From Baseball Star to Prodigal Son
Dave Faces the Challenges of Pain on a Daily Basis
“I had the chance to play with some of the best baseball players in the world,” said Dave,a current City Mission resident. As a teenager, Dave played in the Pony League World Series. In high school, he traveled with an all-star team to compete internationally. “It was an experience I’ll never forget,” he said. “Little kids were actually asking for my autograph.”
He even earned a full scholarship to play baseball in college. “I always had a mind for the game,” he explained. “I used to listen to every game on the radio with my Grandpa.”
When he was 17, his life took a tragic turn. His mom passed away from cancer. “My Mom was my best friend. She pretty much raised me single-handedly.”
Then, in his senior year of high school, Dave blew out his knee. “It still gives me trouble to this day,” he said. His scholarship, along with his dream of playing baseball, vanished.
Dave moved in with his aunt, his Mom’s sister. “I lived with her for five or six years, into my early twenties.” During that time, he continued working at the restaurant his Mom had once managed. He started out busing tables and washing dishes but quickly moved up the ranks, eventually becoming head chef. “I was very young to be running the kitchen,” he said. It was a demanding and stressful job with long hours.
Around this time, Dave’s health started to deteriorate. He began having severe pain, stiffness, and loss of motion in his neck and back, caused by a degenerative calcification of the spine. “It was really painful. Every day was a struggle,” he said. To keep up with the demands of his job, Dave started taking pain medication. “That really got my addiction rolling,” he explained. His growing addiction strained his relationship with his aunt. Eventually, he had to move out on his own.
Before coming to City Mission, he had not spoken with his aunt for over three years. “I thought I had burned that bridge forever,” he said. His aunt feared for him every day during that time, worried that she would see his name in the obituaries.
After a year at the Mission, Dave was asked to help serve Thanksgiving meals as part of a City Mission community outreach. Coincidentally, they were delivering meals tothe place where his aunt works. “Thatreally got my wheels turning.”
On his day of service, his anxiety was “through the roof,” because he didn’t know how his aunt would respond. But when he locked eyes with her for the first time, from across the room, they both started crying and embraced. She invited Dave to dinner, and now they talk on the phone every morning. “It is such blessing. It was like the weight of the world had come off my shoulders.”
Dave is also rebuilding himself physically. He is finally receiving some relief from his chronic pain at City Mission’s new Drug-free Pain Management Clinic.
“I’m lucky if I get an hour of sleep at night,” he explained. “But the best nights of sleep are after my weekly session at the Pain Management Clinic. It’s just such a blessing.”
Because of you, Dave was given a second chance, an opportunity to rebuild his life. He has restored his relationship with his aunt, and is healing physically using alternative pain-management to manage his pain.
Dave shares his story on WORD-FM show Bizburgh with host Jon Hall