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The bond of Sigma Nu Fraternity transcends the years spent within chapter houses and college campuses, often revealing itself in the most remarkable of ways. For chapter alumni Jimmy Carder and Dan Jagoe (Jacksonville State), an extraordinary act of kindness not only saved a life but defined the true meaning of brotherhood.
In the fall of 2023, Jimmy donated a kidney to Dan – gifting him with a life free of dialysis and pain. “It speaks to our brotherhood and the love me and Jimmy have for each other after all these years,” said Dan, who lives just two miles away from Jimmy.
The friendship between Jimmy and Dan stretches back four decades, starting in the chapter house of Sigma Nu in the early 1980s. After college, they both relocated to Cumming, Ga., growing closer as neighbors and the best of friends. A few years ago, they started meeting each month for breakfast. “We get together, talk shop, talk about families and the fraternity,” and we call it ‘biscuit with a brother’.”
In May 2023, during their monthly breakfast, Dan revealed his kidneys were failing, functioning as low as six percent and declining. He had been placed on the kidney transplant list at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta. Jimmy remembers little else about the conversation other than trying to figure out how he could help his friend.
Without telling anyone other than his wife, Jimmy started the process to determine if his kidneys were a match for Dan. He did not tell Dan of his plans in order to spare him the disappointment if it did not work out. Three months later, in September 2023, after multiple rounds of lab work, blood draws, chest x-rays, stress test, urine collection, BP monitoring and an echocardiogram, he learned he was a match.
At the same time, Dan was searching donor registries for someone willing to provide a kidney to someone in need. In September 2023, Piedmont contacted him to let him know there was a match. The first person Dan called was Jimmy to tell him the good news.
“He didn’t know I was the actually donor Piedmont was referring to” said Jimmy, who congratulated his best friend, then headed immediately to Dan’s house. Sitting in his kitchen moments later, Jimmy handed Dan the confirmation letter from Piedmont Transplant Center with news of the donor identity. Dan was speechless when he saw Jimmy’s name.
“I looked at Jimmy, and he said ‘yes,’ and we just hugged each other and cried…it was absolutely beautiful,” said Dan of the moment. “He saved my life…and I can never thank him enough.” Two weeks later, Dan received his donated kidney.
Both Jimmy and Dan knew that kidney donation and transplant are major surgeries with significant recovery times. However, Jimmy said his recovery has been “uneventful,” and after a few weeks was taking only Tylenol and back at the gym.
For Dan, the recovery challenges are lessened by the emotional lift of true friendship.
“To this day, we check on each other almost every day…and that will never change,” Dan said. “The real meaning of brotherhood, love, truth, and honor and taking care of each other is magnified tenfold.”
For Jimmy, it was a humbling experience, saying “I was blessed to be put in that position and honored that I was able to do that for him,”
How has living donation changed your life?
Becoming a living kidney donor has been an amazing journey of self-discovery. I feel I'm a better husband, father, brother, friend and hopefully a better human. It's like a have this secret super power I carry with me now, and that makes me smile.
Would you do it again?
YES
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