard. When the chemo started making Liam’s hair fall out, Gretchen forced herself to smile and said, “Some medicines make you sleepy. Some make you hungry. And some give you magic hair.” Liam’s eyes widened. “Wow!” he grinned. “I have magic hair!” Finally, after months of treatment, scans showed Liam’s body had no evidence of disease. His cancer was gone! Thank you! Gretchen wept with gratitude. And one day, after dropping Liam off at preschool, Gretchen sat on the school steps absorbed in her thoughts. There’s something I need to do, she realized. I have to give back. Now that Liam is healthy, I want to help the other kids facing the battle he did. And it struck her: Liam and I love to bake. Why not bake cookies for cancer? hen Gretchen and her husband Larry welcomed Liam into the world, they dreamed of all the things he’d do and see as he grew up. And even as a toddler, Liam was constantly till, Gretchen didn’t want to stop at just a few asking questions. “How does a fire truck pump dozen cookies. She wanted to do something water?” “Why do frogs jump, Mommy?” big. Because since Liam’s diagnosis, But most of all, Liam loved to cook. she’d found out that pediatric cancer The Food Network quickly became was the number-one fatal disease his favorite channel, and whenever afflicting children in the U.S. Gretchen was in the kitchen Love and So that holiday season, she with his baby sister, Ella, Liam was right beside her. kindness are never called in favors with her family, friends and co-workers. But as his third birthday apwasted. They Soon over 250 volunteers had proached, Liam started to agreed to help bake 8,000 act . . . off. It wasn’t anything always make a dozen cookies to support pediGretchen could pinpoint, so difference. atric cancer research! after a checkup, Liam’s pediaBARBARA DE ANGELIS After she set up a website, a trician ordered blood work and news station picked up on Gretchan abdominal ultrasound, just to be en’s efforts and orders started poursafe. But when the results came in, ing in. Some folks even called in to order Gretchen’s whole world shattered. cookies and said, “I’m on a diet. So keep the “I’m so sorry,” the doctors said. “But Liam has cookies, I just want to help!” Stage 4 neuroblastoma.” Before she knew it, Gretchen had raised nearly Cancer? Gretchen cried, her knees buckling as half a million dollars! Long after the new year, tears poured down her cheeks. Liam was admitted to the hospital immediately. e-mails still flooded her in-box. So Gretchen He’d need surgery to remove the cancerous mass formed Cookies for Kids’ Cancer (Cookies from his abdomen, and several rounds of high- ForKidsCancer.org) a nonprofit that raises The sweetest success S “ ” “Helping kids like Liam makes life sweeter!” Gretchen says. money for life-saving pediatric cancer research. But sadly, Liam’s cancer returned. Though he’d fight hard again and again, each time it came back stronger. And just a few months before his seventh birthday, Liam slipped away. Enveloped in grief, Gretchen didn’t know how she’d go on. Yet every day, she’d get e-mails from people wanting to help put an end to pediatric cancer. For Liam, they’d say. And suddenly, Gretchen would think of her sweet boy’s courage and never-ending grin. He’d want me to keep going, she realized. So that no mother would feel the pain of losing a child. So that no other little boy or girl has to suffer. Today, Gretchen has helped volunteers across the country set up bake sales, 5k walks and fundraisers. And she even penned two cookbooks— her most recent, Cookies for Kids Cancer: All the Good Cookies—to support cancer research! And Cookies for Kids Cancer has raised more than $7 million, helping fund dozens of research projects that led to six new cancer treatments! “I have no doubt this is what Liam would want us to do. Every day my heart is lifted by how many people want to help,” Gretchen says. “So often we think what we do doesn’t matter, that it’s not enough. But that’s not true. We can all make a difference!” —Rachel Misenko Fun ways to make money for your cause! Pizza dough! Cash in on everyone’s favorite: pizza! Little Caesars catalog (PizzaKit.com or 888-4-LCKITS ) offers kits for making pizzas and more. Best of all: Your group nets $5 to $7 for each item sold! Lolli-profits! Find sweet success with candy! Options for a TheGoodies Factory.com lollipop fund-raiser include tasty footballs on a stick and sour lollipops shaped like lips. And your group gets half of all proceeds! Raise funds with these catalogs— all you have to do is take orders! A cash-filled kitty! Love to spoil your pets? Take orders for Worthy Cause Pet Products (WorthyCause Fundraising.com) or TheBarkers Dozen.com dog treats—your group’ll get 50% of the profits! Read or heard a human interest story you think belongs in Woman’s World? Send it to us! If you’re the first to share it, and we publish it, we’ll pay you $100! E-mail the story with your name, address and phone number to: WWFeatures@WomansWorldMag.com. Or mail to: Scoop, Woman’s World, 270 Sylvan Ave., Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632. Photos: Getty Images; David Patino/Ikonik Pix. 40 WOMAN’S WORLD 11/11/13 document1912247010108218225.indd 40 10/16/13 9:59 AM